THE COLUMBIAN. St. Helen, Columbia Co., Or. FBIDAY, tfL? 21, 1832. STTBSC&FTIOX BATES. 1 ywkr, in sdtanee... $2 00 -imoath 1 50 J months " 100 AbVZB'tlSUro HATES: Dm square (It) lines) first insertion 2 00 eh subsequent insertion 1 00 E. O. ADAMS. Editor & Proprietor. ORATION, DellTered by J. It. Ffterton at Clatskanie, Oregon . July 4, 188. Continued from our last. The necond day of rejoicing is Ihb h re are here gathered together to cele brate Tlie glorious 4th of July. Kow I shall hot advise any man to get drunk to day4 but If t waa a magistrate I would never fine a man for getting " full" on thia day. The vry soul is full of lift? and vigor, a disposition to snout aim yell and do something extraordinary takes possession of us all. The American boy has for weeks been saving up his nickels in order to have a good supply for investment in flags, fire crackers, bombs, powder, soda-water and other Fourth of July necessaries, and he will have a good time, except in sOrne places where parsimonious insur ance Companies abridge his rights and the dreaded policeman snatches him up and while Causing him great fear gives hicu a vivid idea of how king craft oper ates on the ppople-. But here -in the mountains where love of freedom is drawn in with every breath of pure air and our wood covered fastnesses seem Nature's own stronghold of freedom the boys can shout, whoop, yell, beat drunn, shoot guns, fire bombs, shake themselves all oVr, do what they piease and have tich a good time as only an American boy ttn such a day can have and there is none to molest him or make him afraid, though I must insure the Anxiety of the mothers of the boys from day break un :i i , i v.. j x i vucjr mi c atuo iu auuu ill ucu tti night. come all who have come to join with us and help us to properly celebrate thi. day. Nehalem, St. Helen, Portland, Marshland, Beaver, and other places have sent us a share. Nearly every country and clime has here some repre sentative, and all of us who arc to the manor born have not to look back many years to find in our ancestors the same kind of people as are the new ar rivals who escaping from the king cursed countries came where they are free. Gathered together are the people of both sexes and all agt the grey haired pio neer, whose years have passed the three fcore and ten, the aged matron who Wai part of the peaceful yet conquering army who endured privation, dangers and exposures almost beyond leltef in order toLBecure homes in the wilderness and open the way or those who followed r those yet to come. The struggles of these people for years, was as heroic as any ever undergono by any people, and they were as brave as the soldiers of any time. They can well be proud as they look upon their work. Tha stalwart eons and tair daughters or these early pioneers are here mingling together' with the later arrivals who have made their homes on Clatskanie, and are doing their utmost to build up homes in the mighty forests that cover the most fertile soil on Earth. Young and old, married and single, from what ever place, or country, all We to-day as one in the one feeling that they are part of the big fifty-fiye million peo ple who go to make up the inhabitants of our country. To-day all political jealous ies ara buried, all sectional hatreds if there arc any are covered up or oblitera ted and we feel that we are one people of one common country and one Flag, Our haarU are large enough to take in all ; to know no North, no South, no '.Zast, no Went, but only one grand and "indivisible country of the people, by :the people and for the people," The pooreMt Iwy to-day i proud of the i fact that his chances of beooming Presi dent ara as goed a the pampered son of VauderbiJt Stanford, or any other of ,mr Government subsidized aristocrats, .rid evn Johnson's Chinese oook seems .to partake of the American enthusiasm .Everywhere prevalent and contagious to day. The log cabins of our country have been; famous fop the liberty loving men and cornea reared iu them, and in the homof dangff when foe threatened our country, .these ame .country homes, hnmbla though? they' be, will furnUh the brave and sturdy aons who will stand a. iUvU2 wajl of steel between oar home and whatever dangers menace them. When war's dread alarm sounds through our land they will ' Rally 'round the flag" though they perish there, or worse, return wounded wrecks to suffer ever af ter till merciful death relieves them. You are , 11 familiar with the Declar ation of Independence which you have just heard read. To every lover of free dom it is the most sacred instrument ever drawn Up. The time it was given to the world, the noble men Who be lieved in the rights of nien and who dared place their names to ity and set at defiance, not only England but all the WOrlcL These wretches' who lacked by ignorant and brutal soldiers rdthless ly trampled down the people, denied them all rights but the right to suffer, respected neither sex or age, who took from them all their subsistence but a mere starving-portion, who denied them the right of petition, who would not al low them representation, who taxed ev erything but the air hey breathed, and who would have pensioned any one find ing a way by which that could be taxed and who claimed to govern by Divine right; laughed in Scorn at the to them futile attempt of these sons of liberty to break their shackles. -These men of i the revolution still livo in the minds and are cherished in the hearts of all the people in our land, and that feeling will never grow dim till time is no more, and deed of all men are forgotton. That Declaration scorned by j the crowned heads, and the titled aristocrats was, as if by the birds of the air borne to the down trodden people all over Europe. The lowliest peasant, and most ignorant serf heard of it, and felt that it was the masric sword which would sever the chains of Slavery all over the world, and would hew to pieces the thrones and scepters of all Kings and Despots. The poor people rejoitted in it, and their hearts were with the little band who defying the whole world fought for liberty or death. These noble men askfd no rights for themselves they were not willing to allow to all the people. And it, will yet be the means of freeing from king rule the people of the world, and giving to every man and! woman liberty and equality. With the eight years of war, the vic tories arrtl defeats, the sufFrrings, dan gers and trials, their hopes of success great, or their despondency almost in supportable, history has made you fa miliar ahd I leave it out as you can read it, or you know it better than I do. They threw their live fcnd fortunes in to the scale believing that " the noblest place tor man to die is where he dies for man," and the best of writers in song and story have told their deeds of valor so wll that it is not enough for me to try to follow in their footsteps. I re member when a boy sitting by my great "rand-father Nathan Pratt llobbins who died in 1857, aged 103 years, and listening to him while he upoke of the revolution, Lexington and its martyrs to libeity's cause, Bunker Hill where our undiciplined troops showed the Brit ish what stuff was in a people deter mined to be free, Wyoming and its de fenceless people butchered by British and savages, Valley Forge, with its cold and hunger, Saratoga with its glorious victories, Trenton and other places seemed real. The merciless savages and similar Hessians and Tories all seemed real living personages. ) The burning cabins, the fleeing women and children, the yells of the fiends as they -shasedj killed and calped a helpless woman ana dashed out the brains of an innocent babe, all were to me as they are to-day to all of you, living and real pictures ot what these people went through for us. While crowned heads and their rain ions nought our destruction, from every part of Europe came noble and brave men to cant their fortunes with us. To France who sent us laPayette and thousands of hnr bravest and best we owp our liberty to-day, and the deeds of the other brave foreigners who made our cause their own axe wt on history's page by th aide of Washington, and in our hearts their memories are ever green. Who can read cf Jasperj of John Paul Jones, d'Estaing, Do Kalb, and hun dreds of o' harts of these liberty loving foreigners without having his heart ex pand with patriotism and a desire to em ulate their deeds should occasion ever offer. History is full of the deeds of the huroos of the revolution. To name the in stven if I could remember them would take a long time and the boys and girls would get out of patience waiting for the opening of the'lunch basket. You have read of Wayne. Mr. Bryant the J founder of Clatskanie, an aged veteran nearly 80 years of age I believe remem bers seeing him. Wayne if you reccol lect was almost invincible. He once told Washington that he " would storm Hell if he would plan the attack." Rather blasphemous perhaps but illustrative of the man. Many songs were sung of him. 1 had a collection of revolution ary songs but don't know where they are, I remember 'one stanza of a song atoUt Wayne : And many a red coat here to-night The Continental Scorning, Shan't live to See the blaic of the brbad sunlight As it shines on the morrow morning. Then who would shrink from the perilous brink. When led on by id. I Attth ny Wiyni ?' Our country should never forget the debt WC owts them. The green sod of Erin, nOw trampled to mud by soldiers of the same crown from which we were freed and whose, merciless, Avaricious, bloody hand is on the throats of over half the peOplo of the world, sent us Montgomery, jasper, Wayne and thou sands more. Braver men or more de voted ones never fought in even holy freedom's cause. We hear the piteous wails of these pecple in every breeze that comes .from Ireland, and still we do nothing to help them. They cry to the world to save them from annihilation & they appeal to deaf ears, or else to those unable to assist. In their fate we see vhat wc have escaped from. We invite these people, here as we do the whole world, and each star on our flag as it waves in the sunlight serves as a beacon to the rlown trodden people of the old world to light them to where Freedom reigns supreme, a ltd after tHcir long weary and dangerous voyage across the ocean they catch a glimpse of Freedom's banner and its glistening stars, they feel a new life born into them, and are ready to do and die with us. They ftel that they are in a country of equal rights ahd privilege?, and all who are worthy soon throw off all allegiance to the despots they eseaped from and Income Ameri can citizens We welcome all the world who will become as we are, but we do n'rii want, :.nd in rpitt of fanatics and greedy monopolists we will soon fix it so that Asiatic slavery or ether of their kind cannot come here-. We all trust the day is not far off when the world will contain only fre people, when Ireland will take its rank among the Nations of the Earth, its peo ple be free and independent and the mer ciless rule of riEnglanJ's crown be done awy with forever, and while we hope that, we a's") liopr for the speedy down fall of all the tyrann'c d govt rnraents and the giving of freedom to all the peo ple. Not alone to the men of the revo lution do we owe our success. The wo men of that day proved more than Spar tans in their courage and. willingness to sacrifice all for the cause, and but for their aid and ccmfort the British would have triumphedv They worked in the fields to raise provisions to feed the armies. They spun wool and flaX and made clothes for the soldiers. They gave their jewels and silver over to be coined into money to buy arms and other things needed. They melted up their pewter pots and pans into bullets, and many a red coat Hessian and savage was made a de cent fellow of by a bullet east by these devoted women from a battered plate or mug, and there were many instances where like the famous Mollie Pitcher they, like the Amazons of old went into actual battle and proved the bravest of the brave. At last the final surrender cam a Peace was decried, and a Ne Nation was born, and would soon take 't.i place among the nations of the earth, king craft with all its safeguards was broken down and the whole people would have a voice in their o .n government. George Washington refused a orown also rejeoted a.third term as Pres ident, and united with JeflWsqn, Adams and other able men in securing for us the form of government we now have. From 3,000,000 people w have in creased to 55,000,000. Prom a small and thinly settled country on the Atlai. tio seaboard we have spread out to where the sun sets in the boundless waters of the Pacific, and South to Mexico our people have gone and a once wild waste is coveiel with farms, cities and villages. The wilderness has been peopled, and school children take the place of naked savages and hungry ciyotes. Th thir teen States have increased to thirty-eight and there Is territory enough for as many more, and good soil enough for 5,000,000,000 people Railroads trav, erse the land in every direction, Qi?r broadest rivers have been bridged, our inow-covered mountains bored throqgh and the tireless 'iron horso speed along day and night hauliug big trains of goads and people, and transporting grain and cattle to feed the world. Net-works of telegraph wires cover the land. The telephone, electric light, sewing machine; motor needlegun and thousands of other inventions for peace or war of American mark our progress. To need a thing is to see some American genius invent it Legal Slavery does not exist in our land, and the Flag of the Free" waves in the sunlight free from smoke of pow der. Schoolhouses are every where and in them our children are taught that our country is the greatest and best in the world. The war of 1812, the Mexican war, and the late struggle We went through have shown the world that Uncle Sam is a hard one to handle. All the ill feeling between the North and South is fast dying out, and would lonr aafO have been dead were not the dying embers fannc-d into life by a lot of hungry and rapacious men who keep them alive for their own base ertds. The soldiers Of both sides now fraternize, ahd every lover of our country Is willing to forget and forgive, and I hope-, and I know all of you hope that even the po litical bummers will have the decency to drop iU We must remember that our country is as of one body, no part of it can suffer without all of it feeling it. We are all Americans. The nieh who wore the grey took as much pride in the deeds in which their ancestors bore a part as did those who wore -the blue, and the glorious FoUrtli of July attd Wash ington's birthday were celebrated by them with as much Vim as we showed, and should foreign foes assail us these men will to the front and prove as brave as they did when thV.y faced the boys who wore the blue. Our country is yet too young in years, to prove that a gov ernment of the people can exist for any gre.t length of time, and able raeli who love our country s wj do fear we can noc much longer txist a a free people. We have passed through many storms when our old ship avemed doomed, and we are now Hearing ths plage where old er republics were Wrecked and which Washington, Jefferson and others warned us to beware of Or we would perish. A Republican Government properly administered is one in which all the. people rich and poor should have an equal roic and equal rights, and while the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness should not be interfered with, there should be no legislation that would tend to enrich individuals and clothe theui with such powers as would place them above the people. When any per son in our country tells the people that their rights and liberties arc in danger from combined capital and political mo nopoly ho is put down by the cry that we owe all to capital, and that our mil lionaire! are the friends of the working classes. I believe there is no one here who would wish to take from any man one dollar without rendering an equiva lent in some form,. but I ask you wheth er labor has not also helped to build up ;pur country, and whether the man who buys up hundreds of thousands of acres of public land at a small sura per acre and without paying taxes on it holds it for higher prices, thus shutting ofl peo ple of moderate means from sett'ing on it and building up the country is a bless ing to our country or a curse ? Is the man with millions of money in Railroads who taxes the pioneer of what he re ceives to transport to market, a bene fit or a cirs? ? Is the protected manufacturer who doubles his capital every few years and refuses to pay the muscle and brain em ployed by him more than starvation wa ges, a hfcssing-ora curse to our 3ountryl The best and ruost intolligent men we have ever had, have left their warning" against such a condition of things and we shoifld profit by them. ( To be continued.) An Extraordinary Offer. Thare are a number of persons out of employment in every oounty, yet ener getic men wjljing to work do' not need to be. Those willing to work can make from $100 to $500 a month oleay, work ing for us in a pleasant and permanent business, Tho amount our agents make varies, acme making at high as $500 a month, while others as low as $100, all depending on the energy of the agent. We have an article of great merit It should be sold to every House-owner, and pay over 100 per oont profit, Each oae is from $3.50 o $10.00. One agent in Pennsylvania sold 32 in two days, and eloare4 $64.00, An agent m New York mJ $45,00 in one day. Any man with energy enough to work a full day, and will do this during the year can make from $2,000 to $6,000 a year. We only want one man in each county, and to him will give the exclusive sale as long as he continues to work faith fully for us. There is no competition, and nothing like our invention made. Parties having from $200 to $r,000 to iuve3t, cau obtain a General Agency for ten counties or a state. An ohe can make an investment of from $25 to $1, 000 without the least risk of loss, as bur Qirculars Will show that those investing $25 can after a 30 day's trial return the goods tinsold to us and get their money back, if they do not clear at least $100 They show that a General Agent who will take len counties and invest $216. 00 can after a trial of 90 days return all goods Unsold to Us, and have money re turned to them if they fail to clear at $750.00 in that time. We are not pay ing salaries, but want rn;n willing to work and obtain as their pay the profits of their energy. Men not willing to work on oltr terms will not Work on any. Those meaning business will re ceive bur large descriptive circular, and extraordinary offer by enclosing a three cent stamp, with their address. The first to comply with our terms will se cure the county or counties they may wish to work. Address, Renneh Manufacturing Co., 118 imithfield Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. LOCAL 2T22WS. There came near leing a law-suit on the bottoms of Lewis River. A Pro fessor there fell in love with a female pupil. She declined his addresses when he transferred them to her cousin, when No. 1 arose and blowed " on him, tell ing damsel No. 2 'his affectious were third-handed (lib was a widower when he started in) whereat he shed copious tears of wrathj and - went to a Justice of the Peace to have damsel No. 1 arretted for willful and malicious lying and inter ference with his amorous intentions. We don't know the result as our inform ant ftiepped out just as things Welti com ing to a crisis(cry sis) j We have received the Breeder and Sportsman, published in San Francisco. Its Editor is John Cairii Simpson, and it lias a host of splendid writers. Its typographical execution is perfect, and it will command the attention of every one who loves the animals God has made as attendants of that prince of animals, man. The information it conveys is well worth itn subscription price $5.00. Office No. 508 Montgomery Street Mrs. Dr. Yergain is on a visit home from Cheney. We heard some very beautiful singing to-niht ai church, and wondered where the voice came from so musical and enchanting, but the ques tion was solved aftf? church was ended by the appearance of Mrs. Yergaiti. The mountain air has detracted nothing from her voice which is as melli(luou as ever. - , . . . vNciv tioods. Arrived this week a full assortment of newest styles of dress goods including Brocades, Grenadines, liiocatels, Seer suckers, Fancy Ginghams aud mom ie cloths also American prints, white goods, Ladies' and. Misses' hosiery in all colors, Lisle-thread gloves, Embroidery tfce. tc. at McBride's Store. In the pubjie. school t the end of the term Professor Quick awarded the fol lowing prizes to the Spelling Classes, iu the First Class, Miss Sarah Smith, of Columbia City, Sir Walter Scott's poems; Second Classf Miss Norah Cony era, Nat ural History; Third Class, Miss Emily M, Co, Picture Story Book, AH the pupils were on the roll of honor, , . m ... ; TIII5 BEST IS TUB A largo and well absortd 4ock of men's boots, men's women's, and child ren's uhoes of all kinds carefully sheeted by Mr, Giltner in San Francisco now ar riving and to arrive at McBride's store. EspeoU! oare has been taken to get tho very best goods in the market. Received D. W. Prentice & Co.'s Mu sical Journal for July. It contains all the latest gems of song, " The Mill," Two Angels," " Mountain Stream," and Bring Me a Vtter from Home." All who would be posted in tlje world of music should take it, only 75 ots, per year, 107 First Street, Portland, Oregon. Miss Helena Hplman is on a visit hero during her vacation at Wilbur Academy where she js teacher of music, Her mother, Mrs. Mary Holraan will soon go to the Wisconsin to visit her brother, Dr. Jamas. McBri4, who has charge of ft fcunatic Asylum at Wauna tosa, near Millwauke Will give an account of our trip to the Cowlitz jiezt week. 1st, 1882, Semi-Anno a I i Settlement. Parties Whose accounts are du tire re quested to call and make the regular senii-anttttal settlement of accounUon or before July 18thv Acjtounts which have been diie for one year or more must be paid, or Settled by note imme diately. ! Q. W. McBRlDE. ReV-. Mr! Campbell, President of Mon mouth College preached on Thursday . and Friday evenings to iiiteniive audi ences. His last discourse was a master pi'Cce Of augument dressed in the most becoming language. Rev. Mr. Wolver ton will preach here on Sunday at the usual hours. The he w Nehalem mail-carrier " has bought on Columbia Street a lot with a tax itle of James Muckle, and is build ing on it a new barn, and will remove the house . lately , occupied by W. H. Whitney also to it. The lot fronts on Mrs. Meeker's residence: The Manzanillo makes trips every Monday and Friday to Astoria and every Wednesday to Clatskanie. This is a finely finished boat, and its Captain; officers and ereWrtre very civil and oblig ing. It has a cosy cabin and nice fur niture to match. Mr. W. II. Whitney will occupy the Trutch house while Mr. Taylor and his. daughter Lillie visit Vermont. Mr. Taylor's father is living and Mr. Tay lor's mother in Wbtfield in that state. Mrs. Enoch Meeker has returned from" her visit to Klickitat County, W. Ti She reports everything there entirely burnt up by i.he sun, crops corked in the, ground instead of on th stove John R. Watts, Mr. and Mrs. Shat tuck and Mrs. Stewart intend to take a summering at Baker's Bay. Mr. Blanch ard will go to Yamhill. Mrs. Capt. Henderson's grandfather Collins by namu 'fought in the Rovolu tionary War. ile -.vas a nati . e u Captt Cod, Mass. g, . Hon. F. A. Moore is having an ell . f- fixed to his residence. . After Six Vvar? San Francisco. Cut; Ms.y 30, 15 81; H. H. Warner & Co.': - To youf Safe jvidUey urtd Liver Cure. I ascribn tho restoration of my wife to perfect health, after six years of nervous afflic tion from diseased kidueys and live-. ClfAKLES E. BlTROANS; Notlre tf Application to Purrllcc Timber Land. Land OrritK at Vancovver, W. T. I July Hth, 1S82. Xotice is lieri-lv g"v that in compliAiice witJ the provisions of the Act of Conresa approved Juiih, lSftf, entitled "An Act for the of Tinihcr Luiuls iu the State of California, Oregon, Nev.nU, an.i Wahin-lon Territory, Bartholo mew T. SvHlen, of Multnomah County, Oregon, has this day filed in this ouio hU application to purchase the North West of Section 12, Town ship 0 North of lvanye 2 West, of the Wiilam ette Meridian. Testimony in the above case r ill be taken b- -fore the ltejrwter and Ueciver, at' Vancouver, V. T. on Sstturday. S-pteibr J3, 1882. Any and all persons having-ad veic claims to the above :fecrilx?d land, or any portion thereof , are hereby required to file their claims in this of fice within pixty(X) days from date hereof. FKKJD. W. SPAHLINO, Iten'ster. n50j21 j Kifrai few igrurga'cgT" ft laaiin? Scintist of foIay tgTMt&at mott diseases an cause f br diseased Kidneys ci Liv er. If, therefore, the Kidneys and Livrr ar kept in perfect npjar. perfect health will be tha result. fhi truth h only be,n known a short time and for years people suffered KtttX agony withut U'ine ahle to, fand relief. The discovery of Vaxn:r' bafe Kidney and Liver Cur mark a new era in'the treatment of those troubles. Made from a imple tropical leaf of rare value, it contains just the elements n.fOeAry to nour ishand invigorate both of thtae great ergan and safelv restore and keep them J order. It is a POSITIVE Rxkedt for all the diseases that cause pains in the lower part of the body for Torpid Liver HeadachesJaundice Dizziness Gravel Fever. Ague Malarial Fever, and all difficulties of the Kidneys, Liver and Urina ry Oryani. , , It in an excellent and safe remjdy for female during Pn jrnanoy. It will oontroi Menstruation and is invaluable for Leucnrrha or Falling of to Womb, As a Blood Purifier it la unequal!, for it cure th organs that hake the blood. ThU Kemedy, which has done ench wonders, i put up in the LARGEST SIZED BOTTLE cf any medicine upon the market, and is sold by Druggists and all dealer at $1.25 per bottle. For Diabetes, enquire for WAKNKIVS SAFE DIA. BETES CURE. It i a POSITIVE Remedy, K.K WAlKHt a CO. Reamer July mm