THE OREGON SOOO" JVJIOS K. J0NK8 EDITOR, P.itv nnrl fminfir nffirial Pinnc wulj vmuu. x ujioi. "" - : .---i.- . Friday, July 20th, 1838, EDITORTAL NOTES. The M'cst Shore for July is at hand, nnd is fully up to its usual standard of excellence. It is n publication Hint should bb in'ovcrv household. Tim (Sod of Nature never goes buck on thc Union county funner. Not witlistand'iig the direful prognostica tions of ii mouth or so ago, the 'tiller of the soil looks over his fields of ripening grain and rejoices. An Mili-niiineHi meeting in Sydney, Australia, was attended by nearly '10, 000 people. Exchange. The anti-Olii-nese meeting to bo held in this county next November will be much more largely attended than the one spoken of by our exchange. A total eclipse of the moon is billed by astronomers to taku place on the night of July 22, when tho satellite passes through the center of tho earth's shadow. The gicatest occupa tion will occur at 10 o'clock v. at. Tin: Maker City pa pern say that the people- living in tho southeastern por tion of Union county want to bo annexed to Maker county. .Seems to us like we heard some-thing of that kind about a year ago, but when wo sent a ntan up. to interview those en terprising citizens, he couldn't liud any of llieni. Tin: J'rinon-Mirror, published in the Sla to penitentiary at Stillwater, Min nesota, is one of tho best writ ton ind brightest exchanges on our list. Its articles, both original and clipped, show m null more than ordinary ability in its make up, and tho moral influ ence of such a sheet must prodtico a better tone- among tho inmates of tho prison, Tiinin-: is no question of free trade hi this cajnpaign and no party favors it. .Democrats believe that t .o tarill' should bo reduced from an average duty of Id per cent, to about -10 per cent., and that certain articles needed by o.r manufacturers should bo placed upon the list of articles imported free of duty. This is not fiou trade, and tho man who states it, states what is false, and if ho is an intelligent man ho knows he is doing to. "Tu no. muck hi pink lo mo so, hop long Hullison, fou sic chin chin. Jloollali! JJully good man." This melodious utteranco issued from tho orifice in Sam King's countenance, yesterday. Mr, Ming is one of our moat respected oiti.ons and has a very remunerative business hero in tho blenching and drying lino. While tho auditors did not fully grasp tho gentle man's train of thought, it was quite apparent from his beaming counten ance that it was of a felicitous nature. Among the Indians in town this week was one well along in years who wore a pair of blue army pants. ) look to see some of the Republican editors, about tho calibre of llarvey Scott, re port an interview with him, toon, and have hiinN ackiuiwledgo that ho was Cleveland's substitute dining the war; that ho contracted rheumatism, Ilright's difcease, and otherwise porin nncntly ruined his health in that gieat htruggle nnd that Clove-laud failed and neglected to pay him for his services and refused his application for a pen sion. "Ni: aro in receipt of the uixth annu al catalogue of t bo Oregon Statu Nor mal School of.'Moninoulh, Pull; coun ty. It is a most oxuulleut institution, possessing a largo Faculty of able Professors and touchers, and is iu a prosperous condition. The circular states that tho sohool is entirely undo lDniinntionul, no church having any interest iu it whatever. There aro 77 free scholarships distributed to the din'orent counties of tho State in pro portion to tho school population. Un ion county is entitled to two. The applicant must present his application to tho Suporintonlluut of Sohools of Ids county, with satisfactory evidence of good moral character and snllloiunl scholarship to entitle him to a certifl cnto to teach iu the public fohool, nnd must sign a declaration to the ellect i that ho is iu good health, anil his in tention to teach in tho public schools for a period of time tit least as great as that spent on his scholarship. This is a good ohanuo for sumo of our young men oy women. Outnloguua are sent free to all who applj for them. the kind he is. Says a. letter from Indianapolis, General Harrison's home: do where you will anioiiK laboring men of uiiv trnde.'i , in Iiulhinapolw, anil you will i , .Clltln,t ...tinathv to General Hnrri son. It is a tradition minted often nnd Willi trrcat force tha in n fiiucch at the time ! of the htrlko in Im7 he xiilri that U a day wns wages enough for any inun j This shows what kind of nn nristo j crat Mr. Harrison is. JIo believes i that honest labor should bo paid stnr- vation wages vet he is a high tariff man . Strange isn I it? JG NOR ANT MTSllEPR KSENTA TIONS. Thc Albany Herald nping thc Only Kiys: Mr. Mills, in his speech before congress in defense of bis bill, closed in the following words: Then every industry will .spring forward nt ii bound, iiud wentth. prosperity nnd power will I'ler.-i the Jnnd that Is dedicated to freemen, fr.;e labor, and. hv trade. The J)c)iiocral nails the falsehood as follows: Now wo have examined Mr. Mill's speecli na found on pages 3:52!J!):W.r inclusive, of Congressional Itccord, and lind that he. made use of no such language, lie closed his speech with these words: Although thc hill proposed in not nil wc could havo-n.sked. although it is n very moderate bill, yet it will nend comfort and happiness into the homes and bosoms of the poor laboring people of tills country and 1 usl; you now in behalf of them to consider their claim, and help to reduce the hardens that have no long I men laid up on their shoulder. We nre. not surprised that the Xlcr altl thus willfully nnd designedly mis represents Mr. Mills. There is no other way of attacking tho speech. A REMARKABLE CJIANGE. In 188-1 (bo republican national plat form said: The domocrntio party hns failed com pletely to relieve the people of Hie burden of unnecossjiry taxation by a who reduction of the .surplus. The republican parly pled ges iteif to rnrrrrt the iitrtualiliex of the tariff anil to inlure the surplus. This year tho samo party proposes to givo the country frco tobacco, and if that docs not reduce the surplus sulllcienlly, to repeal tho whiskey tax. This is the hsuo offered. Four years ago the platform could have bold the Mills bill nicely, for that measure is precisely iu line with the pledge made by both parties lo remove unneces sary taxes, which woro denounced ns a "burden" upon the people. Up on whom is tho tax on whiskey and tobacco a burdonV Upon no one. It is a voluntary tax paid only by those who use wbiskoy or tobacco, Its im position is no burden. Its repeal will, be no relief. Tho unnecessary and burdoiisonio taxes aro those on tho necessaries of life and those articles without which tho business of tho country cannot be transacted. 1 .HALLELUJAH. Our Portland dispatches to-day mention the fact that Portland busi ness men aro greatly exercised over over tho new freight schedulo that will soon be put into effect by the Transcontinental Association, where by freight destined lo interior points will cost no more than to terminal points. This is good news, over the rcciept of which the people of tho in terior will rejoice. It will place towns in the interior on an equality with Portland, and levy a tribute no lon ger upon thcin for the benefit of Port land, us has been done in tho past. Heretofore tho principle has been to centralize; to build up a few -largo cities at the exponso of many small towns. The wrong is to bo righted through the action of tho Iutcr-Stato commerce commission, a democratic institution iu principle us well us iu naiiio. The Portland people aro al armed that they are not lo bo protec ted any more at tho expense of others. The town-lot boomers of that city will doubtless receive n sot back to their business, but legitimtito trade tho state over will bo greatly stimu lated by this ehango m freight rules. Simple justice is to bo given us, and wo herald Its coming witli exultation. Tho mills of tho gods grind slowly, but they grind exceedingly well. (Jlory, Hallelujah! a principle of true free trade is to bo inaugurated. IC. O. PROTECTION AN OUTRAGE. The talk about protection and beat ing the democracy on that issue among republicans is not nearly so loud and emphatic as it was. Tho bosses liuvo discovered that there is iu tho party a strong counter current of opinions; so strong iu fact that It is sweeping the foot of those trying to stem it from under them, A party that at tempts to force Us way against tho common sense of its own people may succeed for awhile, but patiouce will not endure forovor, and appearances indicate that the Republican party must modify its extromo demands up- ' ou us raiiK ami uie, or it will soon find its solt pinched In its own camp between tliu devil and thu deep son. A reduction of thu tariff on the lead ing uctiosftirtes of hfu has got to come. Extortion on tliu part of capital has I been carried so far Hint the most sub- ; servient partisan begins to squirm. j Tho C(U.S0 1)lu.SUC(1 m8 benI1 Ainori. j ... oxtrcillc: .,. t. thc L,.,:C(1 , , . .. ,A UKV" B" jnui.uuucuu uuu it vumu not refrain from taking the grist from the toll. A wiser policy on t!ic part of capital would have been to divide with labor on tho score of profits; but this it has not been inclined to do, and it now finds its interests confron ted by a general feeling of dissatisfac tion. Nothing grows faster than greed when it is well fed. It is the meanest element iu human nature, the inosl cncting, the most heartless nnd the most audacious. Hence, the matter of cultivating or stimulating it in nny country is against humanity mill reason. The practice of bestow ing special favors upon any class in this country must stop. It has been carried to an extent already which threatens the overthrow of our form of government. Thc doctrine of equal rights which is the bash of our struc ture has been undermined by special laws enacted in thc interests of capital. The whole fabric begins to tremble and show signs of weakness. Too many have been provided with luxuri ous accomodations iu the upper story. Thc clement that must live on thc ground iloor, and in the basement, appreciates its situation and thc disre gard that is shown for it. Tho work- i ers sac that the lordlv drones eat up the honey and devour the products of their own toil, and that no redress has been provided them. There is no use of talking. Things have reached, or aro fast reaching a crisis. Something must be done , and that speedily, to avert tho wrath tint has been kindled by a sense of outrage. Tho great mass of the American people find themselves thus early iu tho history of their country at tho mercy of a power that has been conferred on capital. Turn which way they may, and they will find every avenue to prosperity in tho bands of corporations and combina tions. There is no escape from thc tribute lliey exact. Pay it or stand back, is their motto. No, tho peo ple will not endure this tyranny much longer, party or no party. Madison J)cmocmt. WTAKIfMLIIW.HIJ ;lAr INEFFACEABLE 11 ECO ED. It must be unpleasant for a good many republicans to have the Con gressional Record in their libraries. Over and over again, for twenty years tho leaders have talked tariff reform. One after another tho parly whip has swung them into lino against it. Take the famous Forty-first Con gress, when Colfax lead the senate and Rlaino the boiiso. When Randall brought iu a bill to put tea and coffee on the frco list, sixty-two republicans voted for it and thirty-nine voted to add salt and coal. Speeches were made for free wool, free iron and free lumber. .John A. Logan said: "AVowanta reduction on tariff. We aro taxed on overy interest ; blood is not only ex tracted from tho larger veins of the body politic but is bound hand and foot and is covered with gallinippers, who aro allowed lo suck blood from every vein. ' ' Allison of low.i said: ''The tariff of 1810 though a tariff for revenuo on ly was so far as regards all tho great interests of the country, as perfect a tariff as any that we have over had." 1 lo favored taking tho tariff entirely off raw material. During this famous debate re-publicans advocated one after another, most of tho democratic tariff reform principles of the presont tinio, but they split on details, and nothing was ac complished. Thoso things aro all written in the doeu incntary evidence, .i'von so lato as lt3S!l a man could bo a good mem ber of tho republican party and still favor lowering duties and enlarging tho frco list. Hut now tho party has crystalizcd; its war issues aro dead, and all it has left is tho war tariff. Therefore tho leaders of the party would tain have tho nation forget that they have for years talked tariff re form. VAL 1jfoF A J) ) 'EH TJS1NG. It is stated thai a gentleman on en tering tho privuto office of a largo wholcsalo establishment "in ono of tho Middle States, was surprised at tho largo number of nowspapors which ho saw scattered about , many of them country papers of little merit, which ho supposed could be of no interest to the merchants. On his expressing bis surprUo. tho bond of the firm replied: "We always subscribe for the load ing paper iu tho city, town or village iu which any of our customers reside. We study tho advortislmr columns of these papers with the utmost euro. If wo find that oureustomer is n regular advertiser and that his advurtisomonts are prepared iu a careful and judicious manner, we conclude that bo is doing a good business and that wo can place our confidence iu him. Our business with him is conducted accordingly. If , on the other hand, however, wc fail to find his advertisement , or if it is prepared in a, careless or unattractive manner, wc take care not to carry him for any large amount, and if wc can conveniently refuse his patronage 1 altogether, wc do so. If we find that I ho is advertising iu other newspapers j than the lending one because it is cheaper to do so, or tuat he is depend ing on other cheap methods of adver tising, wc know that his judgment and business sagacity are not to bo relied upon nnd wc keep n close watch upon him. Wc have followed this rule for a long time nnd wc seldom make a mistake by judging our cus tomers in accordance with it. By closely watching tho advertising col umns of thc local papers, wc deter mine where to give credit and where not to give it, and we seldom meet with a heavy loss through thc failure of customers who are indebted to us." Tips story illustrates one of i the many benefits of judicious advertising. j Not the business community alone, f but the general public ns well, forms its opinion of the standing and pros pects of a firm, by its methods of ad vertising. Nothing is more natuial than for a stranger, .coining for the first time into a city, to look over the advertising columns of the lending newspaper If he sees m attractive and well arranged advertisement oc cupying a good space, bo concludes that, the firm to which it belongs is one of the leading ones of the city and that it is a safe ono with which to have dealings. Such first impressions arc usually iasting, and thev are scl- i dom wrong. Rev. Tlios. MacGuiro will preach at the Presbyterian churcli every Sunday at .'1 o'clock, p. m. SCROFULA I do not bollevo that Aycr's Sarsaparilla has an equal ns a euro for Scrofulous Hu mors. It is pleasant to tnkc, gives strength to tho body, and pro duces a moro perma nent result than any medicine- I ever used. E. Haines, North Lindalo, Ohio. I havo used Aycr's Sarsaparilla, in my fnmily, for Scrofula, and know, if it is taken faithfully it will thoroughly oradicato this terriblo disease. W.K.Fowlcr.M.D., Greenville, Tenn. For forty years I havo suffered with Erysipelas. I havo tried various remedies for my complaint, but found no relief until I commenced using Aycr's Sarsaparilla. After taking ten bot tles of this medicine I am completely cured. M. (J. Amesbury, Kockport, JIo. I have suffered, for years, from Catarrh, which was so novero that it destroyed my nppetito and weak ened my system. After trying othor romedies, without re liof, I began to tako Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, in a few months, was cured. Susan L. Cook, 'JO!) Albany St., Boston, Muss. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is superior to any blood puritlor thnt I over tried. I havo taken it for Scrofula, C auk or, and Salt ltlieum, and received much benellt from it. It is good, also, for a weak .stomach. Milllo Jnno Pcirco, S. Bradford, Mass. tt Humors, Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. -yer & Co., Lowell, Mats. 1'rlcoSl; (lx bottles, S3. siii:itirt"s NAl.U. I5y virtue of a warrant issued out of the County court of the State of :rn, for Union county, to me directed and delivered, bear. iii(r date of May Uth, 18SK, coinmaudlnK mo to levy upon the goods and chatties of the delinquent tax-payers named on the delin quent tax roll for Mild county for the years lhS(! and 18.VT thereto attached, and if none be found, then upon tho real piopctty ,ns set forth and described iu the said delin quent tax roll or so much thereof as shall xatisfy the amount of taxes charged therein, together with costs nnd expensed, I have duly levied (having heeif unable to lind any Koous or niiuui's ueionxioK i i uu delin quent hereinafter named) upon tho follow ins? described nieces or parcel". of land as I sol lortn m sani tax roil, lyunr ami Dcing in said Union county. State of Oregon, de scribed and assessed as follow.: Dearborn, tieo. l- Commencing nt n point 60 feet X of NYV comer of block 4. of West Union; thence N, 10) feet; thence W. (W feet; thence . 100 feet; theneo K. 00 feet to place of beginning, t'oiuineneing tW feet tf. of XW corner of block I, West Union; thence X. 100 feet ; thence H, 100 feet ; thence S, UN) feet; thence 100 feet to placo of beginning. Total amount of tax, $S,07, and on Sat. the lSth dav of August, isss, ut the hour of 2 o'clock 1' M. of .said dav, nt tho court house door iu said county and State, I will sell ihe above described real estate nt public auction, to the highest bidder for oash lo me In hand, subject to redemption, to satiufy said warrant, eosta and accruing costs. Dated July 12, 18&5. A. X. IIAMILTOX, Sheriff of Union county, Oregon. lty Jainos Lowell, Deputy. " 7-13 NOTicr. to STocuiioi,m;its. To stockholders of tho Union Milling Co: You are hereby notified that tho annual meeting of tho stockholder of the Union Milling Company will be hold at tlieolllceof it. KuKiu A flro., in Union. Orujiou, on the llth day of August, l&vs at :. o'clock p, m. fur the purpose of uloctiu three directors of snld company for tho ensuhui your, and fur the tranwietion of such othtr buslnes as may proporly oomo bofme thu inueting. Union, Oregon. Julv fi, lKis. M s WAHKKN, - sevrvwr- In os e ii sum ml gjgTXOTE. Having no connection with, nnd not being hampered by the showman's trust, we are enabled to present the very best circus that ever crossed the continent, for oO cents admission. PREPARE FOR THE lllllft ' , asihw JjMjjim mm FIELD THE IDEAL EQUKSTIUOLYMP1AN McMahon's Great World's Circus WILL POSITIVELY EXHIBIT AT Tie ffe Introducing all the great arc n'c meteors from their recent triumphs in thc East. Pull 100 Peerless Stars, Equal to the Combined Talent of Twenty Groat Shows. Over 500 Famous, First-time Feats nnd Features Never JJefore Seen West of the Mississippi, Im possible to Duplicate anil Un known to other shows. 0 Doors Open at 1 and 7 o'clock 1 M. Performances one hour later. Admission Only 50 cents, Children under Ten years, 25 cents! J. L ALBERSON, -DEALER IX- CORNUCOPIA. OREGON Carries a complete stock of everything re quired by the Miner, Farmer and Stockman. Call and examine goods and prices, and be convinced that you can save nioiicv, and time by trading at home. GIVE ME A TRIAL ! Jn connection will be found a GOOD FEED AND LI VERY STABLE Where all will lind excellent accomodations for their teams. Rigs at Seasonable Sates. gg J. L. ALHEKSON, Cornucopia, Union County, Or. Wilson Manufacturers ml Doors ai life Keeps Constantly on hand a Large Supply of Bedding, Desks, Office Furniture, etc. All kinds of Furniture Mndo, and Upholstering done to order. WILSON & MILLEK, Main St., Union, Or. W. D. BEEDLEMAN, Proprietor. Keeps i constantly on hand n full assortment of everything in his line, manufactured of the best material obtainable. Ho is now offering for sale the Best Jot of saddles, at lower prices than were ever offered in Eastern Oregon, LEAD HARNESS, HORSE BLANKETS, CURRY COMBS, Also a FULL ASSOKTMEXT of SPURS. WHIPS, AXLK (IHEABK. HARNESS OIL, hTc, Ete.. J'.tc. In fact everything usually kept in a First Class Establishment. Sg-Call and examine goods. - O Main Street. Union, Oregon. (OPPOSITE CENTENNIAL HOTEL.) J- S. ELLIOTTj " Proprietor. Everything First Class. Torms Very Reasonable. Buss to and From the Depot Making Connection with all Trains, GREAT EVENT, IE I,' f. Ill MSI I,' A llll SHOW, AGGREGATION of the UNIVERSE Till & Miller, of and Dealers in 1 Park anrl Burl. room Sets, lLi FEES uIIELE.