Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932, August 30, 1895, Image 1

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Independent and Oregonian J
Independent and Oregonian
Two Qoui
ein Wm'4.'
HILLSBORO, WASHINGTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30. 1895.
Vol. XXII.
No U.
GENERAL DIRECTORY.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
STATE OFFICERS.
lovcrnor
fesnetary ' Slat.
Ireaanrer
Houl. Publio Instruction
tttat Printer
Supreme Court j
Jndg. Fifth District ..
Attorn'? l-'if lU DUtricV
Wm. P. Lord
ILrrleon K. Kinoaid
Pb'llip Metscnan
Htoa Bowaua.
Notary Public
w. d. mm.
MVITU BOWJfA.
VtTuId. A TTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
ikiuk K. Wulverton
lULLSUOliO, OKtUU.H.
ri.ua. k.
K. S. HMD
F. A. Moor
T. A. McBnd.
W.N. Barrett
Orvtoa: Kouoi. 6 and 7, Morgan block.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Jodg.
ConimiwiioueM J
Clerk
Hueri
Recorder
Treaannr ...
SfiHto&tmT
tscliool Huperiiitendent.
Surveyor
Corouer.... -
,...B. P. CoTOallU.
. . l. B. Reaeoner
T. O. Todd
U. B. Good in
" H. P. Ford
K. L. McCormick
i, W. Kappington
.George U. Yilooi
W.A. Bond
L. K. Wilke.
. . V. D. Wood
C.E.KISDT.:
jTTORN E Y-A I -U W ,
PORTLAND. OREGON.
Hnoit ! No. 8. Portland Having Bank
Building, Beoond and Washington Mre.1..
CITY OFFICERS.
f . . .S. B.
Board f Trusties
lloord-r
Treasurer
Marshal
Justice of Peao.
Huetoo, Mayor
K. 0. Brown
. . . . Jos. Down
F. J. Bailey
. . J. H. Stanley
. K. Beret
j. P. Tannest.
1). W. Dubbins
(j. W. Pattaraon
. W. Iledmoud
. . 1.1. Knight
. aaaaaTT,
BARRETT AliAHS,
lTORNEY8-AT-LAW,
HILL8BOKO, OKfcUun.
Omoa: Central lilook. Rooms 6 and 7.
POHT' OrFlCE INFORMATION.
... .... .i the Hillaboro Post
Bethany and Cadar
The- rr.a
Office, daily:
Gleneoe. Wont Union,
Mill, at ll -'On. iu.
Oo!nSwPoV,;ndway-omce..C..
rV.W,.to. and Laurel. Wednd.y.
nd Saturday, at lUuj-
OKKUON CITY LAND OFFICE.
H. B. MUST0X,
... . m v . ttr
ATTOKNEY-Al-i"
AND NOTARY PUBLIC.
HILLS BOKO, OREGON.
Ornca i Boom No. 8, Union Block.
THOMAS H. T0SUUE.
TTORNEY-AT-LAW, (
BILLS BOKO, UltKW".
Orrtoat Morgan Blook.
"As oil fta
the hills" and
never excell
ed. "Tried
Z? aii-1 proven"
I millions.
iSimmoiis
Liver Regu--r
. . lutur U the
77Ionly Liver
J-JUftt aa,i Rklney
medicine to
n
va
Hobert A. Miller
Peter Paijoet.... .
. Kauiater
heoier
u. r p.
,v,.v i,uuif.. NO. 84. K. OF P..
I' meVta in Odd Follow.' Hall on Monday
-LETTol a" ob w.k. Sojonrnm,, bratbren
..loomed to lod. "rt'JHBWB 0. C.
W. J. PtBTLOW. K. of H. H.
. o. n.
MONTKZCMA LOROK. NO. M. "
M We'lnelay .yeni.m.at ' ia l -F.Hall.
ViaitoraniadewMoom..
D. M.C. Goit, Seoy.
1. I". anil A. M.
. . ...... .iiing vri n. A. F. A A. M.
TUeVrV HatnrdH, nihl on or after
full ruo u of each montn.
" A. O. U. VY.
. , iinnl NO. 61. A. O. U.
Toeada, eyen.n AN, M. y,.
J. I. Kaionr. Keoorder.
ThHISOTONKNOAM PMENT No. .
WILKtS BK0H.
USTRACTORS AND
HILL6BOKO, OKEOON.
.-..taforBarLooTTypa Writer. Two
door. BOrth of PoatotBoe.
which you
cm pin your
fnitli for a
cure. A
mild laxa
tivo, t n d
jiuri-ly veg
etable, act
ing directly
on the Liver
n n d Kid
neys. Try it.
fold by all
DntKfjists in Liquid, or in I'o'wdor
V) be taken dry or mad.-in too- ta.
The KIiik of l.li. r 'M. illi llii-..
I liuv'i' it. . vi,.'ii'ii!;..n I.Icr Itcirti-
Pills
tl i- Hid
W. Jack-
hilir and .m
klllk t( Hit livrr iik Ix-ii
flieilicliif chr'-I hi ilM'ii
i:VKKV f ALU Ml.-
tli Z rtHniM in ril oq wrHiptt
NORTH PACIFIC
. CLAY WORKS .
THOS. B. HUMPHREYS.
ABSTRACTINQ OF HTLKtt
HILL8BOKO. OREGON.
PP W "iPTJLXHo
D.i.u axmllltMl. putiuca- -
with promptnea. an- - -"i4. rnrt
Omon Main Btreei, oyi-
Bona.
R. SIX0!, :
DENTIST,
FOUEST unuvAi vcVa"
fonrth Fridaya of each mouth.
- U. B. Uooiua. cwriue.
iLimrbler. of ReUfkah.
nllAHMOKO REBEKAH I-ODOB 1 NO.
iu I O O. F.. meet, m Oad ellowa
Mull every
,a0b ABY H,!M,.HUKY8. N.O,
Mas. Mi Uaa.Hf0'y
pTTTiiiT
2nd anu -" niui".j - ,-- -
llKNi. tlOHOFIKia, ..,
Aami IaiB. bo.
no 17.50
I. now making m "kmn.b.p.
xtraotea wino j .- .- j.
Ttb- d.K.r. north of B.
a trWM koart from V a. n. w v-
WWWWm
II
. M. t K
f EET3 very Holiday rreninR at 7 o'oloek
111 in tli i;nriamu
Yon are
inua.
MIN I IE UtMI'UKEVS. Prea't.
-,railW Invited t attena ni "'"-,
WM. BENS0S,
PRACTICAL MACIHWiaii
... . HtRra F.nain'
-Ttwk" Threahina Maohtnea
and "";,",r. "Bewinii Machine.
Mowera, - -Vrinaera, Pnmpa,
Washing Maohinea, Wnnera.
Hoale.84.r.Kroond .a
itblna. oaw. -TZ-a .nBirle. and
numD.roi--.-jia.
All wm
r". ,u.rn.M COUNTY HOD AND
W ""V. . " - in Mnruan
.Je'r, ItSod TburaT of .oh month, at 8
Vl ILI.HIU UO IADOE NO. 17. 1. O. O. T.
H meet in Oranae Hall every
1 1 . "" '" . ,. :.,, no menibem
Mie KHiae. .
W. H. oi.T, Hioretary.
am
a larae
boiler, for aale,
, aitLBT. a. . . at. t.
f. a. Banal,
DRS. F. A. r. J. BAILEY.
IIIY8ICIAN9, SUUOKONS AND
HILLS BOKO, OREGON.
. r.i.. Rloek. Call.
O-noai l rnarmacy. B w.
.....LvufiiiNil, CHURCH, eorner
C''-nd Filth .t, Jjg
KYiiUT .onin. Y.P.
Hnnday at !.: p.
I
ttaSdad toTniaht or day. ReaWen,
rC tin. and Second .treeta.
iifui ti'ltriBilinn Ulinrfin. iv
iiMtAMiinit nuu no'" .v p.
ima...... - - . 7:H0 D. I
nmiunT .....
Ill 111. ITItJP .ai--...-..
V. r. o. u nuu-
s.
J. P. TAMIESIE,' M. I.
P. R. R. SURGEON,
HllllilHvHimix'l.
Thnratlnv. -iW P
day, 7.1I P- "
iTr ' I'lll'IH'lli H. P. Webb, r'';
W ' ui.i..ih luoriima and
evmiia. Sunday at I
l.etiune iiiieiiMK . ... j -; -
HILLSBORO, OREGON.
, .no latiwi; Third
and Mam Street.. Omo. Zo. to
a. ro.. I to and 7 to P ;, ,',,0ire al
mubt or day.
A Full tiok of
DRAIW TILE
Constantly on hand.
Orders Sollolted.
JAS. H. SEWELL. Hlllsboro, Oregon.
Extraordinary!
The regular subscription
. price of Thk
Independent is $1.50
And the regular subscription
price of the Weekly
Oregonian is $1.50.
Any one subscribing for The
independent
TALIE OF HONESTY.
and paying one year in
vance can get both The
ad-
10 k.
6::w r
ruVi la, evening o, ..oh
iiumtb
kneral prayer "" "e.
mini. Leader.' and Steward (
M. T. LISKliATERy M. B. C. M.
IIYSICIAN AND HUUGEON,
HILLSBORO, OREGON.
Independent..
and Weekly
Oregonian oiicycarforS2.00
All old subscribers paying
their subscriptions for one
year in advance will lie en
titled to the same offer.
HILLSBORO PUBLISHING COMPANY
1V1VIIH.KHL CHI twrner
W.M an 4 IV. I'rea-hina everyHan.!.,
eveninu at H p.
i.'i aeoond and foarth Sun-
. . t I .t. KtilkilM BMTllinrt raw "
.,ra," r .:;...; every' Wednemiay .veniiia
I earhr" ineetina every
H. L. Prill t, piwtiir.
Hnnday evening.
ORNEI.irs CHI RCH - (Vrviw;. flrat
V and third Snnuay . - -7 ,
endfoiirlli H.ih.Ihv at II "u ' '
Yl, iitig People"' "ci'',', ' V'"", 1, iI
v " everv Sunday .veiling " 7 o'eloea. Sua
,Vav J-h.K.1 at I0A. Ter n'hj
montn m n Y w..at,n PMtnr.
iviusr HVPTiar CH I'KCH OF HlLLS-
lH.ro H,rner Third and Fir. Preach-
i-ad
flMiALATIN PLAINS PRESBYTERIAN
1 Church -Regular preacning. onnoaya
11 o'clock
A. M.
A M; Siiiulnv arh..l. 10 o ciooa
W. II. DIERDtHtFF.
Paator.
1,1 ULIiVK'I'H WILt
I .' t.i.i Ili realdtMlce of Mr.
llnternahrer on the last Friday
in
BE
H.
eacb
","n" Rv.f"'d. DONNELLY. Paator
' a. 0. T. M.
7Iiil. V TEN T, SO. IS. K . T. M.,
....i-t. in o ld Fello.' Hall, on
. .... 1 I .. ... nf CtaWh
.,,r...ay -"'jjio;
Com.
ami f"llr.ll
month
11 . urns I'
li. K
EAGLE MARBLE WORKS!
T. C3-. HIoICIlTS,
Miacrtcnrata or
MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES
and all kind of Miirbla Work la
TALIAN AND AMERICAN MARBLE.
Importer and dealer la
AbiIcii and Scale. Bnnlti Miniiatt.
omoa tap woaaa
0,c. . reaidenoe.
u .here b. will be lounu .
when not viaitlng patienW.
W. B. V 0OITm.
OHYSICIAN AND HUROWiX,
HILIJBORO. OREGON. '
rheeatt. Row. Rafioafoi:
oomer Firat aad Main "treeta.
C. B. BROWS,
DENTIST,
HILL8HOHO. OHEOON.
GOLD CROWN and BRIDGE
aoMialty. All work unnranreeu
work a
.T '' 7' a a u. .....! Block.
Ortoa Hooa.: From 8 . at. to t r. .
Dr. Price's Cream Baking; Powdr
Award Gala Medal MUWiater ru. .
noxr.v to mi
MONEY TO LOAN. IN AMOCNT8 OF
a.VM and apward. long Uin a "J,Pr
cent, on improved farm propey. '
addreaa. Boom vn. '. ,
ond and Washington atiwta. Portland, Ur.
8-7
RIBBOXS AND . . .
. . . CARB0X PAPER
roB
TYPEWRITER!
AT
INOI PIND INT OFFICE
Y I. FISHER,, newspaper
1 J agent. 81 Merchant-.
Pea rraaeiaro, la oar
advertiiring
Exchange
authorised agent
Ky to take, Mire to cure, 110 pain
nothing to drcail, pl a-mit little pilli.
I ie Witt's Little Karly Hir. IWnt
for sick lirnilaclie, hilloii.-mM, sour
atoinai'h niul constipation. W. E.
IlriH-k.
myft great. nmrp-M
Jr .i'V ).r"V" JfrifX
'A ' A- .m- v VVi
Th's extra-
Orllnry Ke"
(iiveuainr Is
t a . nmit
wondrrfu I
diarovi-ry f
he are. It
h hen on.
r1or,l by the
H.aittir. hn
It tic men of
Kumpe ant
Am.-rlra.
Nudyaa ta
Ci'i-ly vfire
hie.
Madras irtnrw
t'einiluriKisj
of the d 1
ehanr. In J
dar. Cure,
LOST
r-.o.d
CoTif.t1i.ftt.nn,
1'iixinecft,
FaMinn Ken
Mtinun. N'err
otwtwUchlnx til yr
vl other
Htn?nthen,
I n t I v i ra
ii1 tone the
'ilreytpni.
H'i4tn curtt
l e I 1 1 1 f,
N'rnnsne,
m t Inn ,
nltTeloptt
and TfMopri
weak ornirs.
1 4in in iti
r jr rt a f or
manhood r; vyr-,'4hl,,orr
qtHrklr. Orr 2 rinn rr'rnfe .nio-vmfTi.,
rrematnr-nr. ii-r.r. imwM.i.' y tu lite flret
rtwe It i. l rymp-rm of purnpil yreaknem
S'nl lrrinnr.. It can b. rioj.pea in todays
by the irenl lln.lysn.
Theerw ai-overy fr. man1" W tl. Prerlal
lu.nftlwnM f.rr.c. Huiioa Mtdical lattitats.
H la lha vda.17. r rt.ae. It m very
rjowerf.il. hn h-ml. s. ,s.'. ft PO a pack
aro'4 rairt. I ts.vo 1 j.lntn aca!M hnxe).
Written mw.niee Bvr'i toz a cure. I f yon bny
i tw'x. an. are rot rrtlniy ciirei.al. aiora
i!l he to r.ii fr.- ff All rr-ar..
Hen I f f P'T u .r-.nl lt irfi.rli A Una.
alll llll MHIICAU IMIITVTK.
JaorlloK aioehiaa, Market at .la tm.
nil enm-lacw, la.
Henry Holt U w ritinir a aeries of
articles for the Forum, on social dis
content. The third paper, in the
April number of that Journal, has
this paragraph un what hecalUtlie
"Economic Value of Honesty :"
"The teaching of honesty has U-n
too exclusively on 'ultra-rational'
ground. The other day 1 heard a
man, eminently successful agalust
peculiar obstacles, asked to what one
tiling he liioet attributed his success.
After some consideration he uttered,
lu modest phrase, what really meant
that his success had arisen from peo
ple trusting him. That, however,
was of course as much a result of ca
pacity as of honesty. The value of
honesty could he taught, not only
from this point of view, but from
that of the simplicity and consequent
economy It gives to commercial
transactions. In Wall street, people
constantly trust each other's word for
millions. In banks, as a matter of
fact, signatures are hardly ever scru
tinized. A very elementary iutelli-
genee can be brought to realize what
an enormous waste it would be if all
these transactions had to be guarded,
in the first case, by elaborate con
tracts, and in the second, by scores of
expert examiners; most of the quick
exchanges, which cheapen the poor
man's staples much more than they
do the luxuries of the rich, would
simply be impossible. That they are
so prominent a feature of the modern
world, Is probably due as much to
advance in honesty as in material
facilities.
Next to the fundamental Ideas of
'rivate Property, Contract, and the
Economic Itasis of Honesty, the one
all-including purpose of education
either to content or to advance the
wage-earner, should be to make him
appreciate the manager's function,
and to inspire and fit him to exercise
for himself. As fast as lie does
that, so fast will he receive the en
vied share of product that the man
ager now receives. All the com
mendable schemes of co-operation
and profit-sharing nay, even all the
absurd socialistic schemes, aim at
that result, only the latter seek it
without fulfilling the prerequisite
conditions. They hope by the stu
pidiiies of popular suffrage to get
gratis the results obtainable only
from intelligent and arduous man
agement. Moreover, it should be
taught that as the profits of business
management are something that the
genius ot the manager creates, with
out him they would not exist at all;
and if it is proposed to tax them
away from him, for the benefit of
those who do not make them, he
mply will not take the trouble to
create them. I make no excuse for
iterating these things over and over;
though they are growing to be com-
monplace among the few who really
study the subject, it may reasonably
be doubted whether there is any set
of facts in our universe material, so
cial, Intellectual, even moral that
more need impressing upou people in
general to-day, than Just those; that
the great productive forces of the
world are intelligence, foresight, ini
tiative, character, not the mere me
chanical forces that transfer matter
as the greater forces direct.
Next in importance should Ire
taught the fact that the good man
ager benefits the laborer as well as
himself that the attempt to get
along without hi in would prevent
not only the mauager's share from
coming into being, but also a portion
of what the laborer himself is accus
tomed to receive in short, that the
attempt can only kill the goose.
s statements, all the foregoing
about management are coherent
enough to be utulerstisid by any sane
erson, whether they are believed or
not; they would be vastly more intel
ligible, even to children, than many,
perhaps most, of the statements
memorized by them; they are, as
just said, of the very first impor
tance; but the number of people, who
never have heard them, is astound
ing. Yet even some comprehension
of the reasons for them is not so dif
ficult. Any bright boy who has
watched a gang of laborers can be
made to understand why they would
not accomplish as much without
their foreman, and that probably not
one of them could fill the foreman's
place. Any bright girl, whose home
contains servants, ran be made to re
alize why the house does not run
nearly as well when mother is long
away. At first they think that all
that the superintendent does Is to
keep the laboren up to their work;
but they can easily be made to see
that that is a minor part of it.
Yet, if you succeed In getting these
truths into the workman's mind, he
would naturally persist: "But the
manager's Income must add to the
cost of comnxslities; if it were as low
as mine, commodities would be
cheaper still. No; for then the
manager's income would not be
produced at all. So goods would
cost as much without him and more,
because he does not even get all he
produces; moreover, he makes goods
cheaper than they could be made by
a less capable man
that cannot be said too often is, that
the more ignorant a man, the greater
is apt to be his faith, not only that
anybody can make a statute that will
do anything, but also that a good
statute, once made, will do the work
by Itself; he needs illustration after
illutniliou that a statute Is at best
but a machine, and a machine that
will respond to no inert fuel of mine
or forest, but demands the power an
conscience ol living men.
One more commonplace to round
out this department of the subject
and I have done with it. General
political education, which, of course,
must be moral as well as intellectual
would enable men to elect admlnis-
1 1 Tutors who could be trusted to do
much for the general good that, es
pecially in its cities, those elected ca
seldom be trusted to do now; it
would enable the whole community
to secure the benefit of such natural
monopolies as could then be reasona
bly handled by the government, and
vastly more of the recreative and In
tellectual resources too Immense for
private creation parks, drives, libra.
ries, museums and public fetes cere
monial and artistic and intellectual
TAlilir AM BEXOCKACY.
OKEtlOX IS ALL UIUHT.
Oregon and Washington people
have lately started to boom their
state products for Eastern consump.
tion in a large way. They are par
tlcularly anxious to sell fruit in the
East, because there has been a nota
ble development In the frult-ralslng
Industry of their region, of late years,
They are making the novel claim
that much of California's reputation
for flue fruits has been made on Ore
gon and Washington products. Oreat
quantities of fruit from these states
have been sold to California buyers,
and, it Is alleged, shipped East as
California fruit. A recent case offer
ed in proof is the receipt of an order
by tialem, Or., cannery from a Cal
ifornia fruit-packing house for &00
cases of canned cherries, "to be ship
ped without laliels." The Inference
Is that the fruit would be labeled as
California product and sent East
I'nder the new policy of booming
their own state, the cannery man
agers declined to fill tho order. N
Y. Suri.
The managers did a sensible thing
in -refusing to till the order. Oregon
and her sister state, Washington,
have Btotsi idly by and allowed Call
fomia to monniMillze the attention of
all the country, and palm off their
productions as her own for so long
that the majority of Eastern people
have come to think California the
only inhabited state on the coast. Jt
is high time that we liegin to seak
for ourselves.
A rRAIStWOKNI Y ORDER.
The Market Street Railway Com
pany deserves the highest praise for
Its order, just promulgated, prohibit
ing its gripmen, motormen and con
ductors from buying or selling lot
tery tickets. Whatever other things
this company may do, it consistently
displays wisdom in the discipline to
which It subjects its employes. It
would be difficult to find a body of
young men so wholesome-looking
and so free from Indications of dissi
pation. Drinking and gambling are
strictly prohibited. A large number
of the young men are members of
religious and other societies formed
from their ranks as distinct lodges of
permanent organizations, and the In
fluence thus exerted brings excellent
results. All such things are encour
aged by the company.
The Market .Street Railway Com
pany has made this order undoubt
edly as a prohibition of an injurious
practice. It recognizes the fact that
those who have anything to do with
lotteries aro dealing with fraud anil
demoralization. The company un
derstands that encouragement of
thrift, sobriety and honesty elevates
the character of its men and tends to
the cultivation In them of that con
tent which proceeds from success and
makes men stable and reliable.
Thus the company has set an ex
ample of the highest kind. It might
be followed w ith profit by all other
large employers, and might Ik- taken
as a hint by tlnne of our leading
newspapers who encourage the in
famous lottery evil by publishing
lottery advertisements every month.
-M. V. Call. .
of linprovemeut, and demoralized
IK a a...u.uu ..I I ..i.fu... .r ...
. . ., , , . . . ihb emuT. u K.KHI I'lllzt'flMll I.. lie
The following is an extract from a . . ., , . . .
speech by W. O. Bradley, republican TT , . . 1 .
..,. . . r . . violeuceaud establish public order.
but also to introduce a new form of
candidate for governor, made in
Louisville, Ky., who was Jointly dis
cussing political Issues with P. W
Hardin, the democratic candidate,
Bradley sal.! : '
"My friend then goes on to the
discussion of the tariff. He tells you
of the vast amount of robbery that
has been committed under the tariff.
What sort of a tariff bill did his
party pass at the last session of con'
gress? A tariff that distinctly recog.
nlzed protection, a tariff bill that
protected the luxuries of the rich,
and that laid a duty on the neccssl
ties of the poor, a tariff which Grover
Cleveland denounced, and I honor
Grover Cleveland for his manhood
(applause), the tariff which Grover
Cleveland denounced, which he said
was a mark of perfidy and dishonor
to the party, and to which he re
fused to attach his name (applause.)
That is the democratic bill that was
passed. That is the bill that you
told us was going to open the mar
kets of the world to us, and through
which we were to exiort more than
ever we exported before. And what
is the result? At the end of the last
fiscal year w find that we sold
abroad $84,000,000 less of goods than
in the year before; that in the six
teen articles produced by the farmer
there was a falling off of six hundred
and odd millions to our loss bv
reason of this tariff bill which our
democratic friend talks about. (Ap
plause.) What else do you find
e bought more. There were more
goods brought to this country by
many millious of dollars than there
were in the preceding year. So that
your money that left this country
went abroaJ and found a home in
the foreign world. It has gone to
swell the curreucy of Europe, aud in
thiukiug aud to substitute modern
and enlightened policies for old follies
aud prejudices.
There was never a more important
task undertaken by the chief magis.
trate of any nation; and the measure
of success with w hich it has been (er.
formed marks Diaz as one of the
greatest, if not the greatest, of Mexi
can statesmen and rulers. He has
been obliged from time to time to
resort to drastic and imperative pro
cesses In order to carry out his pur
poses; but he has not antagonized the
integrity of the republic or compro
mised its houor iu any respect
From the beginning he has assidu
ously and puirloiicully striven to put
Mexico in the line of general progress
and to advance the wtil'ure and prus
perity of her peoplu. It hits required
sterling courage aud skilllul diplo
macy to tiling the beneficent result.
Which stun. I to his credit. He Urn-
encouraged the construction of rail
roads, the development of manufac
tures, and the adoption of the latest
expedients in business and industry,
often in oponitiou to prevailing sen
timent. Mexico needed a strong
man to take her out of the ruts of the
past and start her m a right career,
and Diaz has proved to be entirely
equal to the emergency, it is not
surprising, therefore, that she chooses
to retain him in the presidency. He
is her best assurance of safety, her
best hope of progress; and a fourth
term of his ripe experience and prac
tical wisdom can not fail to be more
of an advantage thau she could possi
bly derive from a change iu that re
lation. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
(0KK0H10 OK AI.I. MI.ia.
In-order to ascertain the effects of
A.WIUEK feTKlUK IX ELKCTKICAL
mESTIO.Y.
I i I
rAci.niige you nave got a ioi oi cneap the weather upon ordinary sheet
goods that robbed the manufacturer aluminum. Professor A. I.iversid,P
and your workingmen at home.
i v-v w cnuiiu vr i o umuu Ul
(Applause.) What was the cause of one twenty-fifth inch gage metal, of
..list.:. i.i. aa w i . a. I I
unuersiauu my the best rommrrcil n,.litv .n.Uv.
I 1 , .
posed on the roof of the laboratory,
University of Sydney, from Novem
ber 23, 18U3, to December 7, ISiH, or
all this trouble? I
friend to say that It was the McKln
ley bill. Will you let me read you
ust one little comment on this sub-
ect? I want to read from the Cour
ier-Journal." I think it Is a reason
ably good democratic authority, ex
ept, possibly, on the silver question
(Laughter and applause.) What was
the condition of affairs according to
this Journal? I have not the article
before me, but I think I can quote it
The American Journal of Photog
raphy truthfully says the imiiortance
of steady and useful employment,
especially by the young, can hardly
be overestimated. The unemployed
are generally the most unhappy and
the most liable to w rong doing. The
inrson that Is busy will have less
fifty-four weeks. The metal was
made into basins so as to catch rain
water, and to give the salts, etc.,
which it might hold in solution, an
opportunity to act upon the metal.
The metal soon lost its brilliancy and
became somewhat rough and speckled
with larite liirht crav Hatches: It nlsn
from memory. On the 30th day of became rough to the feel, the gray
October, 1892, the Courier-Journal )artj ue seen to distinctly pro-
contained the commercial agency Ject above the surface, and under the
reimrt. What did it say. It said microscope they presented a blistered
outness whs oeuer men man ever at apiiearanee. This Incrustation is held
ny ume ueiore. It said money was tenaciously, and does not wash .r
plentiful, and, to use the exact Ian- neither is it removed on rubbimr
guage, "there is not a cloud on the wt, , cloth. The raised parts are
commercial sky." (Applause.) That considered due to the formation of a
as two years after Hie Mckinley hydrated oxide. Contrarv toext.ee
bill was passed, two long years after Nations, the cups had not lost weight,
s imssnge. ion were men tola r.y but md even inerd. ()no w..ih.
.... i --ri
me commercial agencies inai mere i:iui lm,l in,.roUu...i i. nuu
as not a single cloud on the com- Lrm.. nd the other, weiuhinir 13!8G:
wen-mi hKics ami mat money was grm increased by 0 .080 grm. After
l'ul. boilinir in water for some hours, anil
How about the clouds on the com- rubbing, the first still showed an In-
men ial sky since then, and how crease of 0.77 arm. and the second of
about money? (Applause and laugh- 0.055 grm. To ascertain the effect of
ter.) In iKremlier, 193, the common salt, a plate of the same
same pHper contained the com- metal, 3 by 4 Inches, and weighing
menial report. They said the year 19.829 grm.. was repeatedly dinta-d
1893, alter the good, old-fashioned I in a solution of sodium chloride and
democratic party had been in power, allowed to dry for three mouilis; this
was me worsi time ever liatl for tiny lost 0.019 grin., and after wishing
years. (Applause.) They eald that and rubbing drv 0 69 grin.
of the year 1893. when it opened One r. i.... i,,n..,.ki, v. - . .. ..vi...r.
with the workshops crowded with iments i- .i.oi Mr. H. C. ltu--.-ll. F.
prosperity all over the land, and R. a., she g.ii.ii.eni 11-..1..1,. i.i. r,
with millions of men employ. d. -owe yers gn irn d hIuhui.uiii i u e
But before It ended under the demo- i..r s rain goge, i ut f-.uud lluil tl,.
cratlc rule the factories were closed w ire so qii.kiy conoded ihrou-h
and millions of men out of employ-1 tlmt In I.m.I to reimq'i.sli iheueni
ment were begging for bread. (Ap- the metsl (if they lui t.een gi.i ih. v
plause.) That is the picture of dem- n,ju hi, however, nme mis m i.-iI w-.
ocratlc tariff. It Is the same condi- leimuirl. i It is a vi rv common func
tion that we inaugurated under to sets aluminum recommended un
James Buchanan In 18f0. (Applause.) account of its lightness and its as
Then the people of New York erected sumed permanent luster; this as-
the republican soup houses, but from sumption being due to the statements
that time until the democrats came repeated fmm book to book, that
back, in 1893, there was never a soup aluminum is unaltered by exposure
A lamp that will burn for six hun
dred hours is the inveution of Oeorgw
L. Roberts, an electrician, who sold
to a tobacco company, for $80,000,
the advertising rights of some of his
electrical devices. The lamp of
which Mr. Roberts Is the Inventor is
charged with sand, Into which two
wires are run, which connect with
one of the regulation bulbs used on
all electric chandeliers. The battery
Is therefore the sand, but the method
of charging it remains a secret with
Mr. Roberts. Mr. Edison, after see.
ing Mr. Roberts' lamp, remarked
Unit he thought he knew all there
was to know about electricity, but
Mr. Rolierta had made a discovery
bich puizled him gnutly. Mr.
R.berts preseuted Mr. Edison with
onie of this remarkable sand, but
with uu fear of having ids secret dis
aivered, for analysis happens in this
.aso to kill all traces ol the secret dls-
.overy. The cost of recharging each
lump is 17 cents. A friend of inim.
who has a contract with Mr. Roberts.
Having bought from him the rights
of one of his inventions, tells mo ho
wouiu not have believed the tale of
the lamp, had he not seen Mr. Rob
erts throw a handful of sand Into an
rdinary tumbler, inserting two
wires into the sand, and connecting
the wires with an ordinary electric
nurner, which burned brilliantly.
.Mr. Roberts made his discovery In
Minneapolis, In a purely accidental
way. He was experimenting with
adds iu his laboratory, aud on the
table was some sand, over which two
wires had fallen and crossed them
selves. By an accident a bottlo con
taining a certain acid was overturned
and some of the acid ran Into the
sand at the point where the wires
crossed. The result was a series of
electric sparks. At present Mr. Rob
erts is quite a sick man. anil ia In
Michigan for his health. Another of
his inventions Is to make seventy-
two changes of color, in the hair.
dress, tights, shoes and so forth, of a
dancer while she Is In motion. The
mechanism works by clockwork and
the light gleams through the fabrics
from a direct current. Mr. Roberts
married a daughter of Pillsbury, tho
great Minneapolis miller. -Telegram.
IOWA BEXOCBATS ON C01XA0E.
house In New York. (Applause.)
MEXICO N PRESIDENT.
The nomination of President Diaz,
of Mexico, for a fourth consecutive
term Is practically assured, and there
Is little if any room for doubt about I guperor0
us retirvuoii a iivinniiiiTu I also len
jority. - mere are inose wnocnarge
that he has in effect made himself a
dictator, and that his long continu
ance in office is the result of methods
on his part which are arbitrary and
to the air, to the action of water hy
drogen sulphide, and only slightly
by dilute acids. The absolutely pure
metal may be permanent In tho air,
but the lt aluminum ordinarily at
tainable Is, in this respect (in Profes
sor LIversidge's opinion,) little, if at
nc. Recently it has
found that aluminum Is
acted upon by sea water. Hence the
claim, often advanced, that alumi
num Is a metal resembling gold or
silver in the property of not oxidi
I frirr Muta ii sitn Ilia iiowir nh.n.lr.M.1
oppressive; but the fact remains that , . ' . ' L
. , ' - i s Hiunuaiion. l lie iptician
IU trai n lil.TWillV.a-; Wl -si VAJiliailUII VI
of his term, he has been urged to ac
cepl another by all classes having the
The Dlararer? Saved Hi Life.
Mr. U. Caiilouette, druggist, B-a-
time or Inclination tu find I fault with , io,erwtj, of ,he Bt heart The ver,vlfif f mya . ,,Xo r Kin)
others or to engage in disreputable
affairs. Ket-p employed. Do some
thing useful. Work for small wages
if you cannot get more. Or work
without pay rather than be Idle,
a person will not lack employment,
neither will he work long without
fair compensation.
Stomach and bowel complaints are
best relieved by the timely use of
De Witt's Colic 4 Cholera Cure.
insist on having this preparation.
Still another of the oft-said things Don't take any other. W. E, Brock
people or Intelligence, wealth and New Discovery I owe my life. Was
high social standing have Joined with taken with la gripx and tried all the
the industrial element in keeping physicians for miles about, but of no
him at the head of the government, avail and was given up and told I
There is no difficulty about under- could not live. Having Dr. King's
standing the remarkable favor that New Discovery in my store I sent for
has thus been shown to him. W ben i a bottle and began its use and from
he assumed power in Mexico, the
country had a comparatively low
order of civilization. - Repeated revo
lutions, local vendettas and factlooal
conflicts had diverted the people from
the first dose began to get better, and
One of the speakers at the Iowa
lemocratle convention made a clear
statement of the financial question
patterned after the republican
speeches made in 1894, In this county.
Here Is wjhat French said at Mar
shalltown, Iowa :
"We have now in circulation about
$100,000,000 of 10 to 1 silver money,
which we are able to maintain on a
parity with gold by Its redemption
in gold. Could we coin the $5,000,
000,000 and more of silver produced
In the last 100 years into 16 to 1 60
cent dollars and redeem them in 100
cent gold dollars? The question
answers Itself. The atteniDt would
mean bankruptcy. Free coinage at
10 to 1 means the end ol redemption
of our sljver money, the loss of half
its value, and henceforth silver mon-
ometallism, pure and simple. Its
advocates generally understand this,
and know that in no other way
could prices be apparently doubled
and the debtor be released from half
his debt.
If free coinage were adopted, goM
would ilist.uitlv disiu.i.e. r fiom elr.
illation. Men will not liiv int jold
dollars worth 100 cents when the la
sllorts them to pay 60-cent silver dol
urs iiiotcud. Gold would Leo'rivtn
iiwiiy by cheap silver ju.-t Ms during
the war it whs drivi u awuy by c'lcnp
pupir inorey. t)r siixer in. .hey
nod our piiper money, which would
iheii be ndecniniile In silver t nly,
would have but half their priscrt
purchasing power, and thus only hn f
the efficiency as a circul.itiog inc.
dium. This would practically de
prive us of two-thirds of our money
and pretty much all of our credit.
Our credit is worth vastly more
than our money. Ninety-five per
cent of our business we do by means
of credit, and only the remaining
five through the use of actual money.
To npair the injury to our circulating
medium, Instantly caused by the
adoption of free silver at 16 to I,
would require about $1,100,000,000 of
silver. Antl how would we get 11?
What would we have to give for It?
Even if the silver of the entire world
should voluntarily seek our mints, It
would take months to reach them.
Meantime the panic would have
swept the land."
Hit It.
Protect the defenceless.
Maintain the right
And whenever in doing it you find
a head that ooght to be hit whether
It be high or low hit It! Dumb
Animals.
Children, esjcially infants are soon
run down with Cholera Infantum or
ordinary pursuits and opportunities at Hillslioro Pharmacy.
after using three bottles whs up and ; "Summer Complaint." Don't wait
about again. It is worth its weight: to determine, but give I)e Witt's
in gold. We w on't keep store or i Colic A Cholera Cure promptly, you
house without it." Get a free trial can rely on It. Usa Bo other W
E. Brock.'
lie, Bala 8U P0BTL SD, 0B laia papat ia kpt oa 8K la his omo.
o o
o c