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About Roseburg review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1885-1920 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1888)
ROSEBURG UFA'IEW : ISSUED FRIDAY MOBNIKGS BY . THE REVIEW PUBLISHING CO. J. R. N. BF4LL, - - Editor FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1888. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. Fou President, G ROVER CLEVELAND, Of New York. Fob Vice-President, . ALLEN G. THURMAN. Of Ohio. Fon Presidential Electors, W. H. EFFINGER V. R. BILYEU E R. SKIPWORTII. No laboring man can afford ti vote for Harrison. v" Vote for Cleveland and Thurman the farmer's friends. ..V . The Old Roman seams to bo having a regular old-time triumph in Indiana. ClevlIasd reviews the business mens parade in NewYork next Sat urday. The only sure way to enforce the Exclusion Act is to re-elect President Cleveland.- Cheap whiskey or cheap necessaries of life which? Let your vote dec'de this question. - ; CovERjif)"? Hill drewa bigger crowd in Indianapolis than Blaine and Har rison combined. The Chinese cheap labor on this coast effects wages vastly more than the tariff possibly can; Congress adjourned last Saturday. .They might as well have adjourned a month ago, for all that has been ac complished. The Pilot, a paper published at livansvilie, inu., says wjj coioreu men in Indiana will vote for Cleve land and Thumian . Congress adjourned last Saturday .at 1 o'clock, sine die. The press cor respondents were so elated that they sang the doxoloay amidgre.it applause, Cleveland has done more to help the laboring man on this coast than all . ,th RopuUican presidents ever did. Dbu't forget this when you go to vote. ' ' eveland reduced taxation and Jhinese, or Harrison high taxes hinese cheap labor, which will you have? Take your choice one week from next Tuesday. Carlisle says the Benate Tariff bill decreases the revenue by increasing taxation. The government gets less and the trusts more, while the people havft an extra burden. A uu v -m j f - - orating tnat Mayor Hewitt will not support Cleveland and Mr. Hewitt keeps reiterating that he will. Now who knows the better? I rir t.-itnn tnnn nfltviv KtfT I'd r Simok Sterne, a prominent lawyer of New York is very confident of the election pf Cleveland and Thurman. II says the Democratic plurality m New York will be over 20,000. Cleveland has signed a bill appro priating $50,000 to carry out the pre visions of the Chinese exclusion bfll. He meant it when he signed that ex clusion bill, and will work to have it enforced. Chief Justice Fuller, during his first week, made a marked impression on the largo number of distinguished law yers in attendance upon the sessions of the Supreme Court, by his dignified bearing and .manner. Some of our contemporanes are quoting Blaine tigamst Blaine. This .is idle. The authority is poor in either case, and the refutation has fully as bad a character" tis the statement. -This is a campaign of iJea. Aha. A telegram announces that the Democratic and Republican clerks in tjje departments at Washington are . going 10 "iiair, instead 01 going nonic to vote, thus saving the expense of the . ... - . . 1 -r - trin. unaer xvCDUoucan aaniinistra- 1 . tions there could have been no "jairs," because there wero no Democratic clerks. ; , The largest delegation of Indians that ever visited Washington, was there last week. They attracted a great leal of attention: The delegation consisted of ''about CO Sioux chiefs. Tbev were there for the purpose of conferring with the interior depart ment in relation to the proposed treaty, by which they are to sell to the gov eminent 11,000 acres of land, about half of their reservation. Th e fallacy of the Republican doctrine is so plain that even their own speak era admit that they do not mean what they say in their platform. They all tell us that if they could make the Democrats believe thatthfly meant free 1 - t .t 1.1 II A- At wnisicey tncy wuuiu n u oer 10 me .n ... . . ... . i:annhlipnn linrrv. WIlH'll is nl.iinlc nrl mittmg that they do not mean free free whiskey,- but that it is a bait to catch rotes. - t-..re.rJtrr "rn&"'iin TJIK IB1SII IS THIS CA.MPA.lQy. Editor Review: An industrious, and I might add, an indecent scramble is being pushed by the Republican bosses in this campaign to appropriate what Mr. Patrick Ford styles the "Irish vote," and which, one roust con clude, he has promised to deliver as so many chattels, to the party which can boast an unbroken record of hostility to. the Irish race in th's country. Mr. Ford furnishes an article which is printed in the North American Review, in which he pretends to de plore the fact that Irish American voters have, in the past, allied them selves almost in a body to the Demo cratic party and disingenuously essays to be at a loss to account for the phe nomenon! If Mr. Ford insists upon an explanation of the reasons which have impelled Irishmen as a practically solid phalanx to adhere to the political fortunes of the Democratic party; if he insists that such solidity of political action has. been without sufficient cause and is inconsistent with intelligent citizenship, I shall, and wi;h greater reason, insist that he explain the ap parent phenomenon of the greater and more steadfast unanimity with which the better and more intelligent class of Irishmen and Irish women have cast their religious fortunes with the Catho lic church, on principles ininjical to patriotism and good citizenship. Pat rick Ford is himself an adherent of the Catholic faith, and cannot be insensible of the causes which have conspired to make his countrymen one in the -faith, hence, for him to deplore and con demn and disparage the political unity of these people, is to cast reproach up on himself and co religionists, of Irish birth or nationality; is to befoul his own "nest, as it were, which we may well be convinced he is quite capable of doing for "spot cash." To be at a loss to accouut for the proclivities of the Irish people in this country is to argue one's self ignorant alike of the Irish character and the po litical history of the United States. The Democratic party was spoke into being by the great Jefferson in a mighty contest in behalf of the liberties and continued safety of the Irish people in this country; and however true other shortcomings may be charged against Irishmen, baseness, ingratitude and cowardice can never be alleged with truth. Indeed, reciprocal obliga tion with the Irish race has the force of a tenet of faith. Naturally shrewd and sagacious, without any of" the sub tilties of cunning and disingenuousness and duplicity, the Federalist or mon archical party were not slow in discov ering during the administration of the elder Adams that the "Irish element" in the union would be dangerous to the success of the ambitious designs of the cohorts of said administration, to subvert our free institutions and rear in their stead an aristocratical govern ment in which only the "high bom" tnii;ht aspire to paiticipation on terms of equality and as matter of right. With the end in view of the founding of a monarchy on the ruins of the fab ric of treedom then undergoing experi ment, the Alien and Sedition laws were enacted. Under these laws it was hoped to rid th 3 country, of ail antagonistic elements, ana the "Irish element" as it was stigmatised at the time was the most powerful, and im placable hostile to the designs of the despoilers. Under the "Alien law," any foreigner could be arrested and fined and banished from the country; while the "Sedition law" denounced pains and penalties against any person guilty of criticism or calling in question the infallibility of persons occupying offi cial place and authority. So the ma chinery for persecuting, annoying, and if possible subduing the patriotic re sentment of the Irish, was made com plete and effective until Thomas Jeffer son came upon the scene with an or ganized, courageous intelligent follow in" and put the conspirators to route, horse foot and dragoons. In the light of this history, of these doings, what must be said of Mr. Pat rick Ford for his affected wonder at and disaprobation of, the "solidity" of the Irish vote for Democratic men and Democratic measures? And let the fact not be lost sight of that the war on the Irish did not cease heie. The opponents of the Democratic party un der whatever name, and the names have been manv, up to and including the Re. publican party, have been actively hos. tile to foreigners generally and of the Irish people in particular. The Repub lican party absorbed and succeeded the Know Nothing party which had made bitter, malign wt, relentless war upon foreigners ai.d Catholic?, This Know Nothing 4i.i-ty, like its ancestor the Federalist party, was met and, after tniny hard fought political battles, overwhelmed by the organized Democ racy, Then, as I cannot but see it, the wonder is not that Irish Ameri. cans are in large majority Democrats, but that any considerable numbers of them can find it in thoir hearts to be otherwise. Irishmen are "solidly" Catholic fo. reasons in some degree kindred to those which have made them "solidly" Democratic, and much on the principle that "the beloved of the martyr is the seed of tha church." Persecution and ostracism for religious sake at home for hundreds of years, by invaders, in terlopers and soulless marauders and pirates whose might was mistaken for right could have no other effect than to unite in bonds of still the victims of wanton and lMib.irus onslaughtes upon sacred preferences. And persecution and the red law of incendiary violence awaited them in this country. But always true to its traditions of Jeffersonian noninter ference with religious beliefs or re ligious worship, the voice of the Demo cratic hosts has always been for toler anceinsuch matters; hence it has been that 1 he Democratic party has been stigmitized bigots in the Republican 1 -.- . . ... . . .', , . , .. I ' r i " J : 1 I ,-. " ' : i r- m -mm ranks as the 'Tojhs party," the "Cath otic party, and so on. Mr. Fordin his article in tho maga zine mentioned above, appeals to the selfish side of the Irish people and would trade upon what he assumes to be. their ignorance or misinformation ion the subject of the tariff, and their ngrained and righteous hatred of England and things assumed to be to the liking of the English. To this end and for this ignoble purpose he distorts history, belies truth and out rages every principle of candid, ingen uous, honoraUo discussion. He holds up the mirror of the industrial woes of the Irish in Ireland before his country men in the United States, and false'.y attributes all to ".Lnglish free trade." No position coull be more false and absurd. The rapid decadence of manu facturing industries in Ireland dates troui the "act of union," which was consummated in the year 1800. For 4G long years subsequent to tht act, England was a "high protection" country. The sun of Irish industrial hopes went down so soon as England laid the heavy hand of her authority unon the internal Dolitv of that doomed and unhappy Isle once the Irishman's own. Free trade had no part nor lot in the destruction of Irish industries. Industrial stagnation had reached its worst while England yet ad hered to protection. Stealthily, treacherously had England under mined and dashed Ireland' prosperity before free trade had become more than a dream among English states men. Belfast, that nest of vipers, where orangemen annually parade in honor of the anniversary of the success of the arms of the bastaod prince, William of Orange, at the battle of the Boyne, has always been exempt from the ma levolent hate of England, and hence is now a prosperous manufacturing cen ter, whose rapid upbuilding, dates from the inauguration of "British free trade." Patrick Ford cannot be igno rant of this fact, and hence by his wicked, deceitful perversions of history and fact, makes himself jiarliceps criminis with tho unpatriotic gang of tones at Belfast who are capable of the unspeakable infamy of applauding the barbarous exploits of a foreign bucc aneer and pirate for having laid waste with fire and sword their own fair land; and every orangeman in America is a blattant, aggressive Republican. And this is the feast Mr. Patrick Ford in- vites his patriotic countiymen to par take of for tho success and glory and dominion of Benjamin ' Harrison, who, for no other offense than that Irish men were generally Democrats, de nounced them in a public speech at Evansville, Indiana as a gang of drunken, ignorant lonfers and Pope serving vagalond.s. It is inconceivable that Irishmen can forget that the tory party in Eng land is their ancient and pit-sent tme my; that the tory tarty in EeglanJ, like its prototype the Republican party in this . our.tr,- ij a "protection" party for the b. ueiu ci the few at the expanse of the maiiy; that the tory party in England uLsji Gladstone and the Liberal jxirty were agitating tariff reform in the interest of down-trodden labor in that country, boistc.-rou.sly pro claimed that Gladstone's plan ot tariff reform would destroy every manu facturing industry in the land and re duce working people to paupers; that the working people of England are now receiving twici the wages they got under protection, and that all the friends of Ireland in the United Kingdom, and especially Gladstone, Parneil, Dillon, and O'Brien are free traders, and that the barbarous, vin dictive .Balfour, now vicegerant in Ire land of the tory party of England is a tory and "fair trader," which means a discriminating tariff in that country against tho products of Irish labor and allotherlalwr in tliis country. Much more could be said in vindi cation of the truth of history bearing upon this snbject, but I d.-em tliis ref utation of the stock argument of the unions of monopoly and class legisla tion to win the Irish people from alle giance to their real fnend, the Demo cratic party, sufficient, and I challenge contradiction of my position and tho history bv which I have sought to fortify it. Nei'.hcr can be successfully assailed. J, If. Upton. Denmark, Oct 12. The frantic efforts of the Portland n onii last wcck to do at liib same time for and against a Democratic daily in Portland were amusing, to say the least. The Oregonian a few days since had a cold tremor to run along its spinal column when The Re view ventured the above suircestion. A daily of the above description should exist at the Oregon i.ietroioli3, and why the papers s;ringe aud scream so at the mention of such an enterprise, is accounted for only in one way, and that is the people will tho more readily patronize a paper like the San Fran cisco Examiner, wLLh gives the news fairly on both sides. The testimony of the wrecked Democratic newspaper efforts in Portland and even in Salem, is to the effect of what we wrote last week, namely: "want of support from friends." You can smoke this little bit of Oregon history Bro. World, and it will clear your head. The majority report on the senate tariff bill makes o queer confession. It says that it would have made further reduction on sugir, if it hadon't been for the fact that some Northern states were experimenting on mak'ng nugar out of sorghatn, cr words to that effect How sectional the bill is may be coneieved when it is known that the only reduction of duties made by the bill is made on. two products of a portion of the Southern states and about the only ones that are protected there. mis ia vifAirawjEBABi.1!. (II- W. Scott in OrepHtian.1 Advocating protection, tie Dalies Times says: The wool growers ( of Eastern Oregon ) know fully thai pro tection guarantees a good price for their dtp, while free trade strikes at tlte very life of industry. If this as sertion were true, still it would not prove the protective policy to be a just and wise one. High prices for wool make high prices for woolen goods, and there are twenty persons who wear woob-n good to one who pro duces wool. Why should the twenty be taxed for the benefit of the one? Oregon is boasted as a wool-growing state, an I so it is: and yet, even in Orpjvii, there are twenty persons who want cheap clothes to one who wants dear wool. Here, in a dozen words of one syllable, is a complete and over whelming answer to all the elaberate arguments ever made r the effort to show the alleged importance of "pro tecting" the wool-grower. But even the small wool-grower himself he who has a few sheep and whose annual clip is a few hundred pounds of wool loses more by the enhanced cost of clothing to himself and family than he gains through the higher price for wool; so that the actual beneficiaries of the system are the great wool-grow ers and the monopolist manufacturers. There is no phase of protection that will bear examination. Every part of the system is as weak as the argu ment for the protection of wool. The system is, throughout, a sujierficial and short siqhled game of greed except for the great monopolist whom it creates and supports. With them it is a studied and profound game of qreed, part of which ts to make large classes suppose they are Javorea and protected by a system which either does not protect them at all, or actu ally robs them. The Old flapaowlU. Mr. Blaine is ladling out to his Western audiences the same sort of "food for fools" with which ho served them on his disastrous stumping tour four years ago. Think of a man who has been posed by his admirers as "the greatest living statesman," and who is or was a really brilliant political leader, reciting to the voters of the West statistics from the census showing the remarka ble growth of their section in popula tion and the increase of its railroads, and claiming it all as due to a system of taxation ! As well attribute the crops to frost as prosperity to taxes. What claims to high patriotism has a politician who subordinates the at tractiveness and the influence of our free institutions and the boundless natural resources of our broad and glorious Republic to a make shift revenue system, or to any partisan -de vice or policy whatsoever? Mr. Blaine is talking flapdoodle. X. V. World. Will the Republican orators who are abusing Mr. Cleveland for his pen sion vetoes tell us why the Republican Senate does not pass those pension bills over the President's veto? That not one of them was passed over the veto shows that the President was right. The idea that anybody who wants a pension should have it is something new in American politics, and was uever seriously advanced un til a Democratic President vetoed some of the more scandalous of the private pension bills. The manner in which these bills were fired through Congress is something startling. On one occasion the Senate passed 123 private pension bills in fifty minutes! Now, it is plain that no time was given for the irojier consideration ot these bills. All tho work of ascertain what merit attached to them was left to the President, and whenever he de tected a fraudulent claim and rejected it there was a concerted howl from a host of Republicans of the Foraker strijie. Alia COXXECTICVT SALE. The Bridgeport, Conneticut, Farmer says: "Precise! why it should be assumed that the changes in this state favor lT:irison does not appear clearly. To lie sure, tho Democratic campaign is not being pushed so energetically by the party's campaginer3 as in New York and Indiana, but there is not probably another state in the Union in which so little of tho campaign ma chmery need to be run. The daily press reports show that in no population' of simuiar number have there been so many and such conspicuous changes from Republicanism to Cleveland's support orso few losses of Democratic votes on accouut of the tariff question,'' Hon. J. D. Whitman of Medford addressed a fair sized audience i n the comt house lasi Saturday evening. He discussed the tariff question from 4 Democratic stand point and proved beyond a question that a high protect ive tariff" is a "robber tariff," and very disastrous to the interests of the labor ing classes, simply fostering monopolies and robbing the poor. He quoted from several different Republican authors stating that during low tariff periods the counti-v was most prosper- our. He argued the question from a farmer's standpoint and proved con clusively that protective tariff works hardships to the farmer. His speech was fair, honest, logical and devoid of all abuse. The latest form of campaign flat tery is- Mr. Blaine's comparison of Harrison as a speaker and thinkei with Franklin and Lincoln. The Re publican nominee has made many speeches, columns upon columns, harm'ess, watery, welt enough in their way a kind of picnic lemonade rhet oric. But we do not recall a single thought that rises above mediocrity a single .sentence to be remembered, To compare these speeches, with their eternal, tumid swaBh, to the keen, pregnant, vascular, living thoughts of Franklin and Lincoln, rije with a wis dom that lives through the ages, is like comparing Tupper to Shakespeare. Albany Democrat. Children Cry for EMTORIHT, SOT EH. HEX O J UMIfL What is the diffoicnce in principle detween free hides and free wool! The Republican made hides free, j The Republicans put hides on j the freelist in 1872 The exports of hides that year were ?574,331. In 1887 the exports amounted to more than 10,000,000. 'That was a sharp eaying of the Voice that said it preferred to vote for a man who was wrong twenty enr3 ao and is right now to voting for a man who was then right and is 'now wrong. ; Jcdoe SAvrer has dicided that the exclusion act is constitutional, that the return certificate is not a contract between the Chinaman and the United States the Chinese must stay aw"y- ' j Perky Douthit, a Marion county farmer, made application to be sent to the asylum for the insane and was sent. A man who ha sense enough to know that he hasen't any sense is to sensible to be insane. The : Republicans are making converts, to le sure. Supt. Downing fired Bill Watkinds, who has been a guard at the penitentiary, and Bill will, in consequence, vote for Harrison and Morton, He has been on the decline for a long time and is now at the bottom of the hill. j The Oregonian has an article entitled t he "home stretch" in which it refutes its own doubts eta few day ago of the results in Conneticut and other manufactur ing states. It begins to feel, to use the "horsey" dialect, that it threw up its tail to soon, and on the home stretch it is trying desperately hard to hold its tail down. The republican tariff bill puts coal on the tree list. Such a howl lias been raised by the coal Baro n that the Republican senators are now claim ing that it was all a mistake ot the printer, and that they intended to raise the tariff on coal instead of put ting it on the free ILt. The fact is that the only place where Cleveland has much of a "fighting chance" is in the solid South, and it will be remembered that once before when he had a "fighting chance" he did not take advantage of it but sent a substitute. Oregonian. Tlie wit of that is good, even if it is against Mr. Cleveland. It loses none of its flavor when it is turned against its author, for, the name and the sub stiute excepted, de tefabula, to quote iEsop, this fable is told of yon, Mr Editor. LOG CABIN LOGIC- ! ! Brawn and Brain I The powerful eneine, with its wonder ful propelling power, coupled to the long train full freighted with the richest fabrics of tne intellectual looms of the centuries what obstacles can stay the progress of this mighty force, when once under full steam along life's highway. The American with brawn and brain does not see the necessity for titles of nobility, does not care for elevation by descent, be can reacn out ana pluck the stars. Cut with brawn and brain impaired, a man is badly handicapped in the mad race for success which is l,he marked characteristic of the present age. The physicial system is a most intri cate piece of machinery. It ought to be kept well regulated, so that it will work harmoniously in all its parts, then it is capable of ah immense amount of work. It is said that a watch, if expected to keep perfect time, must be wound daily. It will not keep good time unless it "runs regular." More men break down because they don't "run regular" than for any other reason. It is claimed by physicians that few men are killed by bard work. It is to the firregularities of modern social life that the high death rate-is due. Men bum their candle at both ends, then wonder why it burns out so quickly. The main thing in keeping the human machine in good working order is to keep the regulator all right. "The blood is the life," and sound health is assured so long as the blood flows through the veins a limpid stream of purity. Regulate the regulator with Warner's LogCabin sarsaparilla, the old-fashioned blood purifier, prepared after the best formula in use by our ancestors in good old Log Cabin days, and with the vigor of brawn rand brain which must ensue, in your life's lexicon you will find no such words as fail. Sheriff Sale. In tlio Circuit court of the State ot Orriron In ami for the county ft lmilan. S. C. Flint In- himself mid aim as mlmr. nt the es tate of Humphry and Flint j laintiffs. v R Rhiiina, W R Willis, Carrie Willi his wife, S Hamilton, OA Tallin-ami HC Sloenm, defendants. VfOTICE IS IIKIIKBYOIVES THAT UNDER AND J.1 bv virtue of an execution ami order of sale duly issued out of the circuit court of tho state of Ore(,nli f ir the county of lloui-las i-i the above en titled cause on the ir.th day of Oct. 18S3, and to me directed and delivered on aiid 15th day of Oct. 1SSS, in pursuance of a judgment and decree of foreclos ure of a mort.-iiire which jiijrdment and decree as entered of record in the said circnit court ou the 10th day of Oct. lt8, in favor of the above named plff S C Flint and gainst the above named deft. K rhipps and againtt the herein after described niortjriid land and premises commanding ni to levy upon and sell said mortffajred land and premises as by law directed and out of the proceeds srisiiiK from said alo to apply first in payment of the cost and expenses of this proceedine in the supreme court of the state of Oregon, taxed at SU5.75 and in the ernn-t below taxed at U3.1i, second to the y mcnt of the decree of the plaintiff herein to wit; 813.015.00 tocether with interest therein at the rate of 10 per cent per annum, since the tM day of Sept. 1886 said interest beinjr 152614.40 and the further sum of si.W.OO m attorney fee allowed plaintiff. In pursuance thereof I have duly levied upon and will on SATURDAY, the 1st day of Dec. 1388. between the hours of 9 o'clock A. . and 4 o'clock r. X. to-wit; at the h on r ol 1 o'clock r. u. of said day ell at public auction in front of the court house door in Koiistturfr OouIas county Oregon tothe highest bidder lot cash all the rivht title and inter est which thesaid defendant R I'hiips has In and to the said mortgaged land and premises dcecrilied as follows to-wit. The southeast of tha northeast I of section 4, the fractional south J of the north west i (ijtsi and 1 of section 3 in Tp 29 south of range 6 west the west 4 of the northwest of Sec II and the east of the northeast i of section 10 Tp 29 south of range 6 west. The donation claim of M C McCloud .No. 41 in Tp 28 south of Range 6 west bounded and described as follows to-wit. Beginning at a point 12 chains north and 9.?ri chains east from the southwest corner of section 3:1. thence north 4f chains tbenee east 40 chains them south 40 chains the north ' St' west S9.6C chains to the p'ace of beginning. Tho donation land claim No. 42 of Robert Fhipps in Tp 2S south of range l west and the donation claim No. 37 of Robert Phipps iu Tp2 south of Range 6 west The dona tion claim of Robert McKee in Tp 28 and 2 south of range tS west notification No, &8t&. The southeast of section 2, the fractional northeast i of section the northwest t fractional sou thwest l, north of southeast and northwest of northeast ) of section 34 in Tp 28 south of range 6 west the west i of the east i and northeasv,J of northeast of sec tion 27 in Tp 28 south of range 6 west the s juth of the southeast ot socUon 31 in Tp 28 south of range 8 west. The lot 1 and the north of the northeast I of section .tin Tp 2s south of range 0 west. The southwest I of section 7 and all that portion of the northwet ) of See 27 lying south of Uie R. Umn qua river in Tp t south of range 6 west. Toe frac tioml northeast J of the southwest J of section 14 in Tp-2S south of ranged west. The donation claim of Stephen Marsh and wife No. 44 to Tp SS south of range 6 west. The sonth of the donation claim of W R Foster No. 45 in Tp 28 south of range 6 west the north K of the northwest and lots numbered 2 and 3 of section 14 in Tp23 sonth of range Swest the northeast 1 of the northeast ( of section 23 in To 2S south of nnn A west the wojit 4 the north east J at southit of section 24 in Tp 28 south of range e west of n inuftem wniii luiniiHiiiii the tenement sndannortenanees thereunto belong ing or in any wise appertaining, situate in Douglas county aud state of Oregon, wi B. C. AOEE, Sheriff, ' ' By 8. C UitiKa, Deputy. Pitcher's Castorla. - : "FREE TRADE." The 'Republicans, feeling that they are on slipjiery ground, and that they will have to resort to stratagem and deceit in order to win, have raised the cry of "Free Trade," and are howling and shrieking that the Democratic party is an "English free trade party," with the view of predjudicing iho Irish-American voters against Cleve land and Thurman. Such a presump tion ot ignorance is an insult to any grown man. There is no question of free trade before the people. The Mills bill proposes to put some articles on tho free list to benefit labor and industry. The Republican Senate bill puts other articles on the free list to benefit capital. Both bills make ad ditions to the free list, and one is as much a free trademeasure as the other.. A vote for the Republican ticket is therefore as much a vote for free trade as a vote for the Democratio ticket. Cleveland gave ample proof that he is not under the influence of England in his retahtory message, hence it is plain to see the fallacy of the Repub lican free trade argument. IIOS. UEOROE II. 1LLIAMS 111 a speach made in Portland, finds fault with Mr. Thin man because the latter opposed reconstruction measures. Con sidering that a part of these mcasuies was to maintain the carpet bag govern mehts of the Southern States, which were a stench in tho nostrils of civilization, the objection of Mr Williams is not of great weight. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castor), When alio was a Child, she cried for Caatoria, When she became Miss, she cluDg to Caaloria, When she had Children, she gave them Caatoria, Children Cry for PITCHER'S Health and Sleep without Morphine. Qui I UM FULL ROLLER MILLS. WILLIS KRiUlEIt, Voim:'.t,.,:. Keeps constantly on htmd Jlioi- Kollcr Flour, liian and chop fend at the LOWEST FBICBS. ; Highest cash price paid Cor all kinds of gram. I invito tlie public patronage, and guarantee satisfaction.' W. KRAMER, Myitlo Ci-eok, Closing Out Sale! Remember that A. F. Broivx of Oakland is closing out his large stock of General Merchandise j Come early and secure the immense bargains he is giving iu First Class Goods tho stock must be closed out by Jan. 1st, "jJttS5" Buildings and fixtures for sale on reasonable terms. A. 2 BROWX, Oakland Or. NEW ERA ROLLER MILLS, if. f ROSE & FI.OOK, Proprietors, : i AND j j Manufacturers of the best Roller Flour, Keep constantly on hand Choice Flour, Hran, and Chop feed at .-the lowest prices. j We also do an exchange business. " j Highest cash piice paid for wheat. .- We invite the public patronage, , ? And guarantee! satisfaction. ROSE & FLOOR. ROBZLU U UG-, City BtilSiOry AND i , OONFB OTIONE HTST IRESII BREAD and all kinds ot pastry always on hand and furnished on short notice. i GIVE US A TRIAL. Jackson Street - - j Rosebud Or. JOHN A. SUFFEBIN, 1'ropritlor of the ROSEBURG Iron Works CASTING of any size and Iron Work of every description neatly and protnply ex ecuted. GRIST, QUARTZ & SAW MILLS Dfnilts to Oifl'i. STATIONARY AND PORTABLE ENGINES Made to Order and Warranted. ONLY BEST MACHNIN'STS EMPIOYED- PUOTIT YOUR Iffl! tCTACtf0 GLASSES PAT9JUIYIH1B79. MR II HIRSCHBERG The well-known Optician nf 107 N. Fourth Street, tumler t'liuiten Ilous'tj Saint Louitt, l.av appoint! Pago & Diinnuck,1 of Oakland, an Airent for his cck-brate.1 Oi inioixl Kctacles and Eyeglasses, and aho forliLs Dimnotid Non-Cliane-able ?pe'taelcs and Kyc;i;isst. Tise (.lasses are tlie if ivaUttt itivenliim ever made in Spectacle, Hy a !ruter coHtru-tioti of the Iamih. a ttrsoii pur chasing a pair ot th"; N'iii-Chaiihle lila-sac-n ncer has to t-hantre these t.JanMes from the eves, and every pair purcliast d arc uaruitetrd, no that it they ever leave the eye no matter how rim ted or Meratehed the L.ericn are) they will furnish the party with a new pir f;i:wit free of charge. Pae & Iiminitk have a full ssKortim-nt and invite all who witch to satisfy thcnwelves of the if r eat ueriority of Ohkc Clauses over any and all others now in use, to rail and examine the Ha me. Page i' 1 Hmn.ick, Sole Agents for Oakland, Oregon. No Peddlers supplied. Howard & Guild Would respectfully call the attention of the LGUCL&S COUNTY To our Lar-re and Well , Assorted Stock of BOOTS Ss ; SHOES All liran new goods, guaranteed to be full stock and first class; if not, bring them back and get your money . ' ' We also kecu a good stock of . Family Groceries, Tobacco, Cigars and notions of all kinds. Iiutter, Kggs, Chickens, I'.acon, Lard, Etc., taken m exchange for goods. Orpron. 3fS LARGEST - OF - CLOTHING & DRYGOODS Just Received and Offered FOR THE LOWEST PRICES ON THE COAST. Call soon before tiiey are ALL DISPOSED OF SEW GEOCEEY STOEB J. W. MILLER $c CO. PROPKIETOKB. IUvin' just uacd a new business in Hujebunj and are now selling at very low prices a complete line of tlie Choicest Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods. Flour, Notions, Candies, Cigars and Tobacco. In Vsirtt vi'y i liinjr JoiiimI in any city Grocei-y Store. Ii'oliioo oPsiH ICiixlM talcum in I?xtliniier Jr Gondx. tt"t'l ami nee our gth?k at ii. T.'Pritvhard's Jewelry store. K very thin;? Ufresb.'fr2 S. B. HENDRICKS -AND REVIEW BEAL ESTATE CO -AT REVIEW ROSEBURG Transact a General REAL ESTATE Business. Buy and sell Farmina: Land. Improved and Unimproved Land City, Property, Collect "D "mi. Solicit Business Will take Pleasure in Show ing Lands to intending Settlers parties having Real Estate for salewill do well to Leave the same with us. FLOUR SVIITsTs FOB Doing a fine local and custom business 3-4 of a mile from' town; between 50 and 75 acres of land, hog pen, slaughter and smoke house $3500. Also near the mill property, a nice residence and barn, with 5 lots, nice location. Cheap . j - Ilendricks-Review Real Estate Cor Fine property for sale, consisting of foundry building and ma chinery, with everything pertaining to a first-class business, to gether with land on which the property standi. The whole property can be bought very low, or will sell half interest in the above to some responsible party who wishes to engage in the manufacture of agricultural Implements, the latter preferred. This we think one of the best locations in the State. i. 360 acres choice farming and fruit lands within half a mile of shipping point on O. k C. R. R. Good dwelling, fair barn and orchard of beaiing fruit-trees, consisingof apples, pears, plains and peaches, 100 acres arable, balance fine timber and pasture; all suitable for fruits. Easy terms, j : S. U. Hendricks, Managerl Fine farm in Tehama county, California, containing 3C0 acres of vrrv ductive land, 200 acres of which ia A 1 table land snitable for pasture. Located atage passes tho place daily. Duildingn school. ; For further particulars enquire of S. E. Hendricks, Manager, j Hendricks Review ileal Estate Co. Rose burg, Oregin. SHIPMENT CAM) Bros. THE- THE- OFFICE. OREGON. on commission Rt.nnV t?o pro level plow land, balance timbered kind 12 miles from Corning on railroad fair and within a quarter of a mile of --, sjT A, t i - .