, r-- .v - i-f 3T?-P;i.p,!K,l fa r ,-, fkeb riMFLE. ,' Ml VOLUME, X.-NO. 4. JDllTLA N D, OIUCf?OSVTl I V USPAY; A UG UST '-'ll, ,111. PEIi YEAH-S3 00. f AOAINON THE V1N(I..' THK KKMOK EMTOll VISITS AKTOJIIA- . ' I.KTTKK KKOM Il:it I'KX. rA "TIMKlV? A8TOIUA, Augusta, 1H81. -To rut tik.Kvr.M or titk fitly- Noujhwkst: : . i . It Ik umiitwliprf related of A certain ktutfuiiimi llhaU.uponarrlYing,flUhe king his annua! round, bo re-'"""" wwn .npMwm- " I : ia. 'i . t ter xf voux-lviwJor lie U umlt r Mr. U. Ik Tare. Tker'a inotlKTly cart , ami pronil to "rt'Hrt for the Mjer'- hia It-tter elsewh!rcia,iiij we: re pair to UpjHT trowii, where Mr. aul Mr. MO. Crwni have arranged for our4 iny'cUiigWlirJuhan feii'a Hull. Here we inwl an Intelligent a(ein My of thouglitful, free-thinking Chrirtian ami ' friend, when ma marked hi reply to her comment up hi Journey ings: "Ye; I am Jike the Hernia ; he in alway In the, air, and I am alway on the wing." A twelvemonth paasetl," and . the ; gentleman wa again a visitor at the house of hi friend, and In response to her rewewtMl exclamation concerning -bU migratory- habits,- Ire-'repeated Jheexact tt--mark he had made the year lfore, and was much 1 mortitlel a minute after in rivalling the fact that T he bad repeated himself in such a way as to make 1 It appear that he kept a stereotyped speech on band for such occasions We recall this Incident r as we sit down to indite. this letter;, and shall be much siirprhed if we. do not find the busy pencil ' guilty of similar repetitions of the sayings of former years ere the epistolary effort before. us Is " concluded. - . ' - ' The llonita I well filled with voyagers, as raaiiy t5 are flitting seaward for change of air and others are bound for the Hunday School Convention at Seattle, whither they are going, the papers say, abraeepr-imMigtltefriends-of -progress ' are Mr. J. 11. Foster and hi, daughters, Misses "TMaggle and -Mattle, and " Dr. George Gray and Mrs. Gray, -of Albnyr and"Mrs. H. K. Hines, of Portland. The weather la pleasant, affording ample opportunity for enjoying the scenery along the tree-fringed river banks. Nothing ofany note transpires on the. Journey.- The UMiai land-r- lng at way ports is attended with the usual rush to the steamer's side and the; usual addition to our migratory numbers. home, are greeted by a crowded house in the even-. Ing, our subject, VKvidence of Iiumortality," though somewhat out of our line, beiug well re eel ved by. the thinking community, albeit It was not what a preacher who was present, and who 0Hned with prayer, would call orthodox, though qr.Jiia-life he coulJtt- lve -mvel it i-Cbri - tian. A Mr. Ally led the singing, which was' good, and Jodge Caples, who was present wh his accomplished daughters, made an excellent ad dress, which "took off the curse" froraur. owu lndeiendent thinking, as he reiterated our decla ration that the churches sustained ' the schools and Sunday school and carried along our "civiliza tion, though less thaiuone-tweutieth of the eopIe belonged to them. . ' ' --r Why It 1 that our most orthodox professors of religion do not see the neel of gathering iu the other nineteen-twentietlis' of the human family' by some new method, or the revival of the old one, since present 'methods do not reach or con- Lviiice them, u can uot i nderstamlr Of Kalama, where our Sunday school delegates leave us,, there is little leftHave the ghostofjle parted irrfrrtatifrnn lfniv nylinil i i rTlTmiiirt) t lo nil the lifillow sink, where the main part of the town was, wlth-storeff'and'hotels and dwellings, nobody knows, unless theyfojgot, In their haste to growrich by building a terminal city, that water will And its level wherever It has a cht'nce, the Columbia It (ver being no exception to the law.-' . v..- , Hatnier, L-Ilelens. IlolumllA-tUtyVH.n4UvniwiJ den la chairman.- Mr, lrelapd, or the Anortan an admirable paper, by the way, which we'd gladly see in every, house' In Oregon has renderwl us every needed courtesy. .- ' : - - Court is In session and there are a good many lawyers In attendance. There are some distress ing cases on the docket of a character so horrify ing that nobody talks about them. ' The murderer of Mr.' J. W. Robb Is on 'trial,1 and we will try to and the different canneries were passed, all seem ing at a stand-still stage In their existence, quite unlike the busy towns thatTare building up so rapidly In the famous region We have so lately visited," known as "East of the Mountains." . Astoria slipws signs of healthy growth as we pproachjier Lwaterjide,LJ The Upper and -Lower Towns are connected by a plank roadway, upon which a line of half-hour 'busses has been placed, where the, fare Is ten .cents and the accommoda HlotrnQTTiif'greaicr value. . The nlUliseason" has not beeu jo good was hoied for, and busi ness Is somewhat dull ; but from the array of sa loons that greet the' eye upon every' hand, it Is reasonable to conclule that dull times niake.dry throats, and that, uo mutter how much economy -must be exacted from wives and jntuijies, the ay- Tlie Sabbath being over, and, we trust, profita bly sent, we slept at Mr. Corson's and return to IiOwerTown on this (Monday) evening. Wehave not had time formuch social life here yet; but Imve met Mrs, InexHarker,-Mrs. Corwln,-Mrs. Merrill, Mrs. Cleveland, Mrs. TruIIinger, Mrs. Johansen, Mrs. HamllnMrs. lJarrjandIrs. Chance' at their pleasant homes and find them as "strong In the fajth" as ever on the suffrage ques tion. We have spenthours In qulet musing In the observatory at the l'arker House, overlooking the Columbia barr Here we scribble this prosy letter, its dullness caused by no lack of Inspiring scenery, but by the setose" of drudgery that cine feels when compelled to work while too weary o entertain an Idea. .. It Is almost su pper time now, and we must lecture, or try to-night, our'theme, the "I'endlng Suffrage Amendment." The Y. M. a A. Hall has been tendered'us for lectures, free of charge, erage voter must or will have his totatious, at whatever cost. 'And yet we see but little drunk enness pu -the streetsJ i Once In a while we meet some young fellow" whose knees are limberrand we kuow his moral sense Is clouded because of the drink, and we pass him by with a pitying prayer for the coming day when the mothers of the boys may have more, power .than now to keep them sober. " At the Parker House, where we find excellent entertainment, we enjoy a brief season of rest, for which we are truly-grateful. The -carea -of -our ; . public life press heavily of , lite, and we would gladly shift the load to less weary heads' and shoulder for a season. We find no better hotel than the Parker House In all our travels. It Is r hard-finished, new, quiet and clean, and It tablet are supplied with everything but, fish, of .which the average Astorian seems to have bad a surfeit. Mr. 11. K. Parker, the landlord and owner of the hotel, has lately built a steamboat for the j river trade, called the t.Tara Parker, a very pleas- snt liit, mui I'm nucleus of a proni jwjj ndeie nd- ent llne.Oii Monday, the 7th, there were three river excursions from Astoria to accessible points, all well patronliel by orderly citizens, while the "cli urcheweTecor ;res poTid i ngly empty. We may lament as we may over the fact of a "church sea son," but it Is becoming as fashionable as' the opera-or theatrical season, and nobody seems able .to belp It, since all preachers must go a-Surnmer-Ing. It Is only editors, printers, farmers, clerks, .mechanics, bakers,, mi Ik men,-woks, house wires and political missionaries that can't afford vaca te realize this as the Clara Parker steams "lions. tnrwdYouiig'i 1 IltverTTttT'wTIety'wTtr love to go only we've agreed to lecture t Upper Astoria. But we let Master Ilalph go, as a mat . . A LAD'S FIRST KKFOKT. Aktokia, August 7, IHI. To run F.nmiR v the New Xortii wkmt : '. -This Is my-first attempt at rexrtingso I beg yoti to not expect too much of me, give our yeronaLcorivlctlas-4MjKH'rning It nrxl-Hrtnartiiwn nirnittyntlrr We must, not omit to mention the Catholic fair, which closed a most successful lottery season lust Saturday evening. Women and girls who do not wrant to vote, for. fear of being "jostled by men at the spoils," elbowed their way through crowded aisles Und buttou-holed meu.for Vchnce'r-with perfect freedom, and no- man molested them. They could do' no Vorse at the polls, even where there was no tyftem or semblance of order ; and, with the regulations women will help to Inaugu rate, there will be no chance for "Joslttng'T W election day. There: Ought to be none at fairs, either, - ., Miss Mollis Burk,-Af Portland, worked faithfully at the fair to aid the No. 2 fire company In pro curing votes enough to secure a fine silver trumpet over No. l's, who also had diligent workers In the flehL No - were - successful, and -they held - a meeting a little while ago and thanked the young lady In a substantial way by presenting her with a ring and pair ot bracelets. The fair was a finan cial success and netted heavily for the Astoria hospital. ' A. S. I. u JLateb. The lecture is over and.we're not half so tired as before it began. There Was a tine audi ence and the bestof orderrrjust what will be our next move on the public checker-board we cannot decide before mornjng, and then this will be on the way to the printer. Master IUlph Is sound aslee X hftUsleI7probbTyiyliTsTa terday as a "reporter." -The tide Is coming In, lap, lap, lapping around -the pile beneath the lafteil6Tjs1fioor7mTid trundltrrg truoks" triateT rumbling noises on the busy wharves hard by. Goodnight. ' ' ' ' " A. H. I). , Mrs, Amelia Lewis, editor of rood atul Health, speaks thus of Tannerlsm : "The poor, chlldsh exhibitions of starving people teach us nothing, for the process hMwealelienheTL7Tnforer aoIiQ ope who haa erex undeigojQe.thft.ordcal.of 1 fasting from solid food will again be the same Vljfc. mm in iimi . .mill uiiimniiiiiim r"' i rwi --rlir - J - 1 " orous being as far as intellect Is concerned. We venture to assert this In the teeth' of all that may be said to the contrary." ' . TI1K UKVISION, To THE KMTOK lr THE Jtrw .NORTIIWKMT I : .The iiew edition of the -New Testament having been sold and, read , among the people, ami most oH hem having had their say, yoyr liumhle wrv aiit thinks that he must also'offer a' few remarks. The'' first say of mhie I that tlie late edition is Inore 1iklTthe"lloniair Cath Testament, and 'that the itext Protestant translation will be the exact copy of the present Catholic Testament. Now, If we Protestants are compelled to copy both theCatholic Hibleand the New Testament, which your humble servant now favors why not all of us go to the. Catholic book stores and buy a cheap and more J ruecppya mLa.tj0nco.juft ved.one.with all of theltible turmoil?, , I have been reading the Catholic Bible, and find there some twenty or more books than In any and all of the present" Protestant lilblea and Testa ments and I also find there who he Writers all were and what their motives all were wTien writ ing those curious hooka. I find in the. sixteenth chapter of Kdrus that the following named per sons, Larea, - Dabra, Selemla, Kcanus and Asiel wrote the 'dreams of FjKlras In the short erlod of forty , days. They - wrote two ' hundred and four lookav seyrnty-ttrbe-shown only tothe wlse7thatrjij Is to say, such as. wear gowns and blinds and other asendages that .would be In their way In earning aJMngjJLlM! the com men jvr-ople might learn enough to com pel the men of cowl and gown to earn their own living, caused", them to throw away one humlre! and thirty-five books; and now, it the common hent would only throw away t herest of the lllble, the men of great learning and wlwlom would, un like all Jndians, have to go to Work 'or become common vagrants and tramps, which In the future they will 1k; ..The Indian's religion is so gtiol that he will not earn-hs own living, butf compel his harem of sjuaws to do all of the work ; and among all of the religious teachers there Is the -mnW l-nr1'"'1""" 1 f phrnnirt tij I sksI t ion to avoid physical labor and to live off the p of the toll of others. .GoI worship, man worship, and beast ami Image worship, all seem to produce the same results that Is to say, the desire to be Idle missionaries of some kind among some people. - And now, In conclusion, let me give my opinion and that is flmt'the total abolition of physical jnejaLlajyjryL n bi-fore the law, that all might enjoy the sa munities anl privileges, would have a tendency to make gotts of men and men of the present goda, end teach u that all Inspiration Is of men and women only, and that God never deviates from the same natural law to fulfill his work Truth needs no lna1nvMfn Ut h-lle It;- TU uatural.sll mr rftuly to rm-lv it; . U-nettU- wt the force f rlest tr tm-Utn - At one to rhunite nil hunisn af Ion. TTTMI. The steamer "Clara Parker" was going with an excertlon .party to Youngs river falls on Sunday, 'the 7th and Mr. Parker, that's the owner of the tMiotuJnvitHj me to go along as. reMrter, and I agreed, so I will try. y She left the Astoria dock, the, boat did, at nine o'clock. - It, was cloudy but dry, that Is all but the water, which was pretty wet. There was a crowd of us, with the women, babies and lunch baskets to take care of. We steamed- down the Columbia for, I don't know-Jiow long, and then we turned Into a river that , Is very small, and that I guess, Is why they call It Youngs river. . ; We'got within two miles of the falls on high tide, and then we landed and set out afoot,1 headed by a boy who said he new the way. 'He Jed us over hills, logs, and rough ground In general and we finally reached the falls all tired out. They are about 03 feet high ad are very beautiful. I met Mr. Mulkejfof Portland and loaned him' my hook and line, and he caught me a few trout. , We went back 'to ' the bout by a better path than the boy-toad- led.tis. As the boat was trying to-dodge the snags on her way dowu Youngs river on low tide her stern caught upon a rotten log and broke It (not the buatbut tlifc log) in iktIcs. was standing on the back part of-tle lower deck by the wheel who would have been knocked over board, If' he had not been holding to an Iron rod running along the side of the boat, but he was couverefJLwHh pecles of the decayed wood. lThLStemer re turnetL to Astoria at six o'clock I had a good time. . ' H. It. P. man 1 1 Blood and Victoria Woodhull, as has been an nounced, but IslanTrish heiress. A It K WOM EN S LA VJ-K? ; .Jltt.r'lo tlie New York Hu,j ; To THK F,IIT)K S'V; "Woiiunar not'slavea," you say. liet us see : ' .' The founders of this Goverunicut called t he ni sei ve slaves bcause they were taxinl without reiret'Utatiu n Ytth-Ia very -In-whleh-- they -lived. under George lllwwas n large aiuLliberaJi freelom compared with the condition of the wom en of this country. nder'GJorge, the King, nuyrefathers were free to pursue any pnfession their intellect or in clination desired. Tlie women of America are debarred the lucra 1 1 re-profession. ' r ''" " Under George, the King, the lept, our fore fathers were free to aspire to any ofllce lower thflb thguthrone. . - The 'wbmen of-Amerlca may not aplre to the humblest office In the gift of the JM-opIe. v Under George, the King, if accused of any of fense, etty o H'nal,our forefatliera were tried by Juries of their peers, mid sentenced by Judges who were only their equals before the law; It-accused- of - any offense, letty or penal, the women of this falsely called republio are tried by , urTes of master and sentenced by Julgen who in their sovereigns by the accident of sexi " ' . When oneclasof men hold absolute MHer over Another clasM, . tli whl te men 1 n t he SHit Ironc" liebl oyer the bNek, we call the one a master class and the other a slave class. ' j . . - - So, when one sex holds absolute rule over til other, as men hold over women, the one Is master, sex and the other is a slavo sex ; and It the Suh deny this hard fact, we' would like to hear the grounds on which It can base such denial. " We arc not only taxed without representation, . anI governol without our own consent, but from), birth to death we labor under such a loul of legal . disabilities as only abject slaves endure. ,. - lioors of learning are closed to our am.bl.tion. . OfllceM of honor and profit forbidifen. - vejrofessionalebarreL -"'V In alltlojiJIiithese wrongs, everyJnMltution In the land.'Uklng Its tone from the law, whlch holds us Inferior to the males of our kind, also I looks upon us as inferior, -thereby overwhelmlnfc us with untold and uncounted .humiliations and wrougs. . ffhe churches conaUler-the best-of-or-sea-aatUr--worthy to enter. their pulpits; while the sinful' they seem to look tipon as having no part In tl ... plau of salvation. ' ' "r.; Medicine deems us unfit lo practice its theraeu-: tie, Even the mechanical trade of dentistry fancies it may elevate Itself among the learned profession by exjidudlng womeu from lts pructlce. The tribunals of so-callel Justice forbid women to enter their courts save as criminals to be trie by jttrics; uf masters and srntewtiJjjiJatgtw who are their sovereigns by the accident of sex. If this Is not slavery, what Is It? Would tb editor of the A'mm fed that he was a free man were lie tn this condition ? . Thousands anfl.thousaiul of ns-. groes In the old time had good masters) who gave them long roe; were they any Icsi slaves ? "Men will not-study- this question.; 'Sex bias so distorts the Jwlgment, they cannot see t might. Atwut a month ago Governor Iong, of M,HHsnchu si'tts, made a speech in Boston from a Woman Suflrage platform, advocating the cause 011 the ground of woinau'a abstract right to sittrraget. Governor Iong statel, however, that he brought ' uo enthusiasm to the cause, Itcc ause be did notr see any. suffering that came from women's, en slavement, or any good that would come from her" freedom. Tills., was precisely the position of the Southera.plantersln the old time. Many of them admitted Uje abstract right of all men to 1rdomi7 but saw no need In the negro's case, he was ao contented andwell off tinder his master's govern ment! . ... -7 ... '. .. 7- Thinking women, who look from fleets causes, see a million evILt resulting from slavery, J Every wlfe-lsBatngJs directly chargeable to the law, which tells the man that he Is the superior the governor, she the Inferior, the subject Every street-walker I directly chargeable to the law. Prostitution is ah unnatural tralo Is dint tfy'op sel to the Ingrained physical laws that should , govef-wo4n4--TbelKiribUt- trade bv the out -growth of the unnatural condition of alwdutc sub jection of women to mcn.r Firmly convinced of htW) any wnil,,t.hHuvmi.p l,rng to sxlvN;acy of this cause all the enthusiasm of their miTs? EMXAnETir Avery XfKn:wnTitRR. Mr. M. P. Brewster, of Wesley Station. Iowa, writes t "Knclosed please find &V00 for your val- uableVpertloiijeserTethe symjtby ami co-' J operation of every woman In the laud for your indefatigable labors I n-thercause of woman's)-? r Miss Blood, who was reeenttv msertoH tn Tw. I ..,..l..t 1.... iii,.. tU V mm,. pMi.iiy.lirr-Y - '"H-Tr-' wT-r-n - - ' -"" " t 1 Wiw m. mwnm f jl l iWlg iiou w ixjni yHipueii, is noi auaugnier 01 uoionei will of one who Is heart and soul In your great work, and the wish that your effort may ere be crowned with sUoeeas." " -v " It, -- y, - -i V 5 -y V :rv. v: -- it' A '