n. ft lt.fi. BELLE Pres. n4 Mufr. II. H. LEIH), Secretary KEAI. B8TATE SA1.B lr Till! OKKGON 1AND CO. 1HI u3L AUCTION SALE -ABWLUTK LEAJDBH IN- fiTAPU' AND FANCY DRY GOODS,. Laces, Lace Curtains, Ribbons, Hosiery, Ladies' Underwear, Etc T-A DIES' MIHBh H Atfn CHILlillBN'S CLOAKS. imti fbr lrd.'vSchodor & Mitchell, FINE FOOTWEAR' Pattern sheets free every i..m4-V Uvtrtdil SCrtt1 irnnt nntvwi f.Ti1 rwif rrr MA7 P!rvr'l Uftanf 307 Com'l Street. jwuuti, uy ix&cui uuuu yuui nu.iv uiiu M,-w vv H, -" v i, - Kl . u i .JJtUt ataa &0V. PEJWOm'S BPiJEOH. Dal1fa at Kbflebttrg-i Or., Oct. 1, 1883. 7nxrr-orrrzBNS! The atkodliinsr presidential election rhuold not ocour without a fair under standing ot the fjreat issues involved, and H w for the purpose of presenting 1 Iiom Isaacs ha 'plaltm and succintly as iioasiMa that X now wdums you. I shall I lay speak in defensfl of the sclf-srinio toeaaenres I have heretofore advocated upon all decisions. I shall defeii(Ltlie iliKitHwe. as hereinfore, that the ImTlc of f deral taxatioii should be levied upon (lie wsalth rstlier than upon the labor and Industrie' of the country; thatthero liould be tho free and equal coinage of lth Mid nn d silver money; that both should be & full legal tender, and that the paper money required by buHiness interests should uo issued direct by the noyerament rather than by piivato bank i.il? associations, which, like gold and ( niver, should be a legal tender. It la I I ue, however, that in advocating the3 measures now I ilnd myself outsido of the political organization to which I foTOwly belonged. But that is noithor 'my fault nor my misfortune. It is the fault, if not the roWortune, of the late Driuooratic pfirty, vfhloh, haying aban doned its principled, now ought by right to abandon its name. Some two and a bi.W years ago, just following Clove land's anti-silver letter, in response to a request, Fnaid to the Cincinnati En quirer: "The great masses of the Demo cratic party in the .United 3tates favor the free' coinugo of silver. Mr. Cleve IkimT opposes it. . Mahoniet must come to the mountain, ns tho mountain will not go. to Mahomet.'' But I was mis- taken., .phenomenon in the political : world has occurred almost as remark able as the removulof a mountain at tho command of a lironhot. A Croat tioliti- cal party with nearly a century's history of consistency in faith and devotion to principle hue at liut proved recreant to all of Its traditions, and, forswearing its fealty to the cun?e of the people, has knelt ie blind, idolutrous devotion at tho ahrine of a man whose solo distinguish ,ing,characterlstio is his stubborn sub i Wvlency to the demands of theTnono u Motalllsts. A careful investigation, f,however, discloses tho fact that this de- yotiou is really not to him, as ho has neither, tho personal qualities, the in- telleotuiil endowments, nor the political sagacity to win homage. Like the moon, his i effulgence in n borrowed light. The real reason of his potency is tho fact that bis candidacy in demanded by thomonoy power. In his nomination, the strength, if any which was gained, was from tho stress; boxes of wall street. As the . pious Musselmnn turns at each prayer his face toward Mecca, so the Democrat ic arty in the hope that "thrift might follow fawning" at the Chicago conven tion turned its buck upon all of its ro ;verd traditions, its time-honored prin ciples, and its heretofore unbroken rec ord or devotion to the people's causo, and with Its tace to the eaot, mado n most profoaad salaam to tho great Joes set up tojrahs duvotces of monometallism aadbank rngmoney. That this diag nosis is eorreot is well demonstrated by the fact that a similar roversal of posi tion on the silver question was made by 4 the Republican party. Two years ago iu Oregon, the llupublicans as well as the Democrats demanded free coinage. Now both purtios are supporting canui ' dates pledged against the freo coinage of silver, and either of which would " yeto any bill in its favor passed by con gress in pursuance of tho demands of the people. The Republicans did not change out of respect to any candidate, but solely to win the favor of tho mouied interests pf the country. In fact this right about laco movomont of the Re publicans wab roally more painful to iksni than to the Demoorats. They number among thoir hosts one man, who like Saul, the son of Kish, "from his shoulder and upward is higher than any of his people, " tho foremost man of America, and one of the most sagacious politicians uud profound statesmen of i our' country and of our ago, tho man wbo has alone given to his party its only Lope of success by clothing the dlvluo doctrine of free trade in the Mother Hubbard garb of reciprocity and instal ling It upon tho most exalted seat in tho Vary sanctuary of protection, where the radiant goddess now nits enthroned, the ODjeoc or tue most devout auoration aim the sols hope of the party's political sal vation. James G. Dlaino of Mains was, as he roally deserved to be, the real choice of his party a a candidate for tho presi dency, ' But there was one fatal obj no Won. He was iu favor of a bl-motulllo currency. H was devoted to tho policy of the constitution, followed for more than eighty yours from tho foundation of the government, which recognized both gold and silver us lawful money. nave to both free and equal coinage, and Imparted to both full legal tender qual ities. The money lords of tho land, who, in order to euhuuco tho value of their wealth, had procured tho degradation of . silver by the denial of its coinugo on ' musJ' terms with gold, and by tho do- privation of its legal tender qualities, pUnuod. his defeat and citoctod its con summation, And then hating secured Harrison's nomination at Minneapolis, tony struck tent for Chicago, where thor procured the nomluutiou of Cleve land. But the great statesman of Maine, Wbo would not forego his principles for sue ot tue presidency, u sun gi eater i bis retirement ttian either of the oau- i of the two Old parties who tiro- kmni. their nomination uy acquiesoeuoe . tn, tue ueniauu or tue monometallic i of ttut laud. The nominations oi and Cleveland, of like priu- i and uolioy unon leadinir uumuous. 'opposing tkolitioal parties, is quite an laur iu tue political worm, uom w tariff as the great source of , both oppose the free coinage of and both are in favor of nuMiionev. Thv are the i serfs of Wall street, aud, like a pair iltanu ota stags are really uuuer tue yam tuouKUintr the national sum- 1 fallow lor Um hire of the ulutoorats. the country a now i tertnaatsly for t tar baa sntaml ths political arena, in awn to both of tue old parties, I of raisins the bulk of the a- I ravanue Ur tariff taxation, whiok i with unjust and unequal weight itaaliiUr and iadasule of the it wonld trauafer the bulk of bv an tnouuts tax. to the i of th nation, whara it justly b Inniead of havbur a single itoii lor U national e urranoy, it would the M-iaatauia baaw of our by the aonal ooiuajM of silvr aid ud by its ro-invastiUura with xai taudtr oualities. lnaiwad iviag the paper moaoy requirad by HsnajAdb) oJf trade nnsl ainvsiiafaa is I aasaattwan by SSjMSI iwil IT l" the Ipublicnn pa;ty, 6r by stuto b.unltB, as demanded by toe Cleveland party, neither of which would be legal tender money, it demands that all tho money of the country, gold, silver, and paper, ehall Ixj iswed alone by the governinent of tho country, and that tho paper money, an well as both gold and silver shall be full legal tendermonoy. These, then, are the leading issues now before the people. The Tariff. Tho constitution of the United States conferred upon congress tho powor "to lay and collcot taxes, duties, Imposts, and excises" for the support of the gov ernment, but for quite a period past tho great bnlk of tho revenue has been raised by impodta alone. This method of taxa tion, although the most unequal, is the most popular for the reason that no per son really knowe how or when ho is pay ing the tax. As Turgot, the French ritatcftimin, justly declared "tariff taxa tion is tho art of plucking the gooso so as to get the' largest amount of feathers with tho least amount of squealing. " Taxation by impost, when framed in thomo!,t just manner and with the ercatest enre. cannot ?fail of beimr fla grantly unjust. The only just standard of r.xi tion is the one that compels a man to pay according to his wealth, for the plain reason that the more wealth he has tho more it is to his individual in terests to be protected by law, and as governments are instituted for the pro tection of property as well as life, he should pay for its support in proportion to tho property to bo protected. This is a plain rule founded upon reason which cannot possibly ba gainsaid. But this plain and just rule cannot be obeyed in the collection of taxes by imposts. Take, for instance, tho most just method of tariff taxation, which is a purely revenue tariff. Such a tariff would have to bo laid exclusively upon articles not produced within the country, for the nlain re.ison that Anv tariff levied upon uny article produced within the national, domain would to a grouter or loss extent afford incidental protection. In this country, then, a purely revenue tariff would have to be laid muinly upon tea, coffee, eugar and spices. With the tariff so lnid, the prices of thoso articles would be bo immeasurably enhanced as to be a most podtive burden upon the poor, if not nnactualinhibitionto thorn against their use. With tills, the most just system of tariff taxation, everyone can discover its manifest injustice. Under it tho poor man with n Invito family of children, if he useu tea, cotfeo and sugar would bo compelled to pay much more for the sup port of tlio government in taxes than Ills millionaire neighbor who has but himself and wife in tho family. Under the tariff n now lnid upon a very great number of articles, tho poor man is taxed iu n still more unjust proportion, but us the difficulty of tho discovery of such tli-saMon is so great, ho can only perceive it effect in tho discouraging fact that it is almost impossible to livo well ami inako both ends meet. It Is, however, when n tariff is laid so as to afford protection that tho greatest in justice is perpetrated, for then the tax payer is not only taxed for tho support of the irovernment but for the benefit of the individual prodnoing theartiole pro tected. Tho Iwneflcianes of protective tariff taxation realize its value to them solves to a full greater extent than its victims realize its injurious offeots. For the last threo-quarters of a centnry at every Rcsion of congress, the represen tatives of tho industrioa clamoring for protection huvo hung around the lobbies of congress like buzzards around a car cass. The latest fad in congressional legislation is to pass tariff laws protect ing everything that wants protection. This is the McKinley doctrine. The great originnl inventor of this doctrine Governor McKinley in its defense, when he took his seat as presiding officer of tho state Republican convention in Ohio, threatened that if the tariff was taken off tho wool on tho sheep's back, he would demand that ltfhouldbetakeu off from the clothing on man's back. This same threat ho repeated when he took his seat no chairman of tho national Re publican convention at Minneapolis. It. was uttered in defense of the idea that protection was a very broad nolioy, and ought to be handed all around. Now, let us for one moment examine this matter. Ho asserts that if tho woolen manufacturer is proteotod, tho farmer who raises wool should also be protected. There in so much justice in that propo sition that no ono can successfully deny it. In this Government no favor should ba oxiouded by law to one class that is not cnuullv extended to another class. Governor McKinley is right in tills ro gurd. But lot us seo where that Bublimo doctrine irresistibly leads us to. No favor, hu aborts, should bo extendod the manufacturer that is not extended to tho sheep raieer. That is most just. And is it not equally just that no favor should bo extended to both the mniiufncturcr aud the producer that is not also extended to tho poor laborer, and millions of consumers who uro neither producers nor mannfao turors? Mr. McKinley would be por feotly fair in distributing his protection equally botweon tho snoop raiser and the manufacturer, if they wore the only two parties affected by it, but the rango of liU vlMou is so elevated that ho has notyot discovered tho poor consumer, who is also pecuniarily interested to a very great extent in the matter. Tho higher tho protection to the wool grower and manufacturer tho greator the rob bery of the consumer. Now, if his doo trino that proteotlon Bhould iw equally accorded, mid if tho caso of the con suiniir U considered, na he must concede that it ought to lw, this most profound statesman will discover tnat tue only possible way in which ho oan protect tho con4um?r Is to ceuso robbing him ror tlw protection or others. The weight of duty, ut. a u.i , sports coming into cnmpi-tinnn with the products of American labor, there should be duties levied equal to the dif ference between wages at home and abro.id. " The Cleviland managers in tho platform presented to the convention with his connivanco and ascent said: "When custom house taxation is levied upon a,r y nvliclcs of any kind produced in this country, the difforence between the cost here and abroad, where such difference exists, fully measures any pos sible benefits to labor. In making re duction in taxes it is not proposed to in. jure iiuy domestic industries but rathor $o promote their healthy growth.'' Theoe nlaulcH are as nearly oiiko an two peas. The Cleveland purty not only aligned it self with the Republican party in favor of bank rag-money and monometallism, but -jumped aboard the samo platform on the tariff. It would have been a great blessing to the country if the Re publicans had taken out a patent right on their platform after it had been adopted at Minneapolis. This would have sim plified matters by eliminating the Clovo landites from tho canvuas aud by mak ing tho issue on those great leading questions betwfen two great parties. The interpolation by Watterson of tho doctrino that there is no constitutional warranty for any tariff laid for purposes othor than revenue was a work of mere supererogation. It was a good deed, well intended, but not at all needed in attestation of tho orthodoxy of his own faith, while it was utterly fntilo In shaping the policy of tho Cleveland party. It was virtually and very adroit ly upturned by Mr. Cleveland in his Mudison Squnro Garden epeech, and the New York Times of July 18th, which is ono of the leading organs of the Cleve landjtes, asserts that it does not repre sent tho party views which it declares are f nlly enunciated by the Mills bill and says "the Mills bill of 1888, representing the ripest thought and the legislative intontion of the party was a protective tariff bill. With its averuge duty of 42 per cent, on all dutiable importa it oould properly be called a high tariff bill," aud then closes the argument in n sublime outburst of Mugwump faith and devotion by the solemn declaration that "Grovor Clove land is not only the party candidate, but its platform, the declaration of its prin ciples, the -definition of its purposes. " Cleveland, not Watterson, represents the tariff policy of the Cleveland party, and that policy is protection, restricted, however, to tho manufacturers. It was a prevalent superstitions belief of the ancient Romans that no city could be taken or destroyed till its tutelar gods had abandoned it, and hence thoir first cure was to evoke the goda of tho be sieged city to forsake it by promising them superior tomples and festivals and n more respectful worship. It is to bo foared that if the Clovelundites, in thoir pious attempt to capture tho Republican fiarty platform, have failod in this devo ioual act of evocation. The gods of unequal tariff taxation, of bank rag money and manometelllsm will not come over to their Bide, in which case they will have only a doep sense of humilia tion for their pains, and will learn when too late that they have alienated the affections of the peoplo in their vain at tempt to win tho favor of tho Republi can tutelary deities. Income Tux. Now for tho first time in the whole history of our constitutional govern ment 1ia3 a great politicul party firmly Slanted itself in defense of the sacred octrine of just and equal taxation. It is a doctrine fidly as sacred as that for which our revolutionary anoestors con tended, which demanded that there should be no taxation without represen tation. Tho great inequality of tariff tax ation, under its most Bkillful adjust ment, cannot be denied by Its most strenuous advocate. In the very nature of things it cau novor be a just tax, be cause it is utterly impossible to so lay it that under its operation mon will pay for the support of the government ac cording to tho mousure of thoir wealth, and as this is tho only just rule it neces sarily follows that a graduated income tax, nosed upon that sound doctrine, is the only really just tax, and tnerefore constitutes tho very tnodo by which the grout bulk of tho national revenue ought to bo collected. Under the tariff men pay to the government a tax on tho food they oat, the clothes they wear nnd the or the iuoiunloy argument, when ap plied to all classes as it should be, u sufficient to break down entirely his sys tem of protection. He has furnished to the pouutry a modt notable instanco'ot a rouii hoisted by his own petard. A pro tective tariff to b effective must bo un just, aud its effectiveness is in exact ratio with Us injustice. If there could possibly be n just protective tariff, by whieh each protected industry would iwy for the aroteetlon of other indus tries exactly what it receives from others for its own protection, then no one would desire it, as no one would be Wnsflttad bv it. Jimtirn and a urn. tective tariff are hitter foes, and cannot live peaoeAbly together iu the same hoiMKthold, Let us examine the position of the Cleveland party an this question of tariff, It wonM have been psrfeetly clear and explicit if Henry Wattarson bad not acted tha role of the bull in a shinashon at Chicago. Tha Kepubll. cans at MlHHapo)( said; " We believe ttmt au articles wuicn cannot l piv implements thoy use in their labor, and this being the ease, it follows that a poor mooring man not worm one uouarmtiie world, who Uvea by tho labor of his hands and who huu a wife and family of eight children, pays ten times as much for the support of the federal govern ment as his rich bachelor neighbor who is worth a million ot dollars. Under an income tux the rioh bachelor would pay fully if not moro than ten ten times as much tax as his poor neigh bor. Under this latter system justice is meted out to both parties. Under the tariff system the rich man is favored while a most cruel wroug is dono the poor man. Wo hear quite a deal of de nunciation against paternal govern ments, and yet tho great faot stands so boldly out that no one dare controvert it, that there ia no government so pater nal as that which depends mainly upon tariff taxation for its rovenue. And it is tho worst kind of paternalism as its paternal benefactions are vouch safed to the rich and its pa ternal exactions are inllictPd on tho poor. Through its subtle and nnnotiQo ublo oporutinus thousands of poor Peters are robbed for the benefit of a tew fav orito Pauls, Many a great struggle in volving the loss of thousands of Uvea nnd the expenditure of millions of dol lars tias iKen engaged in between peo ples nnd nations, when the enor mity or the grievance precipitating tho warfare was as nothing in comparison to tho enormity of the wrongs inflicted upon our poople bv tho unjust Bystem of t.trlff taxatiou. Thero Ja one incalculably great benefit which would la derlvod from tho Imposition of an income tax. The wenlth ot the country is now entirely exempt from federal taxation. Under tho moro just eystem obtaining in our stato govern went wealth is taxed, but it ia entirely untaxed by cougre.s, and hence the wholesomo restraint which it would un doubtedly exercise upou the alarming and profligate iucrvaso of federal ex penditures, if tug burden of taxation was imposd upon it, is not now called into operation. But let wealth be taxed as it should be let the great burden fall, ns it should, upon the rich, and tltsn when thalr poaSrts are compelled to respond to the Mpwdttures of oon Kress, thoir influence would be exercised in favor of a frugal awl economical ad ministration af government. As it U now, with waHli exempt, and with tha bnrdea of taxation failing upon the poor, who hava not tha weans of rtm-t iuoad in the Unit Stat, axoant lux- J aaoe. tha riah do not, and tha poor eau nrias. anoahl to admttt. fraa not, Uttorpa any Imasaiauat agaUut tho alarmingly' increasing expenditures of congress, many of thom being with out warrant of law, and more of them being in defiunco of justice. One objec tion urged against an income tax is be cause it is inquisitorial. Is it any more inquisitorial than a tariff tax? Is it any worse, in order to ascertain whether he hifs defrauded the government, to ex amine a man's books, than it is, in order to ascertain whether or not she is smug gling, to examine a woman's bustle? Anothor objection urged is tho difficulty of its enforcement. Some ten years ago I heard a grave senator affirm on the floor of the Oregon state senate, in dis cussing some provisions of an assess ment law then pending, that there was no use in trying to tax the rich, as they could and would evade its payment. This is quite a common assertion, nnd many facts in its afflimation can be adduced from our present mode of state taxation, while the con tinued neglect of congress to tax wealth appears to give it the most com plete confirmation. Let this bo conceded us a fact, and then it must be acknowl edged that governments need no longer oxist. One of the great objects for which they were instituted was the pro tection of the weak against the strong, the poor against the rich. If under any government taxes are unduly imposed upon the poor, the great purpose for which it was oreated has failed and it ought to be abolished. But that doc trino must nevor be conceded. Our government is strong enough to pass just laws and to fully execute them. Over twenty-four centuries ago, the Ro man government under Servius Tullius changed the system of taxation from a per capita tax whioh had been imposed tor moro than two hundred years to one rated according to tho measure of a man's wealth. During the early days of that government when each man had his four acres of ground, wealth was quite equally distributed and a per cap ita tax whs fair. When wealth became unoqually distributed sUch a tax be came quite unjust and a high senso of Roman virtue demanded a chungo. Should not Americans, be as just as Ro mans ? The tariff tax is in its very na ture a per capita tax, and wealth has become quite unequally distributed. The time has fully ccme for a more equitable system Of taxatiou for the great bulk of the national revenue, and let us practice the Roman virtue of changing our system in order to meet the demands of justice. CONTINUKD TOMOimOW.l Nervous Sostrajjon, Slocplesnne, Slcfc nnd Nervena llciulnclic, Iinomhc, nizzlnpra.Hor bld I'enr, Rut Flushes, Nervous lyBICjln,Liil!iios,,Coiirnluii,lIy. iSrLllA'.1," Ht vt" anco, Opium Ilnbit.ni-miUoiineflN, etc., nre cured by Ir. Miles' llvntoraUvn Nervine. H dooj not contain opiatei. Mrs. Sophia c. Urowuloo, DoLund. Fla aufrflnui with itniinv for W Toara and tcstlUca to a completacur. Jai i. 1 '?,' . ,Prel.'on, had been aulforlnn wlUa Nt OUt l'roatratlon for four roari. rmtlrt not uln KSl.f,?lEra h m mia be u,ed Dr' MHOS' Ro storatlve Norvlnoi lie la now well. Klna books . . m. drVFCits. Dr. Mllea' Nerve ana Liver Pllla, Mi do-cs for 24 conta are the tst romodr for Blllousnc... Torpid lire eto", eto. Dr. Mllos' Nodical Co.,Elkhart,lnd. TBIAX. BOTTXE FIUEE. Sold by D, J.Fry, druggist.Salem. tDOSEsl&Jf fcwaJ T) .T. gold by Act on a new principle rocnlate tha llvor, etomsch and bowcla through (ht r.irret l)n. Jlarsr riua tpaiHly curt blllousneoB, torpW liver anil constipa tion. Smallest, mildest, bum Ml SO(lOBoa,23ct3. ur.nmr.1 tree at 'irtlu'vlsia. " ' ei f , FUUrt. l&l, Fry, druggist, Salem ill HE Kaair-wiravnnrin i ' POWEB HERCULES Sas and B&solim ENGINES TsTiim'i ii wiim mm .,,IRT,S ier parts, and are eroriertn?nni).V'y'y P Sttout hyMtT Jn.t Ti.Vh. ,i- V' "1KurKsoiiiie engines now UM all 3oy!te Wi burut'r turo lh0 wb tLuX tt Mak.t.3 no BaiErx onjxmiT. Ifo double or falae eploalon bo nvduttrJ with tike uurollable agaric, Ifor Simplicity It lloata tho VorW. St Ulla itaolf Automnticallr, No ISnttcrtes or Eloctrlo flpark. It rasa with, a Cb.nrr Crude of OaaoXno llunaar ether li-jiue. on itmtcaiFTtrK ciacvuu Afrtr to PALMER & HEY, Manufacturkm, la Frtttltto. Cal jai Parted, Or h "ANDEK'S RIG BELT ELBi BBBBBflBassaaMsHsSalwHBBaaV UTKTPATEHTSS5Ra?SWITH ELECTM KST SvjfcKIS8 MACKETrS IMrWiHTfc,gj SBSPEHSMiy. mHkw.ull;M MtrtalU.1 U ImuaUrftutrlM MM" t M,M. IWuuh a? MM au.4 k. ttU MW nSrS-VaK-rfiWr? twwwwnrlirt,MWilNlMlhklWi( -o F- .- TRACTS OF FROM 5 TO 20 ACRES EACI THERE WILL BE SOLD AT AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FROM 100 TO 500 ACRES OP LAND IN SMALL TRACTS OF FROM 5 TO 20 ACRES EACH, ON OCTOBER 15, 189 2 THIS LAND IS SITUATED FROM FOUR TO NINE MILES FROM SALEM, AND IS OWNED BY THE OREGO LAND COMPANY Thero will be no by-bidding or reserved bids, but the sales will be absolutely to the highest bidder. If sales are not satisfactory on the first one hundred acres the privilege is reserved to discontinue the sale. If satisfactory, five hundred acres will be sold. THESE TRACTS ARE IN THE SUNNY SIDE FRUIT FARMS, platted and improved by The Oregon Land company, and com prise a variety of tracts, some being set out to fruit trees, some being cultivated and suitable for setting out to fruit or for gardening, and some in. timber. THE SALE WILL COMMENCE ON SUNNY SYDE NO. 5, 2 MILES S. W. FROM TURNER STATION AT 2 P. M., OCTOBER, 15, and will be continued on Sunny Sidel No. 12, Sunny Side No. 10, Sunny Side No. 8, and Sun ny Side No. 3, all of which are shown on maps which cai be seen at the offices of The Oregon Land Company, boHi at Salem and Portland. Arrangements will be made convey all parties, who desire to attend the sale, from Tuil ner, on the arrival of the noon train from the north ortha one o'clock train from the south, to the place of sale when a lunch will also be provided. The title to this land L'J perfect, and Abstracts.of Title will be furnished for ii-j spection of purchasers. Contracts of sale will be made oil day of sale, and deeds will be executed on the following! day when desired. TERMS OF SALE: One-fourth cash; one-fourth on or before sixty! days; one-fourth in one year; one-fourth in two years with interest at 8 per cent, annually. . THE OREGON LAND COMPANY has sold more than five hundred small farms in five years, and in tho belief that money will be saved to both buyer and seller, makes this auction as an experiment. Parties wishing to look at these tracts before the day of sale will be taken to them freo of charge, from the office of The Oregon Laud Company, at Salem, Oregon. Parties desiring small tracts for fruit raising or gardening, convenient to railroad and river near a good cannery where vegetables and fruit find a ready sale at good prices, and convenient to churche .1. and schools, in a location where the roads are good andj where there is already more than one thousand acres of! vounp- orchard now armvmcr will An woll to examine these! B. B, w tracts, and take a look at the orchards in tho vicinity, which are the best in Oregon. 500 K&wrt ! MM HEALTH lie Rlcbrm'a Golden Bat'iaam No, 1 Cures Chancre, flnV and fecool auirea: Sorca on tha Letra and De dj: Bore Kara, Kyea, Noe, ale., Copper-col tored Biotchia, bjphliitlo Catarrh, dlwaied Scalp, and all primary forma ot tha dtiisasa known a sj-pnuu. a-rice, uu per Bottle. I.e KIchau'a Golden 1 Salaam No.il Curea Tertiary, Mercurial fertllllle Rheu luatlam, Fains tn tbe Bone, faint In thi 1I...I ft.!, a Ik. V.l. .IV. ... o Throat, Brphllltlo Kaih, Idinpe oon tracted Cords, Stiffness ot Um Limbs, sn PACIFIC LAND AND ORCHARD CO, FOR TOWN LOTS FRUIT TRACTS AND FARMS. $2.00 Per dozen for the finest finished l'HOTOUHAJ'HS Intheclty. MONTEE BRO&, lbs Commercial street. A, H. FORSTNER & CO, Machine Stop, Guns, Sporting Goods, Etc, 908 Commercial Street. &n! eradicate all disease from tha ajrstem, vubiuh mww hj lauisrrcuoa or S.DUS4 ol Wcrearr, learlnf the blood pure tat beaimr. race as aa iser Katti. X.e Klcaau'a Saldesa Mpaalah Anil lata for tha cur el Gonorrhoea, Olett imwuiunni,uiiaii unaary or unl toldlaaxTangfirianta. artce i pel i etleaan SaMaaa Baaanf Si la. Jeetlen. lor Barer oaeasot eeseirhaa, Vaaaataatary Clwt, 8trt.it ta,a-n Psiee ier JtettM. - iHtan'a IT Olattaaenl L Hie teraaTeetl(lMslfal rWMeori aadenptieaa. aVteaaO .r Bex I KMsan'a SeMeaa ntla-Nrm aaajnamiraaiwiiiK tern ataaysleu paw TaaOa aMl Nefrtna. lir HrWff VlV WL'tnvMC M at tit maJMUC'T ., F. B. SOUTOWICK, Contractor and Builder. Baleui, - - Oregon. J. J. Scientific Horseshoeing. OPPOSITK FOUNDRY On Stat Straat. T. . KRESS. HOUBF. PAINTING, PAl'ER HANGING, Natural Wood finithlng-, 'or, lh and ChemakeU frtreet. 2 CENTS A DAY, Evenincr Journal. RADABAUGH k EPLEY. Livery Feed and Boarding Stable, MBUtaBtreeU Olingcr & Rigdon, UDERTAK1,RS. Opaa n'ghi and day. Comer Court and Liberty, HOEYE & MILLS. PORCELAIN BATHS BHAVINO PAtOJOSO, rValv aVaAasBaJH Lt.tl. aW. I 1L. THE Salem Hackman ia U. POULK. Best Lloe iu the City. Court Street. J. E. MURPHY. Tile for Sale, Brick and Tile Yard, NORTH BAl.r.M. J. L. BENNETT . It CANDIES, Frnit and Cigars. P. O. Bloolfc R. T. IIUMPHK Cisara aad ToBaaaa. BILLIARD PABLO S4B.Oom'l Straat- T. W. THORNBUf The UDholsterefi R-ttiru1lH rtvcovprfl at" Cl J Mi.niitapul ftirniturS. V7 il aui work. Cbemeltett m jHate iBsaraBee lloeti Take It EVENING JOURNAL, Oaly3eaUa day oailvaraaat JOHN unviN, 8bo6HUtet. "f'T- fc-l" Ml W avi NirtreX.frwmANsV)NH UattTarai at Year Daar, rmvSZSCiVffS&r faaraaar. a4arsiaaaiia