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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1904)
II ' V.TTr.Tr.T , CZZZ017 . LTA1ZZ11A1I ' rSXDAY, JULY 3, . K3L r::2 v.ic.iYcr.Ecc;i states: ' - - --i- ""iML-i-viiir'MimiiiiinrniiiLiu"iri FabUaaed ry Tuesday and Friday by the BTATXSMA21 PUBUBHZ5Q COKPXKT x. J. bksdhtchch. Manager, T. T. 3X&, Jtdltor. yr In sArarioa .................... fLDO , Hi month a. iB advance J0 Three mouths, in adraoee. J2& -vnayaax, on um.. L28 'mi f tv-twe yean, sad It bat some subscribers who Vt A Wrnm a. ..I m ,1 4 wa!. W ... m m w as una aw tua svur PJJU mpj w.iT.fli tor ajrmerauoa. Borne n nwmm o)tw to navinc U paper aimratlnaed a U am of exrlrtUon Of their Btitwrlntfnn for the benefit of these, and lor other reasons we naraooncinnM toetsconunue suMcrlpUons vniywaeanAttnedtoaoso. AJl persons paytn waen anMcnDtis, or paring u adraaee. aara th benefit of tbe dollar rate. Bat it they doBotpayfor alx avmtb,th rat wiUbs L2S a yaar. Hereafter we will Mod the will Mna tiMMKr tAaiii Seen'b IStiSJ?' 2".' J - months. In order that there saay bo ao aiisoa. derataadios;. wo will keep this notice star-linx m mm aee uuia paper. CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 OVliitDONE. As was pointed out by the editor ef the Statesman in a series of letters written from St. Louis in May, the Louisiana Purchase Exposition embod ies an undertaking too vast to be ac companied by financial results that will be at all satisfactory to its managers. It includes too much. It is hot possi ble to invest so tremendous a sum as $50,000,000 in an enterprise of that character and reasonably expect to re alize a satisfactory return to the coff ers of those who are managing it. These conclusions are being gradu ally verified. . Last week the govern ment board oz managers addressed, a letter to President Francis earnestly calHng his attention to the surprisingly small attendance, day by day, and sug gesting that something be done to fur ther inform the public of the magni tude of tbe show and the wonderfully attractive features that are to be seen on every hand and their great educa tional value. But this is more of a confession than a complaint that the people at large do not fully understand the nature of me great reposition, ine people uoinuinl)Cr tho onl i(lca tor whicB he on. know. iwcryDouy unaersianus mat tho St. Louis Exposition is in full prd- t;r.B ami luav it ,nK,uini - play of the world's progress in every line or human achievement. It is not aiienaance is wnoiiy unnausiactory i and inadequate to promise anything like a financial succeiHH the trouble is occasioned by the overstepping- the tniunds of reason in the inconceivable magnitude of tue undurtaKing. it is plainly overdone. There is far too much money invested in it. President Carter, of the government loard of managers, calls attention to the fact that three sevenths of the duration of the fair has already pass- ed, and, impliedly, that something must be done, and at once, in the .matter of 'impressing upon "the people tho neces sity of coming to the rescue. As an other effort -in the same direction, the managers have just completed arrange merits with the "Associated liillpost ers of tho United States and Canada" for the', f roe use of 1,000,000 miles of billboards during the month of August for the purpose of exploiting the Fair It is to be presumed, however, that no Exposition is expected to be a mon ey-making concern. .Missouri. appropri ated $.",000,000 in support of the Fair, but it was, it is supposed, voted us a gift,' outright, as a means of advertis ing the state. The Lewis and Clark Fair will be under no obligation to re turn any money to tho treasury of Oregon for the $500,000 voted in sup port of that undertaking. Expositions are agencies for advertising the fie sources of communities and states and the money contributed is not supposed to be returned dollar for dollar, and in kind. But the difficulty at St. Louis is that the income from gate receipts is not enough to pay the daily expenses and the installments due the government on the $3,000,000, or near that sum, which !Was borrowed last March. The situa lion is no doubt deplorable to those taring the management in charge and HairWalk I tried Aver Hair Viwr stop ray air from falling. One- nau a Dome cured me." J.C Baxter, Brsidwood, in. Aycr's Hair Vigor Is certainly the most eco nomical preparation of its kind on the market. A little of it goes a long way. It doesn't take much of it to .stop falling of the hair, make the 'hair grow, and restore color to gray hair. ttHafctUa,, ABaVtrJats. If your dranrlat cannot aanptv too. i yo a bottto. BaaaroaarJTOthOBaSe y ( your aearoat exrr flfs. TXrT J.CAlkK CO.. UeU, liaaa! 1 V . Disfigured SIdn Wasted muscles and decaying bones. What ha roc I i" r ScrofaU. let alone, la capable of an that. and more. -'; It : la- commonly marked by boncnes In tbe neck. Inflammations m tbe eyea, dys pepsia, catarrh, ami general debility. . it i always radically ana permanently cured by f ,,. . Hood's Sarsaparilla 1 Which expels all humors, cores an enr tkms, and builds op the Whole system, 1 aTPIa Kov VMmS fW Alii .. i wv- v wm I wv... tan .. m.. .1 -JU.... I - ' "-F"?-1 I eMro w wm waanowa I ivi . I these urgent anneals for a create r at lneBe BrS appeal xor a greater at UBduce. million dollar, is too large a I t invest in an Exposition. Half of it would be too much, and it is one of the safest of prophecies to indulge that it will not. b repeated for man a year to come. In tbe effort to outdo Chicago, St. Louis has overstepped her self. The St. Louis Fair is not lack ingpuLlieity. Everybody has heard of it 'and has heard of it in favorable terms. The fact is that every citizen of this country who can afford to. do so should attend it, and practically every newsoaoer in the United ' States has tolJ it rcaierB this truth, but the tron tle, wm found in the aet that a $50,000,000 show is too big to be prop erly handled from a financial point of view. These lessons should all be learned and applied by the. Lewis and Clark "Fair managers this year. , . - -a t ' WHAT NEXT? Two or three times recently the Statesman has had occasion to refer to the historical fact that practically all political parties in the United States have come to accept the doctrines of Washington and Hamilton as to the powers of the general government as. contrasted with the theories of Jeffer son and Madison. Notwithstanding all the nonsense in dulged by our Dembcratis friends as to the semi-saered halo which surrounlst,losc first wbo reaeh out for it the memory of Jefferson as the one statesman of the Kevolutionary period whose conception of the principled of government among men which should yield the m-eatest trood to the trreatest tended that divided him from Hamil- ton an(1 the Federalist party was aban doaed in 1865. because it was on the hosing side in the great preceding four years' contest. t , .,, government or one heli together merely at tbe pleasure of the. stater, was the only question that divided Hamilton and Jefferson. History has proven Jefferson wrong and the Demo cratic party today dare not publicly contend for the principle which he up held in his political differences with Washington and Hamilton. : . . , Ah proof of the abandonment of the lif-lonc contention of .Tefferson fur th; Tirinrinl Bct forth in tho Ken- tlirlv vtminiian. nf 17fm.it i V,t essary to listen to the present Demo cratic complaint that 4,a word from Koosevelt would Bettle tho troubles in Colorado. ' 1 Hut the trouble in Colorado is a state difficulty, not interfering with the United States mails, and is one that the state authorities have never admit ted they could not handle without as sistance. The ''autocratic j tenden cies" of the times are embodied in the Democratic complaint that the powers of a "centralized government" are not thrust into the domestic affairs of a "sovereicn state." Jefferson is long since dead, as has been this pet idea of his, and so com pletely have Interpretations of the fed eral constitution changed that here we have those who claim to be lineal polit ical descendents of JeUerson criticising a disciple of Hamilton for refusing to step into the boundaries of a sovereign state, uninvited, and interfering with tho course of its regularly constituted authorities in the disposition of a ques tion that is purely local in its charac ter! 'And the disciples cf Jefferson are asking it! Surely, , such "autocratic tendencies" are enough to provoke a spectral protest from the hallowed cmeterT t Monticello. THE CIECUMLOCTJTION OFFICE IN J J . ACTION. As the direct result of the constant aaggiag on the part of "department inspectors" whose first duty is to ap pear so active and effective that they rill seem to their superiors as having found some necessity for their official existences, Thomas W. Potter, for nine years the superintendent of the Chema- wa Indian Training School ,has volun- tariry tendered his appointment to the Department at Washington. The report from the inspectors jus tifies the. statement from the Depart ment that Mr. Potter " is eiven credit for having contributed so largely io make Cheraawa the finest Indian school on the Pacific coast and equal in all but capacity to any in the country." 'But, and if, and although," there has been some laxity in the unessential red-tape1 requirements of the circum locution office, where the first regula tion is to teach subordinates how not to do it, anf the inspectors have dis- covered that though it is one of the finest schools in the . United States. some laxity " prevailed somewhere, though never affecting the efficiency of the school in any particular, and Mr. Potter, tired of and disgusted ' with such continual nagging in the face of his never-ceasing efforts In behalf of the cchooL has tendered ' his resignation.-: .'.'-''. !' :'' r; .".j. f When Mr. Potter took charge at Che mawa, there were but two hundred In dians there and not a brick building. Now there are 600 : Indians ; and six magnificent brick structures and an other arranged for. lie has made a model superintendent, aa the result of his work shows, and he retires, the vie tim of that species of petty fault-find ing with unimportant details that wearies the patience of the conscien tious, practical official, but with the respect and confidence of the people everywhere who know of his superior work here during the past nine vears, BUSINESS TO THE EAST OF US. ; Thirty years ago Marion county ap propriated several! hundred dollars from its treasury ; for the purpose of surveying a road from the lower San tiam country across the Cascade Moun tains to Eastern Oregon. At that time the Des Chutes valley was little more than a wilderness, j Now it is becoming an important section of Eastern Ore gon. Alter having grown as it nas dur ing these thirty years, and considering the -marvelous development which has taken place directly across the moun tains, would it not be well for Mar ion county to again look toward . the proposition of establishing direct com munication with that section f There should be a good county road leading from Mill City or Detroit to Bend. This is a perfectly ' sane " idea, and is a good business suggestion. These two sections will be closely con nected some day by a wagon road, and the sooner it is consummated tbe more rapid will be tbe , settlement of the Eastern portion of Marion county. Afe wo going to be awake to any of these propositions? In the future more than in the past, business is going to como to Marion and Crook counties lie side by side ana the winters on the highest point between them are much milder than in Ohio or Indiana. Why should the immense business of that seetion be permitted to drift northward as a mat ter of course, when there is. a better and nearer outlet to the west? A PROTRACTED SILENCE. We have been waiting patiently for an answer to the query directed to sev eral, or any, of the Democratic papers of the state as to why gold Went into hiding in 1S93-4 because" asihey claim there was not suflieient quantity of it to do the business of the country, when t was not in biding four years before. though thcre was much less of it an more business doing? - ! This going-into-hiding act is the trumped up excuse at this time for ac cepting Judge Farker as a Gold Hug candidate, supplemented by the claim that the discovery of the Klondike and South African gold mines served to re ievc the business paralysis prevailing luring Cleveland's administration. But since relief came before Klon like did, we have repeatedly asked of our Democratic brothers what cause tf And why didn't gold "go into hid mg," say, in 18901 Really, what exf cuse have you for abandoning Bryan's financial doctrines and becoming Gol BugsT Are you really convinced that you were wrong on this question in 1896, and will you5 say so, or is this a case of assumed .hibernation with general understanding to break out gain when.-the prospect for success aj: pears more nearly ripe than now? ELIMINATES ROOSEVELT. Governor Chamberlain has returned home full of Democratic enthusiasm eliminating President Koosevelt from the possibility of an election and eas ily boosting Parker into the White House on an "unequivocal gold stan dard basis." Even Massachusetts is bodily swiped from the Republican column, and the border states are made doubtful because of that thinnest of all ineffectual myths, the '"race question." However, we are all glad to see the Governor back, his harmless enthusi asm , and all, for it will eome- in good play Friday night at Portland. In the meantime, we are assured that Mr. Bry aa will take care of Nebraska and Mis sonri "after the Chautauqua season is over. MENACE TO REPUBLICAN CESS. SUC- ' '-' ' " While undertaking to farther the ehance of Tom Taggart for tbe chair manship of the National committee, an Eastern Democratic paper said last week be was a man who, in that posi tion, would "prove second Mark Hanna!" i : i ' ' i- '. - Well, in the name of heaven, what ill the reorganized" Democrats claim next t The Gold Standard has been swiped, absorbed and assimilated, the fight lot an income tax law was affirmatively abandoned in the national convention, avowedly for the pnrpose of carrying some of the Eastern states, and here is Mark Hanna 'a .reputation as a politician presented as a standard it: is believed a. Democrat has, been found with sufficient ability to parallel. One by, one, all the cherished - f eat- urcsof the Republican party have be- When the gueis coated, poor and Bleep rest less, you win find a few doees of the Bittern will do you a world of good, lit tones up the I Ultomaeaabd Jcurs IstfoestUa, Dyssessla, Vssiituii. Crzmpt ssa Uver Trsables. Try a bettle. eome endocsable and endorsed by the Democracy until nothing : is- proof against their . marvelous 'facility f o acauirinir "issues' j? that "promise to "appeal favorarbly t the popular judgment," to use n expifjssion of a prominent Oregon Democrat last spring when he was outlining ft platform that would suit. . i , However, when everything else is abandoned, Jiooscvelt's love for war and his general nsafety"- can be made to do a mighty sight of effective service -between now - and November There is not a day that every citizen does not feel the -growing "menace of Militarism." .At every turn the peace ful citizen is confronted by the awful specter of Imperialism. And then there is the "Bace Question!" "Do you want your daughter to " marry a Niggerf" Heaven forbid! 1MPOSTANCE OF GOOD EOAD3. ' Everybody would be pleased with the discovery of oil in the Willamette valley in such quantities that a field of gushing oil wells, or even of. wells that did not particularly gush, would be the result and there would be gen eral rejoicing to see the construction of several lines of trolley communica tion between the different section of the country, but after these are secur ed, if they shall be, the importance of first class - wagon roads everywhere will in no wise be diminished. , The necessity ror good roads will never be superceded by aljy other or all other contrivances for getting from one community to another. After all, the me'hod of trfhsportatioh'th.'l't'!r frec ti every citizen is tho basis for all com mercial transactions. And this is il lustrated by the renewed interest tak en in the construction of good roads better roads- in the oldest states in the Union. - Even in New York, which has been settled for nearly four eenturies, and where it might be assumed that the great net-work of railroads that char acterizes it in every direction, together with its extensive canal system, would be sufficient, the question of. the im portance of entering' upon an extensive campaign, and even an expensive one, for better roads, is onw engaging the attention of the people. The Legisla ture of that state at its session of 1903, passed an amendment to tho state con stitution to be submitted to tho people, authorizing the issuing of $50,000,000 of bonds, not more than $-j,000,000 to be issued in any one year, to be used exclusively for the building of good and permanent roads in every county in the state. At a recent meeting of the Board "f Trade for Cooperstown, resolutions were unanimously passed endorsing the proposed constitutional amendment and giving some very strong reasons for U,B,UK li,lc 1 u i"o cousiruciion oi a system of good roads. Among other facts set forth, it was resolved that: "We believe that it is more im portant to maintain the commer cial supremacy of the state of New York by the spending of $.'30,000, 000 on our highways to develop values in our own farm lands and. to bring our farm produce to our own markets than it is to spend $101,000,000 on the Krie canal to cheapen through transportation of farm produce from the West and so build up greater competition in our home market. "Resolved, That we deplore the fiet sh.Tin by the federal census lh:t the sttte of New York fim thi year 1S90 to 1900jael from third rank fa the Union in imp -tance of agriculture, and that the deprecation of fences and lands in this state during the same pviod was $79,993,096.- The value ia 1890 of all of the land, fences nv l buildings being $968,127,256, nnd in 1900, $888,134,190, a deert-in farm values in round numbers f $80,000,000 in ten years. , ' Resolved, That we deplore the policy of the state, which appropri ates irontY first for development of Internal improvements, vhien creates, values in our already wealthy cities; and continues the policy of starving the interests of the country by denying us anpie annual appropriations for road iu-; improvement." And this awakened spirit l ti og-d tion of the necessity of good roads in .he oldest of our states, even after ail the railroads are built that will be per- naj ever be needed, - only si-ven to show the newer portions of the 'o&ntry the importance of an early and wnSn- tefrnptc l attertioa to this.,form f in teinai Improvement. No matter wht else may engage us in, the forr of de veloping our resources, and in th im mediate future we will bo ding much of this sort of work, the govl r-a.s movement,- as we term it, she ni l In- kept in the front rank.,' As far as able,, but 'to some extent. Oregon" should ;begin a -system of state aid to roads, even if it shoul i neccvi late the cutting down of appropriations in eome other direction. Nothing rvyuU pay better or cause less opposition" en the part of the taxpayers. Let cs push it along unceasingly. s ' ROOSEVELT'S SPEECH CEPTANCE. . OP AC- In formally accepting the Republican nomination for the Presidency-yesterday, Mr. Roosevelt dealt in his charac teristically terse - manner with condi tions as they are. There is no temporiz ing, no: apologizing, nor any theorizing. "We are not constrained to keep silent on any vital question. Wo are divided on no vital question. Our poliey is continuous and is tho same for all sections and localities. There is nothing experimental - about the government we ask tho people! to keep in power, for our performance in the past, "our prev- ed j governmental efficiency, is a guarantee as to our promises for the future. Our opponents, either openly or secretly according to their , j several , temperamenls,' now ask the people to trust their pres- ' ent promises in consideration of the fact that they intend to treat their past promises as null 'and void. We know our minds and have kept of the same mind for ; a sufficient length of time to give to our poliey coherence and sanity." It would be difficult to 'outline : the difference between the two great par ties in clearer or more impressive: lan guage than this. It presents the situa tion in a nutshell and is characteristic of that directness whieh causes . the Democracy to regard President Roose velt as j" dangerous" as he no doubt will prove, as a candidate! against the evasive and uncertain policy of that party as at present constituted. THE "COURSE OF EMPIRE.' A Clackamas county corresiondent writes to know the author of the verse beginning with the line, " Westward the star of empire takes its way." - . The author of these well known lines wa9 Bishop George Berkeley, a man of great learning, born in Kilcrin, Ire land, on the 12th of Marchj 1684 and who died at -Oxford, England, on Jan uary 23, 1753. IV 1713 Bishop Berke ley moved to London, soon after which h served as chaplain to Lord Peter borough in Italy, returning to London in 1721. In 1728 he came to America fau,l engaged in an effort to convert i - . . j the savages in this country, but failing to meet with tho support he cxjicc ted, returned home and was; appointed Bishop of Cloyne in 1734. As to the verse about which our cor respondent inquires it should be said that he quotes it incorrectly, though in accordance with the way we usually seo it in print. The cubtomary form of the quotation: " West ward( the star of empire takes its way; Time's latest offering is his best." The verse, however, as written by Bishop Berkelov, is as follows: illir-..i 1 .1. . . . .. . , I, ctiiwaru iu course oi empire lascsjoacK to ine miiiie ages, us wy ; j. The four 'first acts already past, A fifth shall close the drama with the day; Time 'a noblest offering is the last." RAPID FD2E CONVERSION, "WHILE YOTJ WAIT." If hard times in 15)03-4- were caused by the! scarcity of gold, although it was moro plentiful then thaii it was in 1890 when times were - good, and- if times have been admittedly better since because of the product of Klon- dike and Sooth Africa, how can times become hard ngain with all the gold in existence that made them good! ThelS64, Gen. Geo. li. McClellau was elect Domocratic papers are gleefully pre- dieting bard times in the immediate future, low can there be; any strin- geney in business matters with all the gold n existence which has made times so good that the Democratic brothers nave opemy announced themselves as gold standard menf ; : The question is respectfully aub- !li- 1 A. M . m .ae , any one oi in recent Demo- : .vn.1H.i. vvu.w .n vrcgon .o ..ooseveiw-arKer uold standard monetary proposition. Which, of them will epea first T AN AVOWED STJFp6rTH&. im. : . -. . I " eeivjtuu the L-og.'slature Mr. Brownell, of tdacV ?n,a, -wanteb! to be elected P.-esi lcnt of the Kar. c;.ii .... vote, i T. Z. V"! A TEXAS WONDER HAIL'S GREAT DISCOVEST. One small bottle of the Texan Was. wr, iiiu i u rent Lruteovery, cures all kidney and blaoder troubles, remove gravel, eures diabetes, seminal em is-' 9 WWa - tm and aU irregnlaritiea of the kid- neys and bladder in toth men and wo-1 vuiMBa i ww wz & a. - muaa immaw imraa vnamina. men, regulates bladder trouble In ehil-1 dren. If not sold bv vonr drncfrit I will be sent bv mal o C T Ono amall bottle ia two month' treat-f menu ut. Ernest W. Hall, sole ma no-1 factarer, P. O. box. 629. St. Lonis. V. I 'tT, s?iam braUdroc. guta and Ir. 8. C Stone's Drug Store.! ; t BXL&J) THIS, v The best proof the public has that To Whom It May Concern: ex Senator Davis is going to be mar Tbis ia to certlfv that I'wu i1n. ri.A ;. . . dies 0o no avail until a neighbor Indue- ed me to get a bottle of Tcm Wm,. 1 um.ii vi nutcn curea me sound I ana wen: mis l would cfceerfnllv sroar -to. and for the benefit nf thn kn auncien ani wishing to be permanent-1 incre win ims a circus in Salem to ly cured, they can obtain a. bottle at day and one in Portland Friday nicht Yours truly. i "'. -V - - -'sr u w ww m va uu era - -a a lis bit rasr - , 7. J. 8EALE. I - Aledford, Or.' the chairmanship "TJf-thor"Ttr3rmittetni ways and means to both lliw of Yam Lill pd Knykendall, of Lane. " After his election,' he eonf 9isl his dilemma and got -out of it by agreeing before witnesses to support ltuykendall for President of the Senate in 1905 if he would' release him from his obliga tion. Not knowing Mr. Brownell Very well, Knykendall accepted the promise, and now he and Senators Fulton and Booth and Howe are surprised that the Senator from Clackamas has forgotten all about the compact. J ' The Oregonian's account of the af fair says. that Brownell "was an avow od supporter of Mr. Fulton for Unite- States Senator at that time." Wonder if he was? On the day of his election and after that event had taken place, he ''avowed" himself before witnesses as intending to support the then Gov ernor of the state for United States Senator and to make the nominating speech in his behalf. It cannot be therefore, that he was an avowed sup porter of another for the same posi tion. There is a mistake somewhere or was.. - -,' . Mr. Brownell should not be" chided even mildly for these trivial matters. Let Mr. Kuykendall take his medicine bravely, being a physician, and ban the position over to Mr. Brownell with out a murmer. It's poitics. The engagement ,of Homer Daven port to make cartoons for several lead ing Republican papers during the cam paign will be accepted with pleasure by bi3 friends everywhere that is, his Republican friends. Jlomer is not a Democrat, nor ever was, and when era- ployed in presenting tbe inconsisten cies, not to say stultifications, of the Democratic prty as at present orderedj the best illustrations of his great gen ius may be expected. His latest rep resents lull and Belmont in a private apartment engaged in boisterous laughter as, over il heir beer mugs, ther detail how they took Bryan in by first getting Parker nominated on a plat form' with no declaration on the "jvara- mount issue' of the gold standard and then "sprung" telegram, which had -evidently been j placed up. the Judge's sleeve bv Hill before leaving for St. Iouis It is -. snlen.Hd mrtraval of one of the most 1 interesting ."planks" in the llill- I Parker program. a practical icsson as io wnat virtue there is in stlck-to-ativeuewi jj shown A A? l . . . . I when we contemplate the immense for- tune that would now I within the reach of those! who were interested in the raising of Iteliiian : bares a few years ago now that the meat strike is on in the East. We distinotlv recall seeing at tho State Fair about four years ago a few hares on exhibition each with a printed iKvligrce reaching and that LAtly Suffolk," whose grand-dam was "Lady Smoot" five generations back, that is, four months was easily worth $500 of any man ' money. One of the saddest phages of human life is the discovery of a lost opportunity, looming up so majestically through ou hindsights, where an independent for I tune might have been made. Kven hare-breadth 'scapes are' not always pleasant to contemplate. There is no good reason why Grover tleveland should not become a candi date for Governor of New Jersey. After being a candidate for President in ed Governor of that state, and, besides, under the old Jcffersonian idea of a free and-casy General Government, it was a higher honor to be the Governor of a sovereign state than to be the President of a mere creature of the states. At least, it wiU do no barm jfor ilr. Cleveland to be a candidate. For eight years the Democracy re. fused to take the gold' standard, diag no.is from the Republican nurse, but has finally .ln,5t..i licin into it .i.m i,v.1.i.rn.;..n T " "y "V J "" " vai i from an attendant of its own gradua tion. It was not the medicine so much, I alter all. as thn icniireo nf tha iiruao.i.L. . . ' . v . t'-'v- won, mat causea nausea. - - ' . . T . . not mtter of very much im -rtan-' - wontd enjoy a scific paper of an instance where Koosevelt 1 -' f l- 1 m .; - um given any inoicaiion ot being an ("nnsafe" man. If' tho charge is not altogether campaign rot of the poorest quality, why not condescend to indi cate wherein his unsafety lies!. " iae ,nvc,rt,K'fn to the Prbability of oil at 1'ratum there has K teen no indication of anything looking ,.... . . , l'".ma ucce.v. venamiy e ev",CDfCS ol ,a ol11'1 thero are Itt enough to justify a-further and rmiHiont. r.r-minoi;,.. nn;t i. u Xul, tM . , ' ..... "dLS" ' ave 80 promptly denied the state, meat. The wld soon. - -air. liryan announces that he will make sieeches in Nebraska and Mia ml U) U y Prevented Assisted hy CUTICURA Oint mcnt, the great Skin Cure, and purest and sweetest of Emollients. For sunburn, heat-rasa, tan, freckles, pimples, blotches, black heads, red, rough, and oily skin, bites and stings of insects ; for cleansing the hair and scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff for baby rashes, itchingv and chaf ings; for many sanative, anti septic purposes that appeal to mothers, as well as for all pur poses of the toilet, bath, and nurs ery, CUTICURA Soap, assisted by CUTICURA Ointment,, the great Skin Cure, are priceless. N. B. Complete Externa! and Interna! treat ment for every Humor, from Pimples to S r.,f .! from Infancy to Age, confining of CUTICl'K A Soap, Ointment, and Pint, trice, the tct, Vnt Dollar, may now be had of all drupastt SoH thrauehmrt th wt.r!d. Cn'lnn -jv Oint- tnrat. r.. KMnlTnvl, !-. t In t,-rm A rhm,!n. i llU. the. prr ot . Uwh.i,, 'T "b.r,. Immm Sq. rrK'S Rn-drb P Bt..:.. I ff Cuhiwlm, ' A: PoHliTttCViii. C-mt, s.,iri biLln, fccijs IIjOx, and Umi. ' souri after the t-'hal-.t:iiitia s:i"n is over. '-Aro.tUt.'M'.'tlie only Mut.(.'H'vhi'lit in hij judgiucut, Mr. Tarkir i tuiitlt d tor When Mr, Iirvan got tin- :tjM(t,t':i- ti IX'inocrjH-y ipor.-itii.ctl, y.ty t wonty-y'ar from liow. lri' iil tn.ivf his oratorical battrrio's forward a n- eratiorr and entcrtaiii tin- jmuj I.' wiih Lot shot fit the pir-t liili.ui tf the crime of J!"l. Tho njxirt th:it l'i;cie (i.-iMsaMay Iavis,'tlMii4h ,Sl y.-iri of gv is o get - ma'rri-l, xj!;iiiih in 'u lare ineaMurc his 'indifference to tlje t-xi-n-. cies .f -.partv M'lit Min.?-caiiipiiigii at a'tiuic,' -says' he, im "diulit. "Just trust us, cratic platform, ' sjiv the iu pubsta'nve. lcni' ,4ai:. We'll agreu to not di :niv "f the tliiij wo -threate.ued " to." . do years ago. We're not ' us." . - ' . i. four t-V'U ia"ng'r-tHs.' Try 1 . Certainly . Vu-le Gaiway mu -t have a reputation for having a bt'nv heart,, elm? oitie one of the dozen nu n- tinned would-j jut love to ;oiej.t tho' jKiBition of, fiiairm.iti of the 'National Democratic eoniinit tec. The nrhool board did well in in creasing Prof. Traver's. unlary by 8 year, llvc-ri -et, he is the -o.r.-Ht paid man in the utate for his- xihilily and the position he hold. At any rate, the r.reyniin fomit-iiu can't very Will get away. An . 1""I n it is safely boxed .up it will be fr.-e from the ravages of rust.": It is a 'beau tiful fountain.. Kail road centers are riot only always busy marts .of trad but help-the out lying 'districts they arc connected with. Salem should, aud will be a railroad center. Jfr. Bryan declines to c prcsf-ut at the meeting when . Judgn Parker i to bo notified of his nominal inn. New York is still in the enemy's country. Sapid and cheaper tran"j.ortati"ri ono or the requirements of wi'-rn business 'methods.' Let US get .Sah m withia the circle. This rain' juat iinw i very inoppor tune, and, although the dut has b"H Iai.l, there is no :disxo!ition to .cackle about it. From Cleveland's letter in Collier's one would infer that ho' -favors the gold standard. A little more foolishness anl 'K !!. will find her navy in deeper water -than ever. The prospect for oil in the rraturw listrict impartially shines f,.r all. It seems: to be Tom Taggnrt or no- body poss-'My- lii h. Who can "tell Iiby UcKeef what has Income of Well, who said Uncle Ga.'haway was going to be married, anyway t . ,.j : :l"By v.: V - ' ' ' - I il