2 3
ME COBVALLfS GAZEITt
SPaislished Tuesdays and Fridays by
Oazkttb Publishing Company.
Ttie subscription price of the Gazette
far ceveral years has beeu. and remains,
$2 per annum, or 25 per cent discount if
paid in advance.
HOW LONG?
How long shall the present
Tariff remain on our statute
fooo!:s?" is a more or less inter
esting inquiry that has come up
to us from sources in opposition
to present schedules and provis
ions. It is probable that the
present Tariff will remain in the
country's big books just so long
as its results are beneficial to the
American workingmen, just so
long as it seems to furnish the
anotive power for the great mills
and factories and mines of the
Republic, just so long as it pro
vides prosperity to the American
"farmer and farm, just so long as
it provides for a profitable market
at home and abroad, just so long,
an fact, as it serves the purpose
for which it was intended by the
Republican statesmen and Re
publican sentiment that made
possible its enactment. Ameri
can men may differ on almost
every proposition that comes be
iore them for consideration, but
they do meet and join hands on
one common ground and that is a
willingness and desire for con
ditions that make for prosperity
and profitable activities. Adrian
CMich.) 'Times."
WELL BACKED..
When the government of the
"United States undertakes any
proposition it is pretty certain
to move. What the government
promises its citizens may be
irelied upon implicitly. On the
the other hand, it seems that the
government is exacting more of
its people now than at some
times in the past. Corruption,
just at present, is not much in
fashion in governmental circles.
The part played by the govern
ment in the recent past will have
a salutary effect on many to
-whom the task of withstanding
temptation is hard.
Under the date of October 23,
the following dispatch was sent
throughout the land from Wash
ington, D. C. :
Two towns, for which the United
States Government will act as cponsor.
will be created next month in Southern
Idaho, on sites which now are an abso
lute desert aste Names already have
een chosen for ihem Heyburn for the
first, which official I v fa to be created
November 14, and Rip-i t for the second,
which is to be created one week later.
The towns will be seven miles apart.
Sales of town lots will be conducted
binder Government auspices on the days
the towns are created. The lots will be
TSoldt the highest bidder. While the
eo -in try is now a desert waste, it is ex
pected that the great irrigation canals
"which the (iovernment is constructing at
cot of $3,000,000 will make it very
.productive. The towns are located on
Tthe recently constructed branch of the
Oregon Short Line Railroad.
Thus we find the government
standing sponsor for . cities of
lier own creation. Beyond doubt
there is good reasons for estab
lishing these towns. Of course,
this is something out of the or
dinary, but the fact that "Uncle
Sam" is back of the towns, to a
certain degree, will cause more
-of a boom to these townsites
than any other thing we can
fancy. The confidence the peo
. pie have in those holding the
reins of the government and the
knowledge that the govern
mental authorities would not will
ingly delude the citizens, will act
as a greater incentive to a stam
pede for Heyburn and Rupert,
Idaho, next month than if these
plpes were scenes of gold
strikes.
We look to v Hey' urn and
Rupert spring fro;:: the earth
from nothingness to smaU'cities',
' as it were almost - as - mush
rooms. Beyond doubt here will
be an opportunity for some le
gitimate speculation.
THE COLORED RACE.
Forlo! these many years the
the colored race problem has
engaged the attention of our
greatest thinkers. It is still
receiving much thought and!
attention and the problem does
not seem near solution by a
long shot. Time was when our
foremost men suggested but two
possibilities regarding the course
of the colored race in the pros
pective clash with the whites.
One of these courses was a
race war. This seemed terrible
and all good citizens shrank
in horror from such a solution.
The other mode of meeting the
race proposition in the United
States was the amalgamation of
the races- To the self-respecting
white people this seemed
even more horrible and degrad
ing than the former alternative.
It seems that President Roose
velt has sounded a note that com
ing from him rings truer and
seems to possess more timbre
than had it been voiced by any
other instrument.
A few days ago the president.
while on his trip through the
South, honored the Tuskegee
Industrial Institution, the great
school built up for his race
by Booker T. Washington, the
famous negro, with a visit.
While there President Roosevelt.
among other things said:
Hitherto I have spoken chiefly ot the
obligations existing on the present white
man. Now let you remember on the
other hand that no help can permanent
ly a. ail you save as you yourselves de
velop for self-help. You, young colored
men and women, educated at Tuskegee,
must by precept and example lead your
fellows toward sober, industrious and
law-abiding lives. You are in honor
bsund to join bands in enforcing the
laws and to war against all crimes, and
especially against crime by men of your
own race, for the heaviest wrong done by
the criminalist is the wrong to his own
race. Yon must teach "the people of your
race that they must scrupulously observe
any contract into which they in good
faith enter, no matter whether it n hard
to keep or not. If you save money, se
cure homes, and lead clean decent lives,
you will win the respect of your neigh
bors of both races. Let each man strive
to excel his fellows only by rendering
substantial, evidence to the community
in which he lives.
The people have many difficulties to
pass through, but these difficulties
will be surmounted if only the policy of
reason and common rense is pursued.
You have made real and great progress.
According to the census, the colored peo
ple of this ceimtry own and pay taxes on
something like $3.X) 000,000 worth of
property, and have blotted out over 50
per cent of the illiteracy. What von
have done in the past is an indication of
what you will be able to accomplish in
the future under wise badersbip. Moral
and industrial education is what is most
needed in order that this progress may
continue.
Thus we find the president ad
vocating education and industry
J? j 1 .
ior tne suppression of race
troubles. That "idleness is the
mother of crime" is an old saw,
and while in many ways it may
not always -prove true, in the
main it will do to advocate. The
trip of the president to Tuskegee
was truly an act of courtesv and
kindness. By his examDle he
he gives encouragement to a peo
ple who from the white man's
point of view has little to hope
for. The white man" brouo-ht
the negro here and is really the
responsible party. True, it was
the act of a former generation.
but equally true the "sins of the
lather descends to the son."
EDDY AT YAQUINA.
One Man Mistakes Another for a
Deer and Kills Him.
Almost frsntic with grief at
having., mortally wounded jhis
hunting companion, . W.. G.
Eddy, by having mistaking him
for a deer, - R. L. Holze was
unab'e to find his way back to
where he had left the wounded
man to get him a drink of
water, and Eddy died probably
long before he was found by a
searching party 18 hoars later.
Both men are from -ITnts, Or.,
and the accident occured seven or
eight miles up the North Fork of
the Nehalem, whither they had
gone to establish a Winter hunt
ing camp. , t
The accident occurred early i
Saturday afternoon. Hotze and i
Eddy were hunting and had
separated. The young ' man
thought his companion was be
hind him, and seeing aslir in the
bushes ahead, fired. The cries
of the victim of the mistake soon
made it known. Hotze hastened
to the scene and did what he
could for the wounded man by
laying him in an easv position
and bolstering his head up with
a coat. Then he started to the
ueaiest creek, some distance away
to get a drink of water for Rddv
who complained of intense thirst.
He reached the river but was
unable to find hiswav back. Hp
searched for several hours, and
finally, as darkness approached,
started for help. Thev had been
camped in a deserted cabin in
tne region, and the nearest house
was four miles awav. Hotze
reached it late at night, almost
exhausted, and panted out his
ieariul tale.
Assistance was summoned from
Nehalem, and a party started out
in search before davlip-bt. About
eight o'clock they found the
dead body where Hotze had left
it in search of water. Eddv had
been shot through the hip and
his wound in any event would
probably have been fatal.
Hotze is almost distracted, be
cause he. deems himself responsi
ble, not only for Eddy's death,
but for the untold aeonies which
he must have suffered before
death relieved him.
Eddv and Hotze came here
from Lents a few days ago. Ed
dy practiced magnetic healing
there, and had resided in that
vicinity about seven months,
coming from, Yaquina Bay, where
his father is still residing. The
dead man was a widower, and
had no family living. He served
at one time in the Armv. and
was a pensioner on the disability
list, tie was about 57 years old,
and his companion, was much
younger.
Another Oregon Triumph.
There are many thinss found
in Oregon that may well cause
native pride to come to the sur
face. Among the things Oregon
excells in is apples and pears;
An item appeared recently in the
Oregon Journal that is worthy ot
a reprint, as follows:
A farpier and fruit-grower liv
ing pear Bedford received tele
graphic word last week from a
New York commission house that
a car load ot Comic- pears iiad
sold in that city at $7.70 to $6. 10
per box, averay ine $6. 80. :md
that the carload, " consisting of
1,000 halt-boxes, had brought
$3,429, the higuest price ever
received in that city for a car load
of pears. This is a big adver
tisement for the Rogue River
Valley, and the ' shipper, J. W.
Perkins, not only gets large re
turns for his fruit, but becomes a
benefactor of that whole region
and of Oregon. Other orchard
ists of that - part of Oregon are
also aiding it in gaining a high
reputation in the East, a car load
of Bartlets being recently sold
having averaged $4.30 per box
and a car load of Beurre d' Anjou
for $5.36 per box, at auction sale
in New York. Mr. Perkins,
however, used half-boxes, hold
ing 26 pounds of fruit each, and
made from clean No. 1 lumber.
He used lithographed paper and
laDeis on tne boxes, -lancy lace
paper border and lithographed
top mat. All this cost somethiii-r
but it paid, for appearances count
ror mucn with those able to buy
the best. They are willing to
pay tor style. Ot course great
care was also taken in the se
lection and packing of the fruit,
and the result was the fanciest
and highest priced ' car load" of
pears ever sent to New York
City. Another Southern Oregon
horticulturalist also holds the re
cord of a car load of full-box
fruit though it is not up to this
shipment of'half boxes.
, These incidents ought to stim
ulate all orchardists in that region
and of the whole state to the ex
ercise of enterprise, violence.
and the utmost care in the pro-
auction and packing of frait.
CASTOR! A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
S7
Can She
Save
Save vS-liiR3SS3
Them ?
Manv a tioor
mother who reels
that those she
holds most pre
cious are gradu
ally slipping away from her
over the terrible precipice
of disease, would be thank
ful to know what Doctor
Pierce's wonderful "Golden
Medical Discovery" has
done to restore thousands
of weak and wasted chil
dren to complete rounded, rosy, healthy,
activity ami iuq.
"Five years ago this last fall I was taken
flown with a fever and was very bad for
several months." writes Mrs. Henrietta Bell,
of Diamond, Ohio. She continues: "Finally
recovered from the fever, then my lunps
became very bad. The doctor said I had
consumption, and that he had done all he
could for me. and he did not think that I
could get well. My case was- a very danger
ous one. Became very weak, had night
sweats, also a very bad cough, night and day.
At times would spit blood. I felt as though
my time on earth would be short Requested
my husband to get me a bottle of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and perhaps it
would help me. Before I had taken one
bottle my cough was almost gone. The next
to disappear were the night-sweats. I am
almost sure that if it had not been for your
medicine I would not have been here to-day."
If mothers will only write to Dr. Pierce
concerning the ailments of their family he
will send them sound and valuable advice
in a plain sealed envelope, and without
any charge whatever. His remarkably
wide experience has qualified him to deal
with diseases which baffle the local prac
titioner. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buf
falo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con
stipation. One little " Pellet " Is a gentle
laxative, and two a mild cathartic
What is wanted and demanded,
and must be supplied if fancy or
even good prices are to be ob
tained, is quality. The fruit
must be the very best quality of
its kind, and then it must be
tastefully and even stylishly
packed. Oregon can beat the
world in various kinds of fruit,
and fruit-raisers who spare no
pains are sure of a rich reward.
A Few Points About
Leather Bottomed
Rubber Boots
Up to the time of placing the
Rubberhide Boot on the market
all of the Leather Bottomed Rub
ber Boots were made by nailing
the bottoms to the rubber upper.
The nails are driven through
both leather and rubber, punctur
ing the rubber with two rows of
holes from the heel to the toe,
Water will work in between the
leather and the rubber, and find
ing the openings thus made by
the nails, are sure to leak.
The Rubberhide Boot is made
by lasting the upper under the
foot for an inch, all around the
bottom up to the middle sole. The
upper and rubber welt sole are
joined by vulcanizing them toge
ther, forming a union that re
sists the hardest wear. It has a
heavy leather inner sole.
The sole leather, which is thor
oughly waterproofed, is stitched
to the rubber welt sole;this makes
an absolutely water-tight boot,
and one that will not leak.
It is impossible for the water
to get into the boot except over
the top. For honesty of con
struction, comfort and durability.
the Rubberhide Boot is without
an equal. '
Not low-priced, but cheap
r'A leather bottom rubber boot
will .wear longer than an all rub
ber boot. The Rubberhide will
give longer service, more com
fort to the wearer, and greater
return for the money invested,
A trial will convince you.
' For sale by
J,M,Nolan&Son
I Brandegee,"
Copyrighted, 1905 Kincaii
Wood.
a
onest
A romance of old
with wit
M; J-Mc4fE-' -- Sri
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27
With Alma Hearn
Reserved
MBS. CECELIA STQWE,
Orator, Entre Nous Club.
176 Warren Avenue,
Chicago, III., Oct. 22, 1902.
" For nearly four years I suffered
from ovarian troubles. The doc
tor insisted on an operation as the
only way to pet well. 1, however,
strongly objected to an operation.
My husband felt disheartened as
well as I. for home with a sick
woman is disconsolate place at
best. A friendly druggist advised
him to get a bottle of "Wine of
Cardui for me to try, and he did so.
I began to improve in a few days and
my recovery was very rapid. With
in eighteen- weeks I was another
Mrs, Stowe's letter shows every
woman how a home is saddened by
female weaknes and how completely
wine of Cardui cures that sick
ness and brings health and happi
ness again. Do not go on suffer
ing. Go to your druggist today
and secure a $1.00 bottle of Wine
of Cardui.
'PS.
Gazette Independent phone No
433. ; -
, New Cure for Cancer.
All surface cancers are now known to
be curable, by Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
Jos. Walters, of DufBeld, Va, , writes : "I
bad a cancer on my lip tor years, that
seem incurable, till Bucklen's Arnica
Salve healed it and now it is perfectly
well." Guaranteed cure for cats and
burns. 25c at Allen & Woodward's drng
store.
Some clothes stores seem to have
difficulties in pleasing their patrons
and we often hear them saying
how hard it is to suit and sell their
customers.
At our store we don't find things
that way. Of course a fit is a fit
and every one knows it and that's
all that can be done.
We assume such difficulties arise
in forcing poorly fitting garments.
If you buy the right clothes all that
is unnecessary.
We sell Brandegee, Kincaid &
Wood clothes they all bear their
labelthe label means good clothes
and those having a real guarantee-
Suits $15 to $35
Overcoats $15 to $50
Hearts"
Kentucky, overflowing
and humor
as "Dad's Only Girl"
seats 50 cents
Ve Fit Glasses
PROPERLY,
ACCURATELY, and
SCIENTIFICALLY.
To all Defects of Sight.
MATTHEWS, The Optician
Room 12, Bank Building.
Plumbing
anil I
Heating !
Cornire, Eooflng, Guttering,
and all kinds of t-heet Metal
Work.
F. A. Hencye
In connection with J. H.
SIMPSON'S HA.RDWAKE
STOEE.
The Original.
Foley & Co., Chicago, originated
Honey and Tar as a throat and lung rem
edy, and on account of the great merit
and popularity of Foley's Honey and
Tar many imitations are offered for the
genuine. Ask for Foley's Honey and
Tar atd reiuse and substitute offered as
no other preparation will give -the same
satisfaction. It is mildly laxative. It
contains no opiates ond is safest for
children and delicate noreons. Graham
& Worth am.
Plans to get Rich
are often frustrated by sudden break
down, due to dyspepsia or constipation.
Brace np and take Dr. King's 3Sew life
Pills. They take out the materials which
are c logging your energies and give you
a new start. Cure, headache and dizzi
ness, too. At Allen A Woodward's drng
atore; 25e; guaranteed.