lamlgratloa and Protection. Immigration under present conditions presents a serious problem. No one can sit at his desk and absorb the facts that come to us in reports without appreciating the peril that threatens should hard times come to this country. I am not an alarmist, but when I see hundreds of thousands of ignorant for eigners coming into our great cities every year I think I can realize in some degree the danger that will come from their discontent and dissatisfaction when there are no wages to be earned. Commissioner Sargent. "When there are no wages to be earned." What memories such a sup position brings up. It carries us back to the days of panic and idleness follow ing the Compromise Tariff of 1S33; it carries us back to the worklees and wagelessdays and years between 1850 and 1860, brought on by Free-Trade; it carries us back to the idle men and women of 1895-6, and the loss of earn ings due to the Free-Trade law of 1S94, says American Economist. With the experience and knowledge which we gained from these awful pe-1 riods following Free-Trade legislation, j we can well appreciate the necessity of continuing our present excellent tariff law to enable us to care for these mil lions who are coming to our shores. We must protect them by continuing to protect our labor and industry from one end of the country to the other. It may be that some of these immigrants are of an undesirable character. It may be that better immigration laws are desira ble. That is something that we must leave to the wisdom of Congress. Whatever the present law is we must accept it and face the conditions which are before us. It is protection and pros perity that invites these foreigners to our shores. They do not come in such numbers when we are living under Free-Trade. The same fiscal policy which invites them must proteet them and enable them to gain a foothold and become profitable members of the great American army of producers and con sumers. It does not take so very long for a for eigner leaving his home where he gained an income of perhaps twenty cents a day to become a good American citizen earning ten times that amount per day. Perhaps at first the foreigner is careful ! .of his dollars, and is not so liberal in his ' expenditures as the native born and ! those who have been citizens a number j -of years. But soon he begins to aim at the American standard of living, he be-) comes ambitious to own his business i -and his own home, and to dress and eat ' and enjoy the same luxuries as the average American citizens throughout the country. Our home market has most apprecia-1 bly increased annually, not only by our j own augmented wants, but by the in "creased demands of the newcomer. In but a fe iv years the most diligent be-, come independent, while a few join our wealthy classed. Among our million-1 aires today c-n La found the represen tatives of every nation on earth, many oi whom came to our Ehores but a few years ago penniless. It may be that our J immigration laws are too liberal, or it may be that they are too liberally ad- j ministered. At the Eame time we have ! ?one on now. for over a century inviting the poor and the weak from abroad to this country of opportunity. There need be no fear but what the vast majority of theEe immigrants will in a very short time become good American citizens, law abiding, well to do and reputable upbuilders of the nation's institutions. There may be lawless characters among them, and these must be checked with a firm hand at the first evidence of any outbreak against the country's laws and customs. No doubt a return to Free-Trade and idleness would bring a conditions awful to contemplate. It would bring riot and war with the inevitable poverty .and ruin and death which follow in the wake of a fiscal policy giving no opportunity for employment and no chance for compen sation. Let us see to it, then, that we continue our present most admirable fiscal policy; that we continue to protect our men as well as our industries ; that we continue to maintain and build up our home market, worth more than all the markets of the world combined, and that we do not disturb the causes of the present splendid growth of industries, our splendid advancement of citizenship and our splendid standard of living, which cannot help but invite those abroad who have been struggling for a bare subsistence, and have in their na tures a single spark of ambition. A Pitiful Case. This was the wild cry that rang out in Superior Judge Albertson's courtroom and startled the, staid lawyers and hard ened hangers-on about the courthouse. It was the finale of one of the moat pathetic incidents in the social life of Seattle. Four months ago Mrs. Sophia Nelson was a bright-eyed sunnytempered little lady, the chief ornament of a lovely home, the object of a loving husband's care and beloved by her numerous friends and acquaintances. Last week she was sent to the Stilacoom insane asylum a howling maniac, believing her self commanded by God to kill and de vour her infant child. It was just four months ago that Mrs. Nelson gave birth to a baby boy, and the loss of her mind is attributed by the physicians to the agonies of childbirth. When she was taken into Judge Albert son's court to bo examined as to her san ity the scene was pathetic beyond de scription. The efforts of the sweet-faced trained nurse, who had been caring for her, and her broken-hearted husband and brother to calm her were without avail. Her agony at the thought that she must obey the imaginary command was terrible to see. She repeatedly at tempted to check herself, screaming: "Lord, let me sacrifice myself instead of my boy." As the unfortunate woman was taken from the courtroom she threw her arms around her husband's neck and implored him to pray to God to release her from the awful. promise she said she had given. FW Frames to be used is very much a matter of taste. It is import ant, though, that the frames set properly on the nose, and at the right distance from the eyes. That the lenses be perfectly centered, and how are you to know when .some one is guessing. WE NEVER GUESS Glasses Right, Good Sight, R.F.WINSLOW Je5IefMd uyuwiau REDUCED All Colored Summer Goods Reduced to COST We must ma&e room for New Goods WOLLENBERG BROS., Phone 801. Preparing Strawberry Plants for Fall. Now is the time to do this. Get a lot of 3-inch flower pots, and prepare a rich compost for them. Go into the straw berry patch and find the young runners that have made little white roots an inch or so long. Take these to a convenient table and pot them in the 3-inch pots. Now in an unused cold frame spread a bed of coal ashes and on these set the pots closely together. Water well and shade with a screen of building laths nailed an inch apart and then see that the plants never suffer for water. You can attend to a large number in this way, and in the fall you will have a lot of plants that can be knocked out of the pots and set so as to get strong enough to 'make a full crop the next spring. The books will tell you a lot about grow ing pot plants of strawberries by craw ling about the patch and buving pots and putting the runners on them to root. But all this is a waste of time and labor, and you can have just as good potted plants by taking up the young runners as suggested and potting them in a con venient place. Growers in the trade who o5er the potted plants by the thou sands do not crawl over the ground and sink the pots in the soul. They leave that advice for those who do not know better. Practical Farmer. x MRS. H. E ASTON iB prepared to wait upon old and new customers and: friends with a full and complete stock of -GROCERIES- All fresh and of the very best Quality. Teas aad coffees are i specialties. Your patronage solicited. r c r i . BEST MEAL IN THE CITY FOR 25 CENTS. THE NEW Dill! Cor. Washington and Main Streets Mrs. Belle Collins nil Oregon SUBLINE ahd Union Pacific Title Guaranteed: Loan Co. EOaSBOBG, OBEGOX. D. HamILTOS, President D C. HAXIX.TOS, Secj. sad Tresi Write your Farm Experience and Send- Once in tbe Court Hock. Hare the only con pleienet ol sbotreetbooki In Doturlu County Abstract and Certificates ot Title lurnUhol to Doozla county Isnd and mlnln claim. Hire alto a complete et ol Traclnc of all towsfhlp plate In tbe BoMbunt, Oreson, O. S. Laa d Dl trlct. Will make blue print copies of any town snip Of your life if you bu y a buggy, hack or road wagon before 3ou inspect our stoclc'of John Deere vehicles. We Are After You Haven't missed a sale since car arrived. Finest line o spring goods ever brought to the county. CHURCHILL & W00LLEY 1 A. C. MAR5TER5 & CO. j In 1902 the Southern Pacific Company published a pamphlet entitled "Cali fornia Industries." It contained princi pally the personal testimonies of experi . enced cultivators, says the Pacific Home stead. A short description of the dif ferent sections was given and following this the testimonies of fruit, growers, dairymen, etc., etc., Ehowing the number of acres cultivated to oranges, grapes, olives, alfalfa, etc., the cost to cultivate the yield per acre and price the products were sold for. This was one of the most practical pieces of literature that could be put out. Sir. W. E. Coman, G.P. A. of thrt Southern Pacific Company, has written the agents of that company in Oregon that it is the intention to get up a similar publication for Oregon and asks that all who are able to give tbe results from their farms, daries, fruit orchards, berry patches, etc., in Oregont write the results for publication in this pamphlet. He says he wants only the actual results under favorable conditions the same as can be accomplished by any intelligent grower under normal conditions ; that is, he wants only honest representations. Any of our readers in Oregon who will take the time to give their experiences will be doing the com pany a court sy and the state justice. You may send your statement to Mr Coman, or to the Plaindealeb and it will be forwarded to him. DRUGGISTS N. A. FOSTER & CO., GOVERNMENT LANDS Of every descriytion. Farms and Min eral Lands. Oregon, Washington and Minnesota. (j23) OAKLAND. OEEGON Abstract of Title to Deeded Land. Papers prepared for filing on Govern ment Land. Blue Printa of Township Maps showing all vacant Lands. FRAME. ALLEY Architect, Abstracter. Plans and Estimates for all Build ings. Special designs for Office Fixtures Office in new Bank Building. 'Phone 415 ROSEBURG. OREGON "God says I must kill and eat my little boy, and I dare not disobey him. How can I do it? Ob, how can I do it?" FREE1 FREEH FREEH 1 The Great Majestic Cooking Exhibition Thursday, Sept 3, 4, and b, On a range that cannot be broken or melted in any fire. Will bake and serve biscuits with coffee in three minutes by a lady from our own community. No experts from abroad. A representative from the factory will be present and give free lectures on economic cooking. Come everybody to Stearns & Ciiexoweth,. a27. Oakland, Ore. THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD The Greatest Farm Taper ol the North west. Published weekly at Salem, Orc Kon. Edited by the Farmer of the gKorthwest. Twenty rages. IlluMrated. A WESTERN PAPER FOR WESTERN PEOPLE 5 Papers lor $1.00. Less than acts each Publication began March 1. 1900. Now has 9,300 subscribers. Phenomenal growth is due to it being tho best farm paper pub lished. YOU SHOULD READ IT HOMESTEAD AND PLAINDEALER $2.75 A YEAR. We Want Your Patronage and as an inducement we offer U. S. P. Standard Drugs, Fresh Patent Medicines, High Grade Perfumes, Soaps, Toilet Arti cles, and Specialties FOR go to THE ROSELEAF CIGARS, TOBACCO HND SMOKERS' SUPPLIES. Jackson Street, - - Roseburg, Oregon Ft. W- FENN, CIVIL- ENGINEER. (Lately with tho government geographical and geological survev of Brazil South America.) " United States Deputy Mineral Surveyor. OfllceoverPoatoffice. ROSEBURG, OREGON. Correspondence solicited A. SALZMAN, Pratical WatchmaRer, Jeweler, Optician. Watches, Clock's, Jewelry Diamonds and Silverware Watch Repairing a Specialty.