Valley record. (Ashland, Jackson County, Or.) 1888-1911, October 01, 1896, Image 4

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    OREGON UNION •
PRESIDENTIAL
on D rops
THAT THE
•MVO CROWN OF THORNS,
NO CROSS OF GOLD.”
FOR PRESIDENT,
FAC-SIMILE
SIGNATURE
AVcge table Preparation for As­
similating ite Food and Re£ufa-
ling the Stomachs and Bowels of
OF-------
I nfants /C hildren
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful­
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opiuin.Morphine nor Mineral,
N ot N arcotic .
WRAPPER
RtaptafOldDrSAMUHHTCSKR
JKmfìaa Sui
Mx.Sam»»
OF EVERY
¿trull Sei d *■
Cariava* JùJb*
JÌimSnJ -
BOTTLE OF
flfaw érf ' A mt .
HìaAryntn Nanr.
biòyjlist ?
A perfect Remedy for Constipa­
CASTORIO
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convuls ions .Feveri sh-
tuess and Loss OF SLEEP
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
OF NEBRASKA.
VICE-PRESIDENT,
Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It
is not sold in bulk. Don’t allow anyone to sell
you anything else on the plea cr promise that it
is "just as good’’ and ‘‘will answer every pur­
pose." A»- See that you get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.
Atb months old
The fso-
I
li o#
every
WTWPW.
EXACT COPT Or V/RAFPER.
ASHLAND CASKET CO
N
H. S. EMERY
Manager - aud - Funeral - Director.
ORTHERN
PACIFIC
RAILROAD
Myer Block, - Ashland, Or.
R
H
andle first - class goods
Day or Night Calls promptly at­
tended to.
I
T. ZE. WATSON,
•OF GEORGIA.
u
Union Presidential Electors:
M. L. OLMSTEAD...................... Populist
HARRY WATKINS, ................ Populist
N. L. BUTLER.............Silver Democrat
E. HOFER................... Silver Republican
N
S
«"CHARGES REASONABLE.
Pullman
0.R.8N
Sleeping Cars
Elegant
Dining Cars
Tourist
Sleeping Cars
EAST
GIVES THE CHOICE OF
I
TO
TWO TRANSCONINENTAL
ROUTES
ST. PAUL______
MINNEAPOLIS
DULUTH_______
FARGO__
GRAND FORKS
CROOKSTON
___
I
I WINNIPEG
I
HELENA and
BUTTE
I
Union
Great
THROUGH TICKETZ
Northern Ry. Pacific Ry
TO
CHICAGO
W ASHINGTON
DENVER
SPOKANE
i PHILADELPHIA
I NEW YORK
MINNEAPOLIS
OMAHA
BOSTON AND ALL
AND
AND
POINTS EAST and SOUTH
KANSAS CITV Through tickets to Japan aud China, via
ST. PAUL
Tacoma and Northern Pacific Steamship
Co., an American line.
LOW BATES TO ALL
For information, time cards, map and
tickets, call on or write
A. D. CHARLTON,
EASTERN CITIES,
Assistant General Passenger Agent,
OCEAN STEAMERS
PORTLAND. OREGON
ROBERT TAYLOR, Local Agent,
LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 DAYS
Ashland, Oregon
VIA
i
— FOR—
SAN
FRANCISCO.
4 i i J3
A package of our treat-
t
B Filial
mentfor weakness and
ji g ra"
’ ® W • decay» nervous debility
2? •-«
On and lest vitality sent free for 12 cents
postajc.
For Full details call on or address,
W. H. HURLBURT,
Gen’l Pass. Ageut,
PORTLAND. OR
E. McNEILL, PreBident and Manager
t. WA.1D INSTUTUTE, 120I. 9thSt. ST. LOUIS, 10.
THE NEW WEEKLY
ROCKY MOUNTAIN NCWS
DE KT EK, COL».
T he B bst WFEKLY P ublished
•l.M Per Year la Advance.
LEADS the SI!-er forces of America.
LELOS In Mining and Mining Stock Reports.
LEADS in Special Departments.
LEADS in developing Colorado's woaderfol
resources.
LEADS in Newsiness, Brightness Compre-
kensiveness.
LEADS in Commissions to Agents.
(Writ« for Terma.)
111.8 extra­
ordinary Re*
juvenator is
the most
wonderful
discovery of
the age. It
has been en­
dorsed by the
leadingseieii-
tific men of
Europe and
America.
Hudyan fa
r'biely vese"
The Great
Silver Daily
The New» publishes the representative paper
(daily and Sunday) west of St Louis; cartoon
with every issue. 65c a month—$1.00 lot *
months—tn advance.
For «ample copy of any issue, address,
The NEWS PRINTING CO., Denver, Colorado.
Constipation.,
Dizziness.
Falling Sen­
sations,Nerv­
ous twitching
of .the eyes
and other
parts.
Strengthens,
Invigorates
and tone« the
entire system.
Hudyan cures
Debility,
Nervousness,
Emissions,
anddevctopcs
and restores
weak organs.
Pains in the
back, losses
by day 01
night stopped
Hudyan stope
/rfimaTureness
of the dis-
fa arge in 20
lays. Cures
LOST
MANHOOD
MONEY
<r.ckly. Over 2,000 private endorsement?.
1’re matureness means impotency in the first
stage. It fa a symptom of seminal weakness
and barrenness. It can be stopped la 20 days
by the use o f Hudyan.
The new discovery was made by the Special­
ists of the old famous Hudson Medical Institute.
It is the strongest vitalizer made. It is very
powerful, but harmless. Sold for 81,00 a pack­
age or« packages for $6.00 (plain sealed boxes).
W ritten guarantee given for a cure. If you buy
six boxes and are not entirely cured, six more
will be sent to you free of all chows.
Send for circularsand testimonials. Add resa
HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
1 unction Stockton, Market tc KUlnSt*
San Francisco, Cat,
Twice-a-Week.
• • •
f HE greatest vote maker
in the ranks. You need
it in this campaign. It
gives all the Populist news.
CARTOONS BY HESTON.
A WASHINGTON LETTER
(Exclusive Features.)
(?
?
V aricocele
by special correspondent
gives inside facts as no
other paper (so stated by
Senator Butler.)
$1.00 Yer year; 3 mot ths 25 Cents.
Twice-a-week remember.
Send for free Sample Copy.
COXEH SOUND MONEY
MASSILLON, OHIO.
stricture
it .
m
Withall bad «r.wqBtnr.A certain'y tnd rapidly
mrrtwi hu<c andraiy met-'-’dk. UuaaHnn Blank and
Uouktn.«. Call <.;■ writ«
DR W A KI»INSTITUTE
1Z0 N. if nth Strut,
Louis, MO
WANTED
i
i
AT
ONCE!
ctive agents for
each
County. Exclusive control and no
risk. Will clear 12 to 25 hundred dollars a
year. Enclose stamp for full particulars
or25c for $1 sample. Big Rapids Mineral
Water Ch., Big Rap!«», Mich.
A
A BUSINESS MAN.
Here Is a Merchant Who Investigated For
Himself and Knows What Is the Matter.
One of the most encouraging inter­
views on the money question was that
recently made in Chicago with Frank
H. Cooper of the great dry goods firm of
Siegel, Cooper & Co. of Chicago and
New York, and known the world over.
Mr. Cooper has just returned from a
trip to Europe, and to a newspaper man
he expressed his opinions on the finan­
cial issue as follows:
“I am yet somewhat on the fence, but
I can’t see anything but good to result
from the free coinage of silver. True, it
will benefit the mine owners; it will
also benefit the miners; give them
work, and benefit the west. It will
give the farmer money; it will make
better prices for farm products; it will
make the farmer a buyer in our markets.
“Times can be no worse than they are
at present. Our currency is not expan­
sive enough for the demands of the peo­
ple. Franoe has $40 per capita of money
in circulation, and its people are pros­
perous and happy. We have but $20 per
capita. We need more money, and free
silver coinage will put an end to busi­
ness stagnation.
“Our factories are closed and our
artisans and mechanics are out of work.
More money will make higher prices,
better demand for goods and a revival
of prosperity.
“Goods and produce are too cheap
because people have no money to buy
them. The depreciation in prices on
some lines of goods has been more than
50 per cent in the past six months. Can
merchants and manufacturers stand
this? •
“The Wilson bill that reduced the
tariff on goods about 10 per cent, except
on wool, which is made free, is not the
cause of all the hard times.”
“Do you think that putting back the
old tariff would cause a return of pros­
perity?”
“There are many ways to view this
matter. The poor and the middle classes
pay all the taxes. I believe the multi­
millionaires should pay their proportion.
I believe in a graded income tax as a
partial panacea for the ills we have
fallen into.
“With free silver the price of wheat
and corn would enhance in value at
once. Dollar wheat for the farmer
makes him look at his clothes. When
they are frayed he buys new. He re­
furnishes his house, if it is needed, and
so helps to start the furniture factories
going again. It is so in all lines. More
money, the greater demand for goods.
“A single gold standard would bring
prices still lower and more failures and
moro disaster for the people. It is hard
to say what is exactly right. We are
partially upon a bimetallic basis now,
and that is in a measure our salvation.
Take that away, and where are we?
“Contract our currency to $15 or $12
per capita, and the result wonld be 6uch
as no one could figure. Talking of free
silver, our mints could not turn out over
$60,000,000 per year, less than$l toevery
inhabitant. Would that flood the coun­
try? It would restore prioes, confidence
and resuscitate business. That’s about,
I think, what free silver would do for
us. This question is near to the people,
and they jure oarefully discussing it We
want to take care of ourselves first.
Europoan countries are able to take care
of themselves.”
becauseTio'had turned traitor aiiTwas tram­
CONFRONTED BY A CRISIS.
pling on the constitution and the liberties of
the people. They appointed a committee of
800 Democrats to go to Washington and ask It Is Not a Partisan Q nest ion, but One of
to desist from his course in ruining
Genuine Patriotism.
A YOUNG HICKORY HAS COME OUT Jackson
the country. When this committee got to
Wo
are
confronted
by a money power
Washington, ono of these pride swollen bank­
OF THE WEST IN 1896.
ers so far forgot himself as to Bay to the presi­ that is seekiug to fasten upon the peo­
dent that if he persisted in his course tho peo­ ple of this country an English yoke. Wo
Striking Similarity of the Political Situa­ ple would rise up en inasso and come to Wash­ are now in the midst of the gravest crisis
tions Today and Sixty Years Ago—The ington With shotguns, pitchforksand anything that ever confronted this republic. In
that would kill “to expel the Goths from
Money Lords Could Not Terrorise Jack- Rome.” Jackson replied: “Do yon come here 1861 the Union was confronted with
to threaten me? If you men'Hare to put any dissolution which meant anarchy iu re­
son and They Cannot Conquer Bryan.
of your big threats into execution, by the
spect to government and a perpetuation
The war now raging between the great Eternal I will hong you as high as Ha­ of the African slavery. In 1896 we are
man.”
money power of this country and its
I remember very well the long columns of confronted with the question of perpet­
toiling masses is substantially identical names that were printed in all the papers— ually enslaving the white race. We are
the names of great bankers who had
with the battle which Andrew Jackson mostly
left the party—and each one went out with a confronted with the question whether
won over 60 years ago under similar great flourish of trumpets as though he owned we shall install the English Shylock as
circumstances. Since that time organ­ the party. It is wonderful what an amount of a taskmaster over all the generations of
noise a few men can make, with plenty < i
ized wealth, of course, has swollen tre­ money and plenty of great papers to back Americans that are yet to come. We are
mendously in volume and influence on them I For a time it did look blue for Old not proposing to wrong anybody. We
Hickory. It seemed as if he was being for­ arc proposing to give every man his due.
federal, state and municipal govern­ saken
by all his old friends. But after awhile
ments, but the people have also grown it began to be seen that for each great banker We are not suggesting experiments. We
from 15,000,000 to nearly 70,000,000 that left him four or live honest farmers, me­ are demanding a return to the experi­
and progressed materially in intelli­ chanics and laborers came to him. Ah, Mr. ence of the world for thousands of years,
In those days tho Democratic party and we say that this experiment of try­
gence and alertness. The difficulty has President,
was democratic! No, sir; tho Democratic
been to arouse them to a sense of dan­ party then was tho laboring man’s friend. ing to force the nations of the earth on
ger and compass united action to defend Well, what was the final result? When tho elec­ to a gold basis for the benefit of Euro­
tion was over and the vote counted, Andrew pean creditors is ruining the American
their liberties and redress grievances. Jackson,
the hero of the people, bad swept the
As a result of popular supineness, since whole country by storm! He had more major­ people.
We propose to pay back the English
the close of the civil war, Btep by step, ity than the other candidates had votesl Then
creditors
in the same money they gave
Demoorats
rejoiced
with
an
exceeding
great
the governments of these United States,
Bonfires were kindled on tjjo hills, us—gold and silver. We propose to give
big or little, have more and more be­ joy.
church bells wero rnng and towns, village’
come subject to the rule of the moneyed and oities were illuminated. And amid tho them dollars that shall have the same
corporations, naturally selfish in the ad­ general joy the Jackson men sang a song of purchasing power, that will buy as much
vancement of their own interests. The victory. How well I romembe* those glorious property and as much labor of every
days! Sixty years have rolled around since, kind as had the dollars which they gave
great movement of the people today has but I can hear that song yet':
11s—money having exactlythe same pur­
for its basic motive their liberation. A
Freemen, cheer the hickury troe!
chasing power. We propose to pay them
In storms its boughs have sheltered thee.
prominent New York capitalist recently
O’er freemen's land its branches wave—
principal and interest in the same money
said that “the machinery is now fur­
It was planted on the lion’s grave.
exactly which they gave ns, and we say
nished by which in any emergency the
Yes, Andrew Jackson was indeed a great
financial corporations of the east can act man, and his namo will live forever with tho that their acts in getting silver demon­
republic. Ho crushed tho great money power etized aud gold made dear, after they
on a single day’s notice with such pow­ of
his day and generation as a strong man had succeeded in getting our bonds and
er that no act of congress can overcome crushes an eggshell in his hand.
onr notes, 60 as to compel ns to pay iu a
JACKSON AND BRYAN.
their decision.” The people have at last
been brought to a realization of this
fact, and hence they are in revolt, de­
termined to regain their control of the
federal government Under these cir­
cumstances the memorable events of
1832 blaze a pathway for them in 1896.
Some interesting particulars of that re­
markable presidential campaign are
given in an address delivered at Chicago
by Charles H. Schreiner, who was a
Lincoln elector for Pennsylvania in
1860 and is now a supporter of William
J. Bryan. The money power of Jack-
son’s day was concentrated in the Unit­
ed States bank, which had branches in
all the states, and the fact that the gov­
ernment’s funds were required to be de­
posited in them made it potential in pol­
itics and administration. The managers
of the bank had millions of dollars and
vast power at their command, for mon­
ey was then worth from 1 to 5 per cent
a month, and there was no legal re­
straint on the amount of bills that could
be issued. Mr. Schreiner thus intro­
duces J. Pierpont Morgan’s predecessors:
The same battle between money and
the masses is being fought today, but
the capitalistic interest now arrayed
against the people has vastly increased
in wealth and other resources 6ince
Jackson put it to rout It has its bish­
ops and clergy and lawyers and other
prominent citizens preaching goldbug
finance and denouncing the plain people
as anarchists and repudiators, precisely
as in Jackson’s times. It claims for it­
self all the respectability, intelligence
and money, just as it did over 60 years
ago. It is as great a pretender and as
big a sham now as then. But the people
have a champion today, just as they had
away back in the thirties. A young
Hickory has come out of the west, and
he is in the field to lead the poor and
humble—the farmers aud the laborers
I and the business men—to as glorious a
triumph as Jackson achieved, and win
it against pretty much the same influ­
ences, but mightily strengthened in pow­
er and resources. In this year of our
Lord it is gold against votes, and the
votes are bound to win the victory.—
Nicholas Biddle was president of the great' Paterson (N. J.) Guardian.
bank. He was the money king of that day and
generation. He was not only a banker: he was'
a scholar, an author, an orator and a Demo­
crat, and had supported Jackson at his first
election. He lived in a marble palace on th«
banks of the Delaware, 15 miles above Phila­
delphia, and thero In that palace of pure white
marble, with great Corinthian columns, this
money king dispensed a hospitality equal al­
most to any king in Europe. Thousands of
people thought him a vastly greater man than
General Jackson. I was a boy then, 14 or 15
years old, working in a printing office, and I
remember all the papers announced one day
that Nicholas Biddle would pass through our
village. We had no railroads then. Peoplo
traveled in the old stagecoach or on the canal
packet four or five miles an hour. You will
hardly believe me when I say that people came
60, 00, 80 and 100 miles—came on foot, on horse­
back, in wagons, any way and every way.
Came for what? Why, to see tho great money
king, Nicholas Biddle, as be stood on the deck
of the boat going up north to take command
of his party in the fight against Jackson.
These good people wanted to tell their chil­
dren that they had seen the great money king,
Nicholas Biddle, “the man that crushed Gen­
eral Jackson!” Of course Jackson was not yet
crushed, but they were so sure he would bo
that to them it was just tho same thing. Well,
some time before Biddle’s charter expired ho
took a trip to Washington to have a talk with
his then friend Jackson about a new charter
for his bank. The old one would expire in
1836, and, as Jackson was a candidate for re­
election, he thought it would be a good thing
to tell him about the vast power and influence
of his bank and its many branches. He told
Jackson that the merchants and men of affairs
through aB the states were, as a rule, largely
indebted to his banks and that through the in­
fluence of his branch banks he could control
the election of any state in tho Union. Then
up rose Andrew Jackson and with suppressed
emotion said: “Mr. Biddle, if that is true—and
I think it is—I tell you here and now that if
you control the election of any state in the
Union, that is too much power for one man to
have in a free country in time of peace. And
I will tell you further, here and now, that il
you get a new charter from congress for that
bank, by the Eternal I will veto that charter. ’ ’
Then the fight began in earnest. Then the
great money king set himself to work to de­
feat the re-election of Andrew Jackson.
CATARRH CURED, health and sweet
breath secured, by Shiloh’s Catarrh Reni •
edy. Price 50 cents. Nasal Injector free.
For sale by T. K. Bolton.
Silver Not Redeemable In Gold.
On the Safe Side.
Let me strongly urge the significance
of the fact that the existing standard sil­
ver dollar is at a parity with gold and
is so for the sole reason that the demand
for its uso for that which it can do
makes it so. Let it be understood once
and for all that the silver dollar is not
redeemed in gold. The oontrary impres­
sion is curiously general and is enter­
tained by men whose knowledge of the
general subject ought to be proof against
the error.
But the fact is that there is neither
any law in tho United States nor any
custom of the treasury department
whereby the standard silver dollar or
its representative, the silver certificate,
is redeemed in gold. This has constant­
ly been my contention, but in order to
be absolutely sure cf tho fact I caused
an inquiry on the point to be made yes­
terday in Washington of Mr. Morgan,
treasurer of the United States, and he
stated that there has never been a silver
certificate redeemed in gold except to
a limited extent at San Francisco some
years ago, a proceeding that was
promptly stopped by special order of the
department—Hon. Charles A. Towne.
“Hello!” said the voter to the Bill-
ville election manager. “Ten o’clock
at night and the polls still open?”
“Yes,’’sighed the manager, “vory
urgent case. ”
“Why, the law don’t allow you”—
“The law be hanged!” cried the
manager. “Major Jones hain’t voted
yit, an he bought a new rifle yesterday
an sent word he wuz a-comin. I hain’t
got a thing agin the law, but self preser­
vation’s the fust law er nature, an I’m
a self preservationist!”—Atlanta Con­
stitution.
Squelching Him.
BICYCLE
Cbe
yellow
fellow
A NO M
GOMTEMT.
is known throughout cycling; as a light, staunch,
stylish, speedy mount. There’s a best in every­
thing^ the ’96 Stearns is a veritable edition de luxe
among bicycles. Finished in black or orange.
Stearns riders are satisfied riders, and always
proud as kings of their mounts.
Your address will insure receipt of our hand­
some new catalogue.
E. C. STEARNS & CO., Makers, Syracuse, N. Y.
San Francisco, Cal.
Buffalo, N. Y.
ARE YOU
Financial Honor.
“The financial honor of this nation” If so be sure and see that your ticket*
is just now the subject of much solici­
read via the
tude on the part of orators who are de­
fending the dishonorable gold standard.
We would like to ask all new gold
apologists to explain onoc just how “the
financial honor of this nation ” is go­
ing to be “defended” by selling the
American peoplo into interminable
bond aud debt slavery to the money lend­
ing Shylocks of New York aud Londou. Chicago, St. Paul,
—Knights of Labor Journal.
Une, The
Minneapolis A. Omaha R’y
PARKINSON & WISE
— THIS 18 THE —
GREAT - SHORT - LINE
BETWEEN DULUTH
Have put in a new<^^=^
ST. PAUL & CHICAGO
And all points East and Sopth. The
-Magnificent track, Peerless Vesti-
buled Dining and Sleeping
Car Trails and Motto:
SODA WORKS e
At Yreka, Cal.
A
“ALWAYS ON TIME”
Have given this road a national reputa­
tion. All classes of paBssengers carried
on the vestibuled trains without extra
charge. Ship your freight and travel
over this famous line. All agents have
ticket.
W, H. M ead , Gen, Ag’t.,
48 Washington St.
Portland, Or,
T. W. T easdale , G. P. A.,
St. Paul. Minn.
ND are prepared to fill all orders on
Abort notice. « • • * •
MW" Give them a call.
ASHLAND
MARKET.
JOHN E. PELTON.
EAST AND SOUTH
B. P. NEIL.
PELTON & NEIL, Prop’s
—VIA—
The Shasta Route
—Retail and Wholesale dealers in—
—OF THE—
Beef, Pork and Mutton.
Southern Pacific Co.
Ail Kinds of Fresh Meats
Express Trains Leave Portland Dailv.
I North
South
8:50 p m Lv Portland Ar 8:10 a m
12:50 p in Ar Ashland Lv 4:40 p m
Kept constantly on hand. Fair living 1:0 p in Lv Ashland Ar 4:10 p m
10:45 a m Ar SanFranciscoLv 6:00p m
prices is all that we ask.
Above trains stop at East Portland,
Oregon Citv, Woodburn, Salem, Turner.
We will make it to your interets to Marion, Jetierson, Albany, Albany Junc­
Tangent, Shedds, Halsey, Harrisburg,
deal with us.
feb 1 ’92 tion,
Junction City. Irving, Eugene, Creswell,
Drains and all stations from Roseburg to
Ashland, inclusive.
lloseburg Mail Daily.
-----------------------
NEXT DOOR TO P. O.
Salem Passenger Dally.
CENTRAL POINT, OR.
Portland. .4:00 p. m. Salem.... 10:15 a. m.
Salem.......8:00 a. m. Portland...6:15p. m
ARRIVE
Dining Cars on Ogden Route.
A Descriptive Term.
ALL § KINDS § OF § RE­
PAIRING § DONE.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS.
—AMD—
Second-Class Sleeping Cars
Attached to all through trains.
GOOD line of new goods sold reason
and ou
WEST SIDE DIVISION.
Between Portland and Corvallis.
able. Work guaranteed,
A prices
will suit the customer.
MAIL TBAIN DAILY (EXCEPT SUltDAT.)
It is a sad sight to see an hoDest but
party blind man vote squarely against
his own and family’s best interests.
That any farmer or other wealth pro­
ducer would vote to put 65,500,000 peo­
ple at the mercy of the national bank
ring of this country and the wealth ab­
sorbers of other nations can be ac­
counted for alone on the ground that
such a voter has been deceived.—Peo­
ple’s Reveille.
abbiveb ;______
_______ LEAVES ;__________
Il II II II Call and se e us II || ||
Portland....7:30 axu 1 Corvallib... 1:15 p m
Corvallis... 1:00 p m | Portland... .5:40 p m
-----and we will treat vou well----
At Albany and Corvallis connect with
trams of Oregon Central & Eastern Rail­
roads.
Express Train Daily (Except 8unday.)
Has Been Deceived.
THB OLD DOCTOR’S
abbivs :
leave :
W
Portland. ..4:45 d m I M’Minnville.7:25pm
M’Minnville.6:50am I Portland... .8:2S a m
LADIES’ FAVORITE.
ALWAYS RELIABLE and perfectly SAFE. The ume.
it u»ed by thousands of women all over the United States,
la the OLD DOCTOR 8 private mail practice, for 88 years,
and not a single bad rosult.
Money re urned if not as represented. Send 4 cents
(itainpa) for sealed particular*.
THROUGH TICKETS
To all points in the Eastern States,
Canada and Europe can be Obtained from
D, I., RICE, Agent, Ashland.
KOEHLER,
E, P. ROGER8,
Manager.
Asst. O. F. A Pass Agt.
\'R. WARD INSTITUTE. 120N.9th St, St. Louis,Mo.
Scientific American
No Place In a Prayer.
The Rev. E. A. Meury, pastor of the
Second Reformed church, Jersey City,
has a son, Eddie, 2
years old. Eddie
is a bright boy and plays witli boys old­
er than himself. While his father and
mother proudly listened Eddie said his
prayers the other evening, thus con­
cluding :
“And bless mamma and papa and
make me a good boy—nit ”
“What’s that I” exclaimed the clergy,
man.
“Why, Eddie!” almost shrieked the
horrified Mrs. Meury.
“Nit,” repeated Eddie, with pre­ I
cision. “Nit. The big boys always say
it at the end of everything they say.”
With some firmness Eddie’s father
explained that-“nit” is not to be used
in supplication, and Eddie fell asleep
after repeating his childish prayer:
“And make me a good boy. Amen. ”
—New York World.
Her Own Fault.
“It is true that the poor girl died of
love,” said Cupid, “but really I think
no blame attaches to me. I know I used
an arrow intended for men only, but
when you observe the way she was
dressed you must admit that the mis­
take was pardonable.’’—Cincinnati En­
quirer.
____
Application of the Text.
“Can you give an application of the
admonition against avoiding the appear­
ance of evil?’ ’ asked the examiner.
“Well—why—er,’’saidthe candidate
for orders, “I guess it would apply pret­
ty well to a Prohibitionist going fish­
ing, eh?”—Cincinnati Enquirer.
His Father Knew Him.
First Student—What makes you look '
so melancholy?
Second Student—I have been fooled!
I asked my father to send me 60 marks!
to pay my tailor, and a few days later
I received the tailor’s receipted billl
—Fliegende Blatter.
Grand Scenery.
FROM
Model Accommodations.
Low Rates.
OCEAN
TO
OCEAN
Without Change of Cars—Via
A STRAPPING YOUNG FELLOW.
—New York Evening World.
Superior Talent.
“Does your wife understand politics,
Pilcher?”
“No, but when she puts up a lunch
with eggs in it she doesn’t forget the
salt and pepper. ’ ’—Chicago Record.
Subscribe for the “Record”—and keep
posted.
______
An Unreasonable Man.
A subscriber, evidently in deep
¡►ouble, 6ent the following to the “lei­
sure editor” of a well known paper:
I don't want to know how many
miles it is to the moon.
I don’t want to know how many gal­
lons of water there are in the Dead sea.
I don’t want to know how long it
would take to creep from Maine to Cali­
fornia.
I don’t care who invented the first
washing machine.
I don’t care who will bo the greatest
living person fifty years from now.
I don’t care who first wrote that ex­
quisite gem, ‘‘When Lovely Woman
Stoops to Folly. ”
I don’t care who first discovered
America or whether it was discovered
before.
I don’t care whether it’s silver or
gold, 16 to 1 or 1 to 25.
I don’t want to know who made the
first pair of pants for Bryan cr McKin­
ley.
But if yon will kindly tell mo how
to rid my house of waterbugs I'll be-,
everlastingly obliged to you and will
send you a five years’ subscription in
advance.—New York Sunday World.
i
Th* bo­
llali»
cigMxun
abbivb :
kak :
Senator John Sherman says that the
free coinage of silver would raise prices
of farm products, but what good would
the money do when it wonld require so
much more of it to purchase anything?
Why, it would do much good every way.
The Bounder (endeavoring to strike
If there was more to pay to buy some­ up an acquaintance)—A-hernl Very
thing, there would be more to pay it close today.
with, and as so many are in debt it
Miss Cutaway—Yes, we want rain.
would be their very salvation.—Milton The air is full of insects.—Pick Me Up.
(W. Va.) Independent.
i
GOING EAST?
lbavb :
The Farmer’s Salvation.
I remember very well a meeting of this kind
that was held in Williamsport, Pa., near where
I was born and lived. Judge Anthony, then a
Democratic luuniher cf congress, presided and
made a sperdh. They p:.
resolutions set­
ting forth that it wan a libel on Andrew Jack-
son to say that lie would veto the recharter:ng
of tho great bank or that ho would remove
the deposits. These good people thought they
could bead off General Jackson in this way.
But, thanks to God, Andrew Jackson was
made of sterner stuff. A great anti-Jackson,
an “honest Democratic” meeting of this kind
was held in Philadelphia, whero the great
bank was located, at which they gave a free
dinner to 8,000 luen—all paid for by tho groat
bank. Bonton, in his groat work, “Thirty
Years In the Senate,” gives an account of this
great meeting. John Sargent, with 300 Demo­
cratic vice presidents, presided. All the speak­
ers, speaking from 20 stands, were anti-Jack-
son Democrat«—men who had voted for Jack-
8£fl_atJusllrst ejection,
jww oypotted him
Toronto, Ont.
Portland.... 8:30 a m Roseburg... 5:0 p m
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The Best Cough Cure.
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cure. For sale by T. K. Bolton.
The first move of Biddle was to ob­
tain control of all the important Demo­
cratic papers that were for sale from
Boston to New Orleans. Jackson was
consequently treated by the eastern press
pretty much as Bryan is today. The
Whig papers were all against him, and
many of the Democratic papers turned
traitor to their party, just as some of
them at the east are now dong. A con­
gressional investigation showed that
government money in Biddle’s banks
was used to influence Democratic pa­
pers. When Jackson learned this fact,
he instructed his secretary of the treas­
ury, Mr. Duane, to remove the govern­
ment deposits from the banks. Duane
was under the influence of the money
power and refused. Then Old Hickory
showed his indomitable purpose, and
Secretary Duane was made an official
head shorter in a jiffy. His successor
promptly removed the deposits, and im­
mediately a terrific storm burst over
President Jackson’s head. Clay, Web­
ster and Calhoun were the leaders in
the senate, all ambitious of the presi­
dency as Jackson’s successor. Webster
was a Whig, and Clay and Calhoun
called themselves Democrat. The trio
pooled their issues and formed what
Thomas H. Benton called “the great
triumvirate,” making war on Jackson
for removing the deposits from Biddle's
banks and his avowed purpose to veto
the bank charter. There were bank
Democrats in those days, just as there
are gold Democrats in these days. They
got up meetings, thinking they could
influence Jackson by invoking the name
of “honest Democrats. ” Mr. Schreiner
says:
Palaces on Wheels.
When people travel now a days, they
expect comfort, and when they travel on
Tne “Milwaukee" they get it.
There has been on evolution in the
means of transportation for man that is
verv interesting. The more civilised a
People becomes, the more exciting it grows.
he coaches now running between 8L Paul
and Chicago, and Omaha and Chicago, on
“Tl>e Milwaukee”, are marvels of elegance
and convenience. The private compart­ James J. Corbet gave some pretty good
ment cars, library .buffet smoking cars advice to the boys of the Olympia Club,
and free reclining cnair cars are models on when he was in San Francisco last. He
luxurious comfort, which in style and told them that the best way to get strong
furnishings are palatial enough for royalty was to avoid all excesses in youth, so that
itself. A great pleasure for tne traveler on they should arrive at manhood lusty and
its sleepers and private compartment car, healthy. Manv men who have been guilty
is the electric berth reading lamp, which is of excesses and over-indulgencies, ana have
an exclusive feature with “The Milwau- used the Celebrated Medicine “CUPI­
kee”. The beating is all done by steams I DENE” lived to give testimony of its won­
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The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail­ “CUPIDENE” is a powerful, harmless,
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Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. $1.00; 6 packages $5>*00. For sale by 0 A
0. J. Eddy, GrawEi Awnt, pbrcicnffi Urt» Btanftnit.
different kind of money from what they
gave us, to pay in dollars which cost
twice as much sweat, twice as much
blood, as did the dollars which they gave
us—we say that that act was a fraud
and was a crime against civilization.
This' is not a partisan question. It is
not a question of Republicanism or of
Democracy. John Sherman and Grover
Cleveland are sleeping together. It is
a question of patriotism. It is a question
of maintaining the institutions of the
fathers, for if the present standard is to
be maintained, if our people must go on
paying interest and principal in dollars
that require twice as much labor, twice
as much sweat, twice as much blood to
obtain, as did the dollars that were in
circulation when the debts were created,
then the doom of the American pro­
ducers is sealed. Low prices will bi
made perpetual, and thero will be no
hope for the American farmer, tin
American mechauio or the American
laborer.—John P. Altgeld.
V-'DZ?
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CANADIAN
CAVEATS,
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desicn patents ,
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For Information and free Handbook write to
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------- TO-------
CHINA © AND © JAPAN.
FOR BALE BY T. K. BOLTON.
QUICKLY 8ECUBED. Trad.-mark, sad Copyrights
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promptly and ikillfully conducted at lowest rates.
a ™,'yitlol>* iatroduosd, companies formed, and PKT-
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« or invention, with explanation, and ws will report
'
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4
WHXM PATENT IB ALLOWED When
d patent ix secured we will conduct ite sale for you with-
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2U0 lnventiuni wanted mailed to inventor* free upon
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, H. B. WILLSON A CO , Fatset SolicUon,
I U Droit
WASHINGTON, O. C.
MINNEAPOLIS
St. PAUL
These twin-screw steamers are in every
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CAN AD1 AN AUSTRALIAN STEAMER
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These steamers carry an experienced.
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For time tables, pamphlets, or any infor­
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E. J. COYLE.
.46 Third St.
Portland, Or^
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