THUBSDAY...-SEPTEMBER 6, IS73. TO OUEATEONS. Volume VII. of the New Northwest will close with tbe next issue. Now is an important aDi appropriate time to talk a little with our patrons on plain business topics. We have struggled through storm and sunshine, heat and cold, and health and sickness, to hold aloft the baouer of equal rights through a period of. seven and a half years. Ottee only, and that was nearly six years ago, .when our entire household was overshadowed by tbe darkened wings of Azrael, have our halyards been loosed and the flag compelled to fall for a season from its post of honor and duty. From the day of resumption until now, tbe People's Paper has never failed to visit you regularly. Many of you have promptly paid your dues when called upon, but many hundreds are in arrears for subscriptions, and we must ha&e the money. If you oould know of the cease less eltorls necessary to not only supply the paper with the needed mental stlm blus efforts that cause you to hail its coming from week to week as a familiar and valued friend but to do tbe added , work that must be done to meet tbe weekly bills, surely you would not be so lax iu your duty as many of you are. Then there are many regular sub scribers who 'might aid us In various ways, who never seem to even think of it. It is a very easy thing for every one of you to procure at least one new sub scriber. Who will be tbe first to add his or her name to our roll of honor for Volume VIII. by sending Ills own sub scription in advance, accompanied by another responsible name? Friends, this is a little thing for you to do for human rights, and yet the good that will accrue from it you cannot estimate. Wherever' the New Northwest is known and read, the woman movement Is appreciated. Where It is not known and read, the Ignorant prejudice of the dark ages yet lingers. We have done quadruple work to carry your banner for so mauy years that we are no longer able to struggle so hard as formerly. In fact, we were literally worn out iu tbe unpaid servitude common to subjugated womanhood before this public work be gan, and we are now committing slow suicide in your service. Help us by your subscriptions and dues and all will be well. Who, we repeat, will be tbe first to act? One example will stimu late another. Let us have a goodly list to report next week, good friends. We need your aid, or we should not ask It. We need nine hundred dollars next week. Surely one hundred and fifty patrons can respond for tbe new volume, each with their own subscription and that of one new subscriber. Then we can pay up old scores and provide a por tion of the stock for the coming year. Shall this appeal be made in vain ? "HEBL0T." The serial story, " Her Lot," or "How She Was Protected," will be completed In two more chapters. The unlooked for success of this story, far which the compiler claims only the merit of group ing and arranging authentic incidents in a readable form, has encouraged tbe writer to undertake its successor, enti tled " Fact, Fate and Fancy," or "More Ways to Live Than One." The publi cation of this serial will begin with tbe first issue of Volume VIII., and will continue regularly for six months, or until completed, and will be, like its predecessor, a compilation of interesting facts, grouped according to tiie writer's fancy, ami in such a way as to enebaiu tbe sympathy aud attention of tbe read er to tbe end. There is no better, time than the present for forming clubs, as this will be not only tbe beginning of tbe serial but of tbe volume. Any per son sending us five subscribers, with fifteen dollars, will be entitled to one year's subscription free. Or should our readers club together and forward tbe cash for six yearly subscriptions, they may secure the paper for $2 50 per year. These club rates will continue but a short time, as our only object in offering tbem is to secure subscribers at the beginning of tbe volume. A little eflert on the part of every reader will speedily double the list. THE TALKING MAOHINE. The phonograph, which has been on exhibition at Masonic Hall during tbe past week, has attraoted large crowds of visitors. The machine is about tbe size of a family sausage-grinder and stutter, and looks a good deal like one. Around its cylinder a piece of tin foil is smoothly wound, to which an ordinary needle, attached to a diaphragm like a tninature drum-head, is cautiously ap plied, tbe crank turns aud you articulate words, coughs, laughs, or sentences in the mnuth-pleee. Then you reverse the engine's crank and bring the cylinder back to the point of starting, apply a raw-hide trumpet to tbe orifice through which you articulated, turn the crank again, and a repetition, much faiuter than your voice, but otherwise exactly like it, returns to you the words you ut tered, reminding you of the ghost of tangible shadows. Some day the pho nograph will be useful in a thousand ways. Now It is only a wonderful toy, which everybody should see in Its infancy. The Wett Shore has completed IU third year. With the new volume the publishers will commence tbe issue of a tbirty-two-page paper In colored cover, stitched and trimmed. We are glad to note this evidence of prosperity. Mr. Charles E. Stowe, son of Professor and Mrs. Harriet Beecber Stowe, has recently been licensed at Hartford, Conn., to preach. He Is a graduate of Harvard College, and has studied two years abroad at Bonn. J UNJUST, BUT TSUB. No ono can read tha immnni mnitol by the press, or listen to the comments of persons, who are firm believers in old idees of woman's sphere irrespective of circumstances, without becoming con vinced that a line of conduct iu busiuess matters Is insisted upon for women whieh is entirely overlooked in the case of men. We have, as iswell known, al ways advocated tbe doctrine that women should be fitted by a careful course of training for auy business in whieh they expect to eugage for a livelihood, ami that in busiuess of all kind woman should be paid, not in consideration of 6ex, but aocordiug to tbe work she ac complishes and the manner in whieh It is done. Justice and not favor is tbe great demand of the hour. Some women, it is true, seek employment, expect con sideration to be shown for inetlleiency, and blunders to be overlooked because they are women, but this is the fault of education and depends not at all upon tbe aeoideut of sex. They have been throughout all tbe ages so accustomed to be considered secondary that they do not readily take first plaeesand fill them with an assurauce that places them high up in tbe scale of individual work' ers who are In every sense "worthy of their hire." Tbe world probably hears In greater or less degree of tbe 111 success of every woman who attempts a line of busiuess and fails, aud iu no case is the matters placed upon a basis of justiee and eouilv. but the fact that a woman has failed to fulfill attempted duties is her alded far ami wide. Men fail in busi ness attempts, aud in thousands of In stances fail to support their families (which is, next to voting, recognised as man's peculiar province) iu comfort, yet no one ever heard the failures attrib uted to the physiological fact that they were men. In every eommunlty men are found who are not employed because of their illness to follow the business they eugage iu, but because they need to be supported, and more, that they have involved the welfare of families iu their Incompetency. It is no uncommon thing to hear of places being made for men because they need them, and this extends throughout all grades of work or service, from presidential patronage to the employment of street cleaners, The cases when women are given em ployment regardless of their qualifica tions are inelguillcaut in comparison to like cases with men, yet we bear about tbe one out of one hundred women who fails, with the additional announcement that she failed because she was a woman, while of the fifty out of one hundred men whose lives are failures in every sense, social and financial, we hear not a word of reproach because of sex. That this is as true as it is unjust no one who will consider the matter will deny WOEE TOE THELEGISLATUBE. The State legislature will convene in regular biennial session on Monday of next week. As usual, the all-absorbing topic for a time will be the election of a United States Senator. That this duty should have been delegated to State legislature at all is one of the gravest aud most manifest blunders of the Fed eral Constitution. If one-tenth of the reports relative to tbe bribery and cor ruption that obtains in State leglshv tures upou occasions of Senatorial elections are true, evidence sufficient and black enough would be admitted to render constitutional amendment in tbls regard imperative. The usual po litical trickery and tbe customary waste of the people's time and money upon this job for in no sense is such election fit to be called by any other name will, of course, take place. After that is over, if the average legislator does not lose all interest in the business of tbe session, we may hope for matters of real interest to claim the attention of the law-makers. The question that Mr, Ferguson, of Yamhill, at the last session was in favor of considering so that it "might be got out of the way" the great question of Womau Suffrage will be brought before that body, aud tbe plea presented for it will be backed by a legion of names. To get this question permanently out of the way put a qui etua upon it so that it may trouble their dreams no more legislators must understand that justiee will have to bo done. Tbe suffragists of the Slate reasonably expect this at the hands of the corainc legislature, and are de termined to work for it faithfully. A TBAMP LAW. The legislature of New Hampshire has just passed a most stringent law, looking to the abatement of the tramp nuisance. This law declares that any person going from place to place, beg ging or subsisting upon charity, shall be punished by imprisonment in the State prison for a period uot exceeding fifteen months. Those exempt are women, minors under 17 years of age. and blind persons. The first probably forming an exception because there are no women tramps, and it is just as well to show magnaminity when It is cheap. Acts usually committed by tramps, such as lighting fires on the highway, enter ing dwellings, carrying dangerous weap ons or making threats of violence to persons or property, are specified, anda term of two years In the State prison defined as the penalty for commission of any of them. Copies of the law are ordered printed and sent to the several town and city clerks, with directions to post in at least six conspicuous places, three of which shall be on the public highway. It now remains to be seen whether this nuisance can be legislated out of existence, or whether, like most lortuiuable evils, it will exist and multi ply In calm defiance of statutory enact ments. xue miru number of Mr. Pearson's paper. The Jlemureet of Oregon and HWllllafni I.., I i t . . . fT-1 ..... If amouut of wwer n Us peculiar c . .9 ui. uuuu. 1 1 mnrn nt a uciu, uuu snows care In tbe compllatl and arrangement of the same. THB JUTUBEMAJORITY. a trll.knwn scientist advances the opinion, which hedenotnlnnteaaprincl- pie, that "trails produeed by eireumstan- ces are inherited by thatsex upon which tbe circumstances acted." If this prin ciple Is accepted, It pours a flood of light upon the vexed question of woman's physical Inferiority. Let us consider tbe ages of slavery to dress for woman's dress in its simplest form is a slavery that would soon prostrate mau's physi cal strength the slavery to enstom, the slavery to wearing, and often unappre ciated home duller, and, remembering that the traits thereby Induced have been handed down always to tbe daugh ters, we will cease to marvel at woman's physical weakness. Let us consider fur ther the centuries of mental starvation aud repression which have beeu the her itage of women, and, again remember ing our scientist's principle, that daugh ters alone have come Into the maternal inheritance, so far from wondering that more women have not distinguished themselves iu the world of letters, we will be nstoulshed that any have beeu known in tbe realms of thought. A few generations of mothers whose woman hood has beeu well developed, instead of beiug stunted aud narrowed by re pression, ami the daughters will come into possession of tbe birthright of men tal ami physical strength of which they have been so long defrauded. The puny, puling women who have barely sufll elent strength to declare without n mo ment's previous thought that they have all tbe rights they want" will then be in such pitiful minority that men cannot boast of their numbers to tbe brave souls who besiege them in legislative halls, beseeching for equal rights. No longer then will be heard the tauut from men iu high places, "a majority of women do not desire equal rights before the law SOWING POE OTHEBS TO EEAP, "Have you Methodist schools in your district?" "Yes, sir; some." "Are they doing anything for Metho dism ? " 'We are trying to make our schools useful iu training our children up relig iously." "There Is no use in glviug our money for Methodist Institutions of learning unless those schools are of a benefit to i." Is there, or Is there not, an exhibition of tbe " primal sin of selfishness " in the foregoing short colloquy ? It appears iu the published proceedings of the Metho dist conference as between a presiding elder and tbe bishop. It is, in our estima tion, an extremely selfish ami egotisti cal idea that there Is no use in giving money to sustain tbe schools of the church unless Methoditm Is thereby benefited. If humanity is benefited, something Is surely gained; if ignorance is forced to yield to knowledge, it Is surely a gain; if lessons of industry and principles of morality are Inculcated, surely tbe gaiu is immense even if not one pupil iu a hundred, after the com pletion of his education ever hears a sermon fall from Metbodistie lips, or drops a penny iu tbe bat at church col lections. "Sowing for others to reap" is therommou lot of humanitarians, and it is vastly better tlmu abandoning a field to thistles and brambles unless we alone can reap a useful harvest. If hu manitarians are coutent with such lot, surely those who make Christianity speciality should be content, even if their creed is not able to garner all that their Christian zeal and labor has sowed. KEEPING SILENOE. Mother II III, president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Unlou, Newark, New Jersey, was present with her son, Rev. J. li. Hill, at tbe Methodist con ference, and on the occasion of tbe tern perauce anniversary spoke with great clearness, readiness and force, giving interesting details of tbeorigin, progress, methods of work, and success of the or ganization she represents. She closed her remarks by a solemn appeal to the women of Salem to do something at onee in behalf of the temperance cause, The ministerial lights of the great M II church, while opposing tbe ordina tion of Mrs. Van Cott, for reasous grouud ed upon Paul's gospel to the ancient Corinthians, listen wlthedification while tho very same gospel Is put to equal stress or violation by a woman "speak ing Jn church" In advocacy of lemper- auce. "Imi your women Keep silence,' brethren, or rise above dogmatic asser tions of a buried era, and give them equal liberty with yourselves to "pro claim the gospel to every creature' under sanction and by appointment of the rules of the church of their choice, 0. S. WS. A. A called meeting of the Oregon State Woman Suffrage Association will con vene on Wednesday, September 25th at tbe Opera House in Salem, for the purpose of agitating woman's claims for political enfranchisement. A lull at tendance at this meeting is especially desirable. Tbe best speakers and e9say ists in the State are Invited to be pres ent aud participate In the deliberations of the Association. The convention will occupy three days arid evenings, and no pains will be spared to make tbe meetings entertaining, Instructive, pop ular and profitable. The usual courte sies of transportation lines will be granted all delegates, and the good ladles of Salem will entertain them at their homes. Rally, friends of human rights, and let us prove to the waitiug legislature that we arc not only thoroughly in earnest, but amply able to give Incon trovertible proof of the Justiee aud ex pediency of our very reasonable de mands. Abigail Scott Duxiway, President. Subscribe for the New Northwest. EDITORIAL 00ERESP0NDENOE. Dkak Hbadehs of the Tk' N'oktkwkut: The State Teaobers' Iustilute.of which we last week made mention, dragged Us tedious lengths along till Friday even lug, when to avoid itsdpatb byaspbyxia, the more daring members knocked Hon the head and ended Us career. As com pared to former years, this meeting of the Institute was not a success. There were presenta few self-opinionated little masculines, about five feet high, bare footed in some instances on the top of the head, and exceedingly "uunierous" on all occasions, who disgusted the abler workers and caused them to retreat to the background. Superintendent Row land, who 1ms hitherto beeu the life of these meetings, studiously avoided mak ing himself conspicuous in such Lilli putian company. ProLPowoll, his sue cessor-elect, kept silence evidently for a like reasou. Several ladies read care fully prepared essays, which were well received, but the oflleious air of the ef fete masculines already alluded to had the same effect upon them as upon the above-named gentlemen. There was music, pleutyof It, and any amount of "country sohool exhibition" nonsense, but tbo scientific dicueilou of former years was almost wholly wanting, so far as we could judge. Professor Gregg read nn able essay on "School Laws" on Fri day, and in the evening Mrs. Curl fa vored the Institute witli a valuable paper. For the rest, so far as we saw, a wludy admirer of Mark Twain had the floor. An able scientific paper by Major Hell, of Kugene, was crowded oil' to make room for this pedagogue to exhibit his imitative prolicieucy in amusing a motley crowd. Nellie Meaeham recited a fine poem in her usual apt and excel lent manner, aud then "more music" capped tho climax, leaving the more thoughtful and scientific of the leauhers present in doubt as to whether, after all, the thing had paid. This mention must suffice for this time. Anil if any feel aggrieved we cau only say that, as a faithful chronicler of what we saw and heard, we cannot do otherwise than eall the Institute for this year a failure, as lid everybody else, save the elleles mentioned aud hinted at, who went away in sublime unconsciousness that they wereslmply laughing stocks for the men aud women of brains and power, whom they silenced for the nonce by su perior audacity. The Institute over, we have time to look about us. First we note that the Chemeketa Hotel, whieh Is thronged with guests, has undergone many im provements not the least noticeable beinj tbe fine array of floral beauty through the house, which stamps Mrs. Matthews as an artistin tbislluenf business as well as in the role of landlady. The smiling j face of Mr. Matthews also bodes a prof- itable harvest in the coming autumn, j aud this every one that knows him will j assert that hedeserves. We also visit witli Mrs. Mallory, Mrs. Strong, Mrs. Bridges, Mrs. Minto aud others, all noble work ers in the cause of freedom, with whom we lay plans for the forthcoming con vention; aud on Saturday we mount the stage for Dallas, and seated on the box beside Mr. George Fosi, the obliging proprietor, travel through a portion of country that u quarter of a century ago was as familiar to us as. the home of our early childhood. Eola, five miles from Salem, presents much the same appearance as Iu the days of old laugsyne, when we, as the vil lage scboolma'am, taught young ideas bow to shoot through heads that now are crowned with legislative responsi bility, while we are left to bog of them the right to represent ourself; a right which they, as yet, withhold, though how it came iu their possession they know not, nor do we. We had been billed for a lecture in Dallas, but when we reached the future terminus of the new railroad, the pleas aut little burg had locked itself out of its court-house, and, through its sheriff, carried off Its keys, so there was no al ternative save to wait for another occa sion, and the people and preaoher went away disappointed. But we made the best of tbe delay by writing up the re maining chapters of " Her Lot," receiv ing calls from suffragists, and employ ing intervals iu canvassiugfor subscrip tions to tbo paper and signatures to the petition to the legislature. At the pleasant private boarding-house of Mrs. Stiles we found agreeable entertain ment, and cheerfully reeommeud her home to the traveling public. Conspicuous among the gentlemen of brains who assisted in making our visit at Dallas a success was'J. M. Daly, Esq., whose card can be found In another col umn. Those in need of the services of an attorney cau never do better than patronize the lawyers who advertise In the New Northwest. We also bear cheerful witness to the courtesy of Mr. J. L. Collins aud family, thegentlemau ly sheriff of Polkcouuty, and others, and shall be delighted to visit the place again at some lime in the near future. An attempted suicide about the hour of assembling for the lecture somewhat disconcerted both audience and speaker, but a grand good time was had, and many signatures were added to the peti tion to the legislature for women's rights to equality before the law. But there are men in Dallas who are as bad ly iu tbe dark over the alms aud objects of this woman's mission that is moving the world, as though they were nothing but eunuchs, whose employment con sists in guarding women lest they run away from meu's rights harems In the suburbs of Stamboul. One of these would-be autocrats (a druggUt) excused himself from subscribing for tbe New Norhwest or signing tbe petition, by saylug that he was only a clerk, the proprietor was nway, and that his own nam was "Code." three dlstlnot well there's no mau of the name of Cogle in tbe place. Dr. Connoway was not ab sent aud kept no clerk. Yet women who rear men aud pay taxes to support a government that desires their repre sentation must to look to such as be to grant or withhold their personal inalien able rights. Afterward this fellow ex plained to others that the reason lie told us these Ilea was because be lived hap pily with bis woman, and didn't want us to make any trouble In his family ! No better proof than this, ids own ad mission, is needed to write him down a silly tyrant, who depends upon the law to do for him that which he Is unable to do for himself namely, hold his domes tie relations intaet through his own worthiness. Dallas is on the. 7m' vine for a new aud needed railroad. Property is held at a high figure, aud ever.vbmly is hoping for better times. On Wednesday morning we departed, bright and early, for Salem and home, accompanied by the wife ami nieces of Mr. Foss, tbe obliging proprietor of the stage, ourroud running through almost unbroken wheat fields for many miles, Col. Xesmlth came out to me stage as we passed for his daily allowance of fresh meat from town, and his wife sat upon the porch and surveyed the scenes of peace and plenty that the two thousand acre farm offered with an air of pleasant contentment. But again we must bring our joltings to u close, lest our readers grow too weary to follow us further. A. J. D September 3, 1ST8. EEOENTEVENTS. Tiie public debt statement for August shows a decrease of $5,476,601. The barley crop of the Northwestern States has been seriously Injured by rains. The yellow fever seourge continues in many Southern cities with unabated violence. Forest fires, extending In a continuous line for ISO miles along the north shore of Lake Superior, are noted. Total subscriptions to yellow-fever fund iu St. Louis up to the 31st, were about twenty thousand dollars. The iron masters of West Scotland have agreed to notify their employes o a reduction of ten iter cent, in their wages. About sixty clerks, mostly women were discharged from the office of th commissioner of the land-office 011 Sat urday. Lack of funds is the cause. The plague shows no signs of abate meut in Memphis. Physicians, drug cists, nurses aud undertakers are be coming exhausted by constant work Tiie United Stales treasurer has within the last ten days transferred by telegraph over otie'-half of a million gold from San Krnueisco to New York, The amount of standard silver dollars coined is $22,596,500; ttraouut outstand lug, $2,850,927, leaving on bund $10,37, SIS. The demand for them iu In creasing. Kearney add refuted an audience several thousand people at Pblladelphi an Friday evening. At his request collection was taken to defray his ex tenses to Baltimore, whither be weu on Saturday. Another nltro-glyeerine explosion, tbe second within eight days, occurred at Negance, Michigan, nn the 29th, by which three meu were instantly blown to pieces, and a fourth was landed on a shelving-rock uninjured. Cause of ex plosion uuexpiaiued. r0BEIGNNEWS. The general peace of Europe Is deemed perfectly secure. Hungary has lieen visited by a Hood that destroyed thousands of houses and many lives. It is believed that a large portiou of the Mussulman population of Belgrade will emigrate. The divisions of the Austrian army, mobilized by order of the last cabinet council, reached their destination early this week. Tiie Auetrla-lioeniuu war is prose cuted with vigor. Insurgents are in creasing, and Austrian reinforcements constantly arriving. Persons liable to military duty only leave Austria with permission of the minister of war. The government urse nal manufactures weekly six hundred rifles. All property of the late Queen Chris tiana, valued at eight million francs, is left to her children by the Duke of Iil anaares, having In her lifetime given their portion to Queen Isabella and tbe Duchess of Montpeusier. The Sultan sent a dispatch on August 27th, requesting the Czar to give orders to check outrages on Mussulmen In Itoumella. Tbe Czar replied, ex pressing sorrow at the anarchy pre vailing, but declaring it his belief that the reports: were exaggerated, and that Russian generals had strict orders to prevent and punish such acts. Mrs. M. A. Warner, who lias recently removed from this Slate to Washington Territory, writes from Spokane Falls, her present locution, eulogizing thecli mate, healtlifuluess and fertility of that regiou. She mentious, among other faets, that hotel accommodations at tbe place named are notonly very scarce, but almost entirely unknown, and says tbat any oue desiring n location for a paylug busiuess in that line cau do no better than locate there. Here Is a chance for some enterprising woman who has a mission to "keep boarders," or is com pelled by circumstances to adopt that business to earn notonly a living, butiu time a competency. The Chicago Inlet -Ocean asked some lime ago, "Whoever saw a woman tramp?" and tbe papers have been re peating tbe inquiry alt over the coun try, and so far not one has been discov ered, which has led some of the para graph philosophers to conclude that women are .better able to take care of themselves during hard times than the men. THE 00IN DOLLAR AND THE GREENBACK. To th Editor OP THB N'bw NOBTilwswr : A "bard-money" friend of miue lias Just banded me tbe following "knock- owu"argumentou the money question, which appeared in the Oregoman or the 24th lust. : The following Us an extract from a recent orach in Pennsylvania by Oalosha A. Grow. Whatcoald drive tbe truth borne quicker to the average ciUsen than Ibis comparison of tbe coin dollar and the greenback T "Tbe paper read on iu face, I promise to pay real value. The coin declares on its lace, I am real value. Tbe coin dollar need ao indorter. Tbe paper one Is worthless without It. Tbe coin dollar runs throush the commercial world by its own Inherent strength, and bears upon its face its real value. The paper dollar has not strength to stand alone, and bears upon Its lace only a promise, wblch. If its fnl lllintent is to be IndeOnitely postponed. Is as worthless as tbe rags of wbicb it is made." With your permission I will offer a few comments upou the foregoing through the New Northwest, for the consideration of its numerous readers who may possibly read the Oregonian also. There is an old saying that "oue story is good uutil another is told," aud so It Is with tbe money question. The reader should have both sides before be or she is prepared todetermine which Is correct. Mr. Grow says : "Tbe paper (meaning a paper dollar) reads on its face, I promise to pay real value." I deny that a thing can be that which it promises to pay, and assert that a prom ise to pay is uot money; therefore, the paper dollar alluded toby Mr. Grow is not money, but a "promise to pay," the same as a note 01 nauu. .Mr. u row- says : "Thecoin (meaning a coin dollar) declares on its face, I am real value." I deny that any piece of paper, leather, tin or iron, declares on Us face, "I am real value," in the same sense that coin dollar does, and that the "real value" of either is determiued by the law of supply and demand, and their degree of usefulness to mankind. I as sert that the world could better do with out gold or silver coin In it than it could without paper. Mr. Grow says "The coin dollar needs no indorser; the paper one is worthless without it." I hold that both the coin dollar and the genuine paper dollar (which is a full le gal tender for all debts aud dues) both have an Indorser, and that they both have the same indorser, and that this is the Congress of the United Stales. This Indorser specifies the weight aud fine ness of the coin dollar, and declares that it shall be a full legal tender for all debts aud due; but for this edict of the government, tbe gold coin dollar would only be worth its bullion value by weight, aud would not be a legal tender for a debt. Tiie Congress of tbe United States says that a genuine greenback ixiper dollar shall contain certain de vices, and be printed in certain colors, and shall be a all legal lender for all debts ami dues; but for this edict of tbe government, tbegreenbuck dollar would be powerless to pay one dollar of debt, and would only be worth its weight as lper in the market. Now let Mr. Grow coin a gold dollar couluiniug twenty-five or fifty grains of gold, or stamp a greenback dollar, ami pass off either to one of bis neighbors as money, and see if be does uot fetch up at the end of a rope, or In a State's prison. He might put a pound of gold into a dollar of his own creation, and he could uot stop interest on a note of hand fur oue dollar, uuless the person holding It was willing to take it aud give up the note. If the person saw fit to take a ball of paper or a bog of chips, it would be the same, but he would not be obliged to take either, and the interest on the note would continue to increase until Mr. Grow tendered him a gold dollar, a sli ver dollar or a paper dollar, backed by the edict of the government, that it too a fall Ugal tender for a debt. The per son would not be obliged, neither could he compel him to take either of these. Rut, from the moment of tender, the Interest would cease to accumulate, and Mr. Grow aould go about his business without fear of exeeutiou. The hard-money meu look upon gold anil silver as a sort of God-ordained money, or metals created by God es pecially for use as money, and it is hard for them to give up the idea that these metals should be discontinued in exclu sive use as money, notwithstanding there are not enough of these metals in the world to pay the one-hundredth part of thp Indebtedness of the world. They have yet to learn to distinguish between real money and the spurious trash put out as money to blind the people a commodity created in the Interest of a favored few, to further enrich the rich aud enslave the poor. They have yet to learn the use for which real money, honett money is created, and the power which creates IU It would seem that the acts of our nation iu demoralizing silver money, depriving it of its money power in sums exceeding five dollars; In erecting a trade dollar containing 420 grains of silver, and making it of less legal value for debt-paying purposes than the silver dollar containing only 412J grains; In creating the new silver dollar and making It a full legal tender for debts. I repeat, it would seem tbat these acts of Congress ought to open their eyes as to what la real or honest money and that which is spurious, a fraud upon the masses. These aets ought also to teach them where the only power In this government exists to create good or bad money, and then they should join In the demand that that power henceforth and forever cre ate ouiy goou, nonest money. It Is clear that money is the creation of law, aud tbat the ouly law-making power in our government with author ity to create money for use among the whole people Is tbe Congress of the United States. It is equally clear that honest money has but one power, and that power is to nav a debt. It is the only use for which real or honest money Is created, and If none but honest monej tr. ni.,i o,..i n,.i in snllleient quantities to' fill the requirements of debt-paying purposes, it count uoi. uieU as a speculated corau""j; n ...II.. aniifl i?..-tfn1lv submitted, M. S. BOOTH. Seattle, W. T., August 30, 1878. NEWS ITEMS, TVIK AND TKKKITOBIAt. The legislt.ure convenes at Salem next Moutlay. A Ia.rge fnu we"-kept hotel has been opened at Tillamook this season. Snake River is at ita lowest stage, yet boats continue to reaeh Lewistou. There were 1,207,474 kecs of lager beer consumed on I'uget Sound las year. Mrs. Mary Mead has been appointed postmaster at Collins, ltentnu county. The Astoria Packing Company intend to put up beef at their eauuery ibis fall. The Hop Association of Laoe county has employed 180 Chinamen to pick for them. W. B.Carter has let tiie contract for the Stute printing to E. M. Waile, of Salem. There are thirty-seven inmates In the Territorial asylum for the insane, twelve of whom are women. Property in Ashland shows an ad vance of tweuty-tive thousand dollars on last year's assessment. Mrs. Colouel Maury, one of the earliest residents of Jackson county, died at Jacksonville last week. It will require the labor of two thousand Indians to pick the hop crop of Jordau Valley the present season. A. M. Smith, of Buena Vista, has started up his pottery again, aud is now manufacturing better ware man ever. The first discovery of oysters on the Pacific Coast was made at Shoalwater Bay, opposite the present site of Oyster ville, in 1S50. Within the past year there have been two large mercantile establishments, one drug store, and several dwellings erected at rhilomatn. The Jefferson Institute will corn,-1' meuee the fall term September 2d, Pro fessor G. T. Taylor, principal, aud Miss Cox, of California, assistant. Six hundred tons of hops were e-- ported through New Taftoma from '.h 1'uyallup region last year, and tne out look Is favorable for au equal yield tbe present season. St. Joseph's Hospital at Vancouver was totally destroyed by fire on Sitbda.? afternoon. The loos falls heavily Shoo the Sisters of Charity who had cSHrge of the institution. The Grand Lodge of Good Templa will meet at Seattle September 1S Delegates, by paying full fare gd -will be returned free on any of ' Puget Sound Navigation Com pat .. 1 boats. Sevier Lewis was hanged at Knot-i City on the 30th ult., for the munier of his brother iu 1S76. Up to the last mi fl ute he showed a very vindictive sp.i it and used violent language, losing sr sympathy had been expressed for r.m by his conduct. NEED OF SELP-PE0TE0TI0I The American Home, com men Upon tbe gigantic strides of evil,' combating tbe idea tbat women are- o blame for tbe greater share thereof, 9y "The fact Is that man is fast losing bis power of resistance to evil in any forts.; witness, for example, his complete suc cumbing to the tyranny of the tobacco habit; can feminine enslavement to lasniou compare wmi tins nauit iu evil results? It is a lamentable fact thatr men are allowing their minds to becoiww subservient to habit more every day; and every day they so live renders them less able or less likely to make any de termined resistance to the usurpers, habit and passion. When they reatit; tbe depths into which they are sinking, there wilt be some hope of a proper con sideration of woman's elaims; until then, woman must find some way to protect herself." If anything is to be made over : above good pay for actual labor per formed by getting the State priallBg done by contract, let the Stale tnatfflta own contracts for the work hereafter, aud abolish the office of State printe-. Amassing a fortune or securing a petency at the expense of the tai.l ers of tbe State is charity on too la scale to be It towed upou a single citi zen thereof to satisfy tbe average inhabitant. p" f "Whatever I have tried to doSu my life," says Charles Dickens, "I have tried with all my heart to do well. What I have devoted myself to, I have devoted myself to completely. Never to put my hand to auytbing on wl ieb & ,uu,u -' " 1 1 1 1 ,7 '"J m IIVIO BCII, UUU never to affect depreciation of my Work, I nnitl.l TWlF ..... ... 1 1 I T . .. .1 . .. 1.... I. T st ...I . I beeu golden rules." i. muieniEiuie ihgk ui imirioiisuu s tbem so to court obscurity and, shirt: official honors, is noticeable. Ajs proof note the faet that but one hundVed and r m ---- i tweuty-flve aspirants for Senatorial honors have thus far been reported. What is the world coming to, wber men lose all ambition to servo, the Now is the time to make up elub. Specks are obnoxious, particularly on face or beauty. No complexion, bowevei -,:r it may be naturally, looks well when dUng ,. ft by tan, Irecklea, pimples, blotches, or Oio'f blemlsbes of a like nature. Tbat sale;. -' beantiner and emollient, Olexits 8ri.Pi' , Soap, removes all such complexlonal de' and eradicates all local disease of the with (ratifying promptitude. It not whitens tbe cuticle, but imparts to It adell fnl smoothness. T Certain Cure Tor Cancer. Mrs. Ir. Mary O. Brown takes tbls metho saying to the afflicted tbat sbe is in posses of a safe, certain, and painless cure for mo-t loathsome and terrible disease know CaNCKK, in all Its forms and phases. remedy is never known to fall. Address . Dr. Mary a Brown, Olympla, W. T. . juts. dk. until. Homeopathic physician and electrician, removed to the lanre and commodious ror in tbe building of the Yonnf Men's Christ Association, Morrison. Kirst street, between Alder SI-KCIAL, XOTICC All business letters pertaining to tbe N XoarHWSST. nd all money due this oSice InhTiiiioiisorotherwle, mant he dlreetec MRS. A. J. UUNIWA ass-The National Oold Midal was a wan to Bradley 4 Rul!on lor the best "hotograi In the United States, and the v lenna iieaai for the best In the world. 429 Montgomery street, San Franeteeo.