PAGE FOUR. ASTORIA, OREGON, TlirKSlUY, SEPTEMBER 8, l!HH. Cfte morning flstorian ESTABLISHED 1S73 PUBLISHED BY ASTORIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. RATES. By mail, per year 0 00 By mail, per month 50 By carriers, per month CO THE SEMI-WEEKLY ASTUItlAX. By mail, per year, in advance $1 00 REFORMERS' MONSTROUS PROPOSAL. Perhaps because. II. W. Scott's name vas used bv the direct primary "league," the Oregonian must needs undertake defense of the legislative abortion recently brought into existence by the misguided voters of the unfortunate state of Oregon. But even the astute Oregonian, professing superior knowledge of matters political, admits that the new law is full of defects, and implores that it be given "fair trial" before being pronounced to be what it is the great est legislative farce ever concocted by would-be re formers. he attitude of the direct primary reformers to ward the independent voter is quite plainly brought out in the Oregonian 's belabored reply to The As torian's criticism of the new bill. THE INDE PENDENT VOTER, the Oregonian assures us, HAS NO PRE-ELECTION RIGHTS. HE SHALL BE EITHER REPUBLICAN. OR DEMOCRAT, OR ELSE HE SHALL NOT VOTE FOR CANDI DATES FOR NOMINATION. He is read out of a constitutional voice in the selection of candidates by our present-day reformers, despite the acknowledged .fact that THE INDEPENDENT VOTER IS THE SAFETY-VALVE OF OUR "WHOLE POLITICAL SYSTEM. By what act of God or man, by what precept of Americanism, was the right delegated to such men as the editor of the Oregonian to say that any man shall be denied the right to cast a secret ballot? By what authority has it been decreed that the inde pendent voter shall have no voice in the selection of candidates for seme of whom he must vote or stay away from the polls? Did the men who fought. bled and died for our country contemplate legisla tion that would require a voter to subscribe himself to either the democratic or republican party in order that he might exercise his right of suffrage? Is fidelity to party organization essential to enjoyment of the privileges guaranteed by the constitution ? Long before the state election was held The Asto rian pronounced and denounced the direct primary bill as un-American. Let the honest voter consider the questions propounded above, and he will agree with us that the direct primary bill has no place upon the statute books of an American state. The Oregonian sets up the anarchistic contention that "an independent voter has no more right to vote in a republican primary than a stockholder of the Northern Pacific railway has to vote in an elec tion of directors in the Southern Pacific." What sickening rot! The independent voter has the God, given right to go to republican or democratic primar ies and express his choice of candidate. It would be just as reasonable to deny hiiii this right as to deny him the right to vote for 'republican or democratic candidates after they were nominated. The Ore gonian and the fanciful reformers with which it has identified itself would name candidates for the in dependent voter to choose between and would take from him his American prerogative of expressing his choice for nominees at primary elections. "We have failed utterly to find one reasonable innovation in Oregon's direct primary law, and are not surprised therefore that the Oregonian has refrained from re sorting to reason in its discussion of the outrageous measure. Very flippantly our Portland contemporary asks whether or not The Astorian ever heard of a primary election under the old system in which a man did not have to make known his party affiliation before he could vote. The Astorian never heard of a pri 'mary election under the old system at which a man was required to publicly or privately. convey any in timation of his political faith. If he happened to vote the republican primary ticket, it was taken for granted that he was desirous of voting for republi can delegates to the convention. He might have been a republican, or he might have ben a democrat. His political faith was his own business, and the con stitution of the United States rind every principle of common decency intended that it should always re main so. Voters, just ponder for a moment upon this "argument" for that feature' of the direct pri mary law which requires a voter to publicly announce his political faith : "Every man who goes to a republican primary to voe for delegates to a republican convention thereby announces himself as a republican., Otherwise he would have no business participating in that primary. The only change made by the new law is to require the voter to make his public announcement of his party affiliation some time in advance, so that his Hllow-nun may have a chance to know in what primary election he intends to vote. No man who went to a primary election under the old law could conceal his party affiliation, a,ml the only dilTeivuee under the new system is that, if he undertakes de ception, his trickery will be known in advance," The man. ihen. who undergoes change of political faith is a trickster! He is practicing a "deception !" According to this doctrine, the democrat must never change his politics; the republican must always re main republican. No more preposterous idea was ever advanced in the annals of our republic, and I he argument stamps its author a numskull. lxt us sup pose Governor Chamberlain is renominated. Some of the 7000 or more republicans who elected him will want to vote again for him. Shall they be required tc publicly renounce allegiance to the republican party because they favor George Chamberlain for governor? Has not the voter the constitutional right to vote for the candidate of his choice at the primary election? The people of Clatsop county want C. W. Fulton returned to the United States senate. "When the voters of this county are called upon to choost members of the legislature that will elect Mr. Fill ton s successor, must democrats renounce aliegianci to their party because they favor the selection of re publican candidates best fitted to bring about ,tlu re-election of Senator Fulton! People of anarchistic tendencies perhaps will answer in the affirmative but all men of ordinary reason and intelligence will reply, emphatically, "No." "Party organization" demands this, howls the Oregonian, putting party above constitution. If th Oregonian feels that a man shall not forsake one party and go to another, why did it so industriously support Y. J. Furnish, the last republican candidate for governor? Mr. Furnish used to be a good dem ocrat, yet the Oregonian made no protest when he broke into the republican party. What is good logic now ought to have been equally as good then Only the veriest dreamer would for a moment seek to contend for the terms of the direct primary bill. It is a disgrace to the state, utterly impracticable and without the lease semblance of reason. The provision requiring voters to state their polit ical faith before the primaries merely has the effect of putting the bulk of the voters under the thumbs of the men for whom they work, and of increasing rascality. The manufacturer will be in position t require his men to vote at primary elections. If he happens to be a democrat, his employes must register as democrats, and those of them who may be repub lieans will thereby lose their right to express their choice at the republican primaries. The registration books stand as a check upon the political conduct of every workman and place him absolutely under the control of his employer. The Astorian begs to assure the Oregonian that it understands thoroughly every scftion of the direct primary bill, and that it is and always has been aware of the fact that the provisions of the measure are confined to parties casting 25 per cent of the vote for congressional candidates. In this respect, also, the law is un-American, as it excludes the smaller parties, the members of which are guaranteed by onr constitution quite as much political freedom as was original y guaranteed to those who seek to deprive them of it. In a local article appearing in The Astorian the predicament of Clatsop county democrats was stated backwards. Correction was later made in this col umn. Hundreds of democrats in this county have voted a citizen ticket for years. Many of those voters are foreign-born. As only about one-tenth of the voters are capable of following the schemes of political tricksters, many who have voted the citi zen ticket in the past will register, unknowingly, as citizens. They will find no citizen ticket to vote, and therefore will have no vote. They are in precisely the same fix as the independents legislated out of their great American right to vote as they see fit, and to vote secretly. No condemnation is too severe for the men respon sible for the Oregon direct primary law. DYSPEPSIA Hrln lakm yen wonflortnl "Pnni-nrolt" for three month ami Vetnf vnMrly crmt f toniacti catarrh ami ilyatata.. I think wurU of traU la due to"t'at,ftreU' f"r Oielr wumlerful cituinillloll. 1 have uk"i iiumernna mher -eallel romeillea but Willi. .m avail ana I HiiiI thai Caiareti reller mure In a ilay tliaa nil Ui utliera 1 hava taken voiiM In rear." . Jaiuo M.'vjuih, M JWreer 8k, Jerjej Cllr, N. J. Best For CANOYCATMAATK PWant. PItlil, Potent. TMtaQontl.r-o flood, Never SWkeii, Weaken r Urll'o. lv, Si,'. w. Never oM In bulk. Th genuine tablet umixid COO. tiuarantooii to turn ur your tu.iuey Uaca. Sterling Remttly Co., Chicago or N.Y. AXXUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES WILL MAKE REPLY TODAY. P. A. STOKES "The Store That Does Things" i OCEAN TRAVEL. So great is the multitude of visitors to Europe who are now returning to this country that the first cabin rooms of some of the first class steamships have been overcrowded. One large vessel found the ac commodations so taxed that the management decided to transport no steerage passengers on the western voyage. That appears to have beenan almost Un precedented decision. Trans-Atlantic travel year after year swells' to amazing proportions. Within a decade important additions of monsters of the deep have been made to the ocean fleet, but other leviathans will be launched within a comparatively early period, while still others, larger than any now afloat, have been do signed. The speed of the future champions of the was driven by turbines will doubtless surpass also the most striking feats on record. The czar has made his son a colonel and now hope Kuropatkin will be encouraged to advance fearlessly upon the breastworks. Russia' Answer to United States Con cerning Contraband. Ia)Ih1oii. Sept. ".The preliminary lvpit'jtentatloiia miido liy ('emit t'Hiu k rndorfT, Hie Russian tiiiitnisNiiiltir to tlir furelKil ottVe. liulleiilea that Ituxxi.i I on thi point of making suhstantliil io,i cessions to the I'nltod SUtfS and Ureal liritalii rt'KurdltiK the uui'stlon of ion- li alia ml of war, as a result of the sub mission by FotvlKn Minloter I.am dorf of th report of the (tcnoral eum mission to KiniH'ror Nlt-holus to. lay, to gether with the Information transmit ted by Ambassador IlenokiMiilorff show ing the views of the Itrltlsh govern ment. The Russian foreign minister Is ex pected to present to the Itrltlsh gov ernment, through Sir Churles HarlnKe the Itrltlsh ambassador to Hussla. to morrow, the formal reply of the Rus sian government. It Is understood In official circles here that Russia, while not acknowledging herself at fault for the capture made by her ships In the past, will more speclliciilly describe the condition under which certain goods, such as foodstuffs mid cotton, become In her view contraband. The ItrKlsh foreign office Is satisfied from the representations made to It that such substnntlitl ccncesslons will be made by Russia it, will tend to an easy settlement of the vexatious huh. tlon. To "swap horses while crossing stream" would be about wis as to divert any part of your advertising appropriation to uncertain mediums.. THE PACIFIC LUTHERAN ACADEMY does not claim to be the cheapest school on the Pacific coast, but It nlms to be the best of its kind. It has made it a point to secure good teachers, knowing that a poor teacher Is dear at any price. It hn. made provision for good library and laboratory and other school equip ment, knowing that evin a good teach er cannot do his best without these aids. The school Is therefore In a position to offer advantages to young men and women such as only comparatively few schools on the Pnclfla coast can offer. Our new catalogue will give wull in formation. Send for it. Address DEPARTMENT B, PACIFIC LUTHERAN ACADEMY. Parkland, Wash. &e STAR THEATER ASTORIA'S FASHIONABLE VAUDE VILLE HOUSE IN CONNECTION WITH STAR AND ARCADE THEA-. TERS OF PORTLAND ii n a n We beg to announce to the pub lic the opening of our Fill and Win ter DUNLAT HATS. Tis a gentle manly hit, built on gentlemanly lines, suitable to the most fastidious. Sold P. A. Stokes' way, money back if you tbant it :: :: See display in west window. The Store That Does Things" P. A. STOKES r AN ASTORIA PRODUCT Pale Bohemian Beer Best In The Northwest North Pacific Brewing Co. Change of Program Monday. thingt of Acu Thursday. MONSTEIt HILL .V''k Kcjrliiniii"; MONDAY MATINEE, SEPT. 5th THE TWO BENNS, Spectacular Sketch Artists and Come dians. 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