ijr M- -iLi" " 4 n. ,i EJU. Ml :. Qj n i I I aft Capital Journa!.1 BY HOPBR BROTHKR!), THUKJOAY. MAY li, 189S. 'I Oaflf Otic Tear S3.00, fa Advance Diflr Fcrar fdo3ths 61 00 in Advance Wes'ily, On Year SL00, in Advance UNION T'CKET. BUte Ticket OMrernor W. K. KINS. SisnUry of Sfawe II. It KIXCAID. State Treawer J. O. BOOTH. Sapr-en Jrtdir- W. M. RAMSBT. Atfnjr-CeneraJ-J. L. STOUT. SUte Printer OHAR A. FITCIL gup. of Public lastnKtIoR II. S- LY MAN. Cvngre!enaL. First DtoUfct-B. M. VBATCH. SsOTnd District C. 51. DOXALDSON. PVst Judicial DUtrtet. Judge E. a WADE. Judge-JOHN' A. JEPFRETS. PrscutlDS Attrny A. Jf. SOLISS. Jlember imid of BflualteatteB C E. W0RDBN'. Second Jodlctal District. Judee-J. W. HAMILTON. PrMfcaUng Alt'y IIBNHY DKV- LINGEH. Jr. Third Judicial District. Jadre-. I. BOIHB. JudBC P. If. D'AP.Ci. . Proscuttag Att'y S. L. 11AYDMN. Member Board or Equalization J. P. IlOBEHTSO.S. Joint Senator Ctttleama and Marion If. L. DARK- I EY Marlon County Ticket. Ssnator-CBO. W. D1MICK; U C- GMFFITlL Rrpreseniatrves JAS. A. KNIGHT; F. A. MYBIIS; II. L. BENTS. CIIAS. F. HEIN'; GEO. If. CUOISAN. Sheriff FRANK W. DURBIN. Cletk-KING L. HIBBARD. County Commissioner C. MARSH, lleeordsr C. P. STRAIN. AssSMr T. C. DAVIDSON. County Shool Supt W. II. EG AN. Tiearurer-C. J. SIMERAL. Surveyor T. CJ JORY (People's). Coroner T. L. GOLDEN. SALEM PHECUfCT. Juutlcc-JOHN M. PAYNE. Constable -C. M. CHARLTON. Dates for the Joint Canvass in Marion County. Saturday, May 21rt Turner, 10 a m.; Marlon, 2 p. m.; Jefferson, 8 p. m. Monday May 2M AumsvlIIe, 10 a. m.: ffcitiUmlty, 2pm.; Stay ton, 8 p. m. TiiMtlav. Mav 2h Detroit, 8 p. rn. AVedneday. May 2Sth Gates, 10 a. m.; Mill City, 2 p. rn.; Meharna, S p. m. Thursday. May 20th Victor Point, 2 p. m.; Kllvertrm. S v. m. FriHay, May 27th Scott's Mills, 10 a. m . M"nlt'jr, 3 p. rn.; Sit. Ansa!, 8 D. m. Saturday, Slay 2Sth Gervals, 10 a. m ; Wood burn, 2 p. m. Tuesday May 3lt St. Paul, 10 a. m.: i'hnniK. 2 p. rn.; Uuttevllle, S p. rn. Wednesday, June 1st Aurora. 10 a. m.; Iluhbard, 2 p. m.; Brooks, 8 p. m. Thursday. June 2d Howell, 10 a. in.; Maeloay, 2 .. in. Friday. June 33 East Salem, 2 p. m.; Salem. S p. m. STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS. I'ruf. AclccrmaD, the Kcpublican candidate, Id scndlni,' out tlion.sands of tyr written letters to tcaclieis and kiw odlcerH, telling tlictu that the cilice he seeks is not a political oflicc and askinc for vol's on the ground that he in not a iolltlcIan and that there are nopolttlca in It. Now this U a fraud on the face of the mat ter. He id the -Republican norulnpe and should not disclaim his connec tion with a nartv LliaL has several tirnrA hnnnrcil him with nlEccs. Tliel truth is well known, that Prof. Ack-I ennan Is a shrewd ambitious man, who came from Wisconsin to Oregon nbout eight years ago. He lias shown ability as an educator and would be perfectly unobjectionable as acandi diitc but for his close relations to the Amerlwtn Hoo'i 'Company. This In Itself 1 no rellectlun upon his ability or Integrity, but makes him objee tlonauh a-a cundldato ;beforo the peoplo of 'Oregon. -The American Iiook C mipaiiy is furnishing some In farlu" books at higher pricos than the Bi.ue company charges the people of Oregon, and reports from the various counties indicate that the peoplo can not even gut the books ut the high prices. A new contract fur text books will hivo to to made during tlio term of the state superintendent of schools now to be elected and the American Book Co. wants Ackurmun because ho as county superintendent of Multno mah county voted for the present sys tem of textbooks, nearly the entire list he clioc being thoe of the Amer ican Book Co. If Oregon is to liayo better and cheaper textbooks Acker muu mutt be defeated. Keep ay to say, but n am m m bow thall I do It? W All I tuo only com- won miho waykeep your head cool, your feet warm and your blood rich mi purely taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. . Then all your nerves, III thC muscles, tlstuos and organs will bo U t ! H tt properly nourished, r ' " llood's Baruapnrllla hiHtU up the system, creU a ap pelte, tope the s4oma(i mni gives ueMgUi. It m tlio people's Spring Ue, bu 11 tftrfer Hie ftud cf imn mum Umw 4i oUwm. Hood's artaparllla das. e. L 00., LwH( AmerteVs i imteMHtdt , jwewta. hh, .. ... PflU st Urn tevtrlM foiatiy Annual Safea evev0,Mee Bo jjpHg FII1S ZtS HUOOS ATO KEEV0U3 irOGBIJEBS 1 ?rtT$ll?Zg . Btb. Dizziness. PtovvIimm. FlasblnKt &52 KfT SHiMS Blctebes en Us Bkln. Cold Chills, DU-1 tarbed 8lep. rrlzntfal Dreams and all aerroas and Trembling Sentation. THE FI23T DOSE WILL CITE HELOT 15 TWE5TT XTjnJTES. Ererr siUTerer will acJmowIedce tfaem to to A WONDERFUL MEDICINE. nr.VCUXm VlVUi, taken Mdlrect cd.will'iuteklrr'vioro Females to eom pleto health. They promptly remoT-e oMtrtJctlonorlrrnilnti'-5 of the sys tem and enrr Iek Ilcad&ebe. Fort Weak Si Impaiic IK MEM, WOMEN ch 'gestfon zred Liver OR CHILDREM Bcocham'3 Pilfs aro Without a Rival Anl hT lh LARCEST SALE ofsnyralentMcdtelne In the World 25c at all Dros Stores, Ills opponent Is County Superlo tendent H. S. Lyman, of Clatsop county, Union candidate for superin tendent of Kbool. lie Is a Christian Renlletuan, a graduate of Pacific uni versity at Forest Grove and Oberiin college, a man of culture and refine ment, wit'i thrre tl'i.is the education that Ackemian has, and wliai is still better he is a man the American Iksok Co. was unable t persuade Itilo car- rjiDK out its Vk UUm. Tuk Journal dlwlalnis all prejn-dic-j foror-aittl' sttlie Aniericau Hook Co., or any other clioo! tetbonk lirn, in dfcuiui; tlilsnutsiiot' of the rel ative nines of the canoidjte for state suDcriritcndet t of fchoul. Tin Journal would rather not hate tin American Hook Co. take any part, li the campaign for state superintend ent of schools. It probably considers that Mr. Lyman Is not k'oIok to be fair to the American Book Cc. Mr. Lyman is candidate on the Union platform which pledges him to oppose all trusts and combinations that oppress the people, at.d there Is abundant proof that the American Book Co. has not treiterl the people of Oregon fairly. The people of Oregon are entitled to have the best and cheapest textbooks that money can buy and the benefit of open competion of school book pub lishing houses as other states have. KING AND SOVEREIGN. Their Itinerary Arranged for Two Weeks. Senator W. II. King, the Union candidate for governor, spoke at Ileppner Saturday night. He will re turn at once and lie and J. II. Sover eign will sneak at Med ford at 1:30 p. rn. on Mond-iy. Their Itinerary has been arranged as follews: MedforJ, May 0, 1:30 p, m; Grants Pass, May 10, 1:30 p. in; Hoseburg, May II, 1 30 p. m; Eugene, May 13, 1:30 p. m; Albany, May 13, 7:30 p. in. Corvallls, May 14, 7.30 p. in; Toledo, May 10, 7:30 p. m: Independence, May 17, 2:30 p. 111; Dallas, May 17, 8 p. in; McMinnville, May 18. 8 p. 111; Forest Grove. May 10, 1:30 p. in; Illllsboro, May 10 8 p. mj.Oregon City, May 20; Portland, May 21. "Cyclone" Dayjs, the Texas Popu list, arrived Saturday morning and will begin the campaign at once, td STAYTON. W. Y, Richardson and wife, Salem, visited friend and relatives tllls P1ICC Mrs. J. W. A. -.Mayor has returned Improved in from Portland, much health. E. Ray the Jeweler Is permanently located In his new quarters on Third street. A coat of paint Is adding value to John Gcods residence property. G. B. Trask has gone to Vancouver, to purchase additional stages to opcr ato the mall line between Turner und Mchama. Adalbert Balselcy has returned to Stayton, having finished his course In the Business college at-Salcm. Miss Delia Alrlch of Sodavllle, Is visiting friends here. The speakers on the Union ticket, gave us a very Interesting talk Frl day night at the opera house. Contractor M. McCoy of Salem, Is putting In a now bridge over tho Mill race adjoining the saw mill of Leo Bron & Sons. Frank Dutbln the Union candidate for sheriff, passed through here bound for tho upper Sautlum, canvassing for yotee. A Splendid Reception. It was exactly 0.05 Wednesday evening when tho first section of tho southbound California overland, consisting of eight coaches aud currying tho first Battalion, Oregon Volunteers, num bering In ull 330 men, reached this city. Tho platform was crowded by hundreds of Salem's citizens who had assembled to cheer the boys onward, and they cheered and that Quito lus tlly too. The train mudo only a brief stop nt the water-tank and then continued its way to San Fran cisco, From tho fact that nono of the troops 011 last nights train were from Salem, tho big demonstration ut the depot only attests tho popular enthusiasm that &bounds In every part of America. Tho Second und Third batalllons will pass through this city cither Saturday or Sunday oYcnlug, When Nature Kecrts assistance it may be best to reader It promptly, bub one should remember to use even the most nur- feet remedies only when needed, The best und inot sluinlo and gentle jremcay is lue Dyrun vl aius, uiaiiu- .... . - Yi fact u ivd by tho California Fig Com-paoy. ON LAKK BEWETT TRAIL. 1' I Ad In eretttne Luter F10 the Frozen Nrtn. Lake Bennett, Alaska, April 24. II ha been just four weeks since we started out on tie trail. We bare " slow tluie compared wlib our expectations, altlHMigli we are doing " well as our neighbors. ho bare no better facilities for transportation. Kay one who has ptenty of money to hire their goods packed over and to buy a boat, can make this trip with as much ease and pleasure as any sports man would want. There are no hard ships to encounter to tar as we have come, except the labor of packing our goods. The trail is good and the weather is pi ease nt. The Bracket company is baullrrg goods from Stag way to Lake Bennett for twelve cents a pound. A man wltb a horse can make good wages freighting; seme make as ruaebasSdO per day with only one horse. Hay is worth 15 cents a pound at Bennett lake, meals SI; duughuuts 0 for 25 cents. We found tbe police at the summit very accomodating. They pay no at tention to goods bought in Canada, except to sump the invoice bill. They only watch for goods that come from the United Slates and they arc very lenient with them, They usually charge duty only on lumber and pro visions. The people on the trail rcscmtlc a swarm of bees, all In a hurry going and coming. All have as much as they can do attending to their own business, therefore goods are unmol est?r,,that arc coached along the trail. We heard of only one or two cases of parties 'lotlng goods. They are all quiet and aud obliging. We saw a tight one day between two employes on the Bracket trail. Fully 100 men witnessed ft; S3 quiet were the peo- le that not a sound was heard or a word ipoken u'llil the fight was over, when ill continued their travels and one niiuM not have known that any thing had occurred. We are now camped eleven miles from the summit, but haye our goods five miles further over. We will move camp In the morning. By Sat urday night we expect to have all our goods on Lake Llnduman, All kinds of machinery from a buck saw to a steamboat can be seen here. There are several good sized steam boats be ing built to run on the lakes. It will be fully a month before we get our boats made, us the timber that is suitable for boat building Is getting scarce. They are sawing logs that only make boards six inches wide. Lumber is worth from 20c to 30c per foot now. A good many have bought light, white pine cacoes that will carry 1500 pounds, that arc mada In Ontario, Canada. Rough boats made at the lake are worth from $150 to $200. Benton. Deafness Cannot Be Cured, by local applications, as they cannot reach the deseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remed. les. Deafness Is caused by an In tlamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube gets lnilamcd you have a rumbl ing sound or Imperfect hearing, and wiieti it is entirely closed deafness Is the result, and unless the Inflamatlon can be taken out and this tube re stored to Its normal condition, hear ing will bo destoryed forever; nine caves out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inllamed con dition of the mucous surface. Wo will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafncs3 (caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Send for circulars, free. F. J. Chenuy & Co., Toledo, O. USTSold by Druggist., 75". War Measure Ready. Washington, May 12. With the exception of a few administrative features, the war revenue bill Is ready for report to the senate. With the ussistanco of Senator Jones, of Nevada, tho Democrats had control of the financial part, and adopted their amendments, winch In clude a corporation tax of one quarter of one per cent.; u provision for the coinage of the seigniorage, and tbe Issuance of $150,000,000 of greenbacks. Of Mr. A. II. Crausby, of 158 Kerr St., Memphis, Temi., says that his wife paid no attention to a small lump which appeared in her breast, but it soon de veloped into a cancer of the worst type, and notwithstanding the treatment ol the best physicians, it continued to spread and grow rapidly, eating two holes in her breast. The doctors soon pronounced her incurable. A celebrated New York specialist then treat ed her, but she con tinued to grow worse and when Inlonned that both her aunt pudgraiultuotuerbad died from cancer he gave the case up as hopeless. bomcoue then re commended S.S.S. and though little hope remained, she begun It. and n improvement was no ticed. The cancer commenced to heal and when she hud taken several bottles it disappeared entirely, and although sev eral years have elapsed, uot a sign oi the disease has ever returned. A Real Blood Remedy S.S.S. (ruaranteeJ furly vtglable) is a real blood remedy, and never faili to cure Cancer, Uczrma, Rheumatism Scrofula, or any other blood disease. uur uooks will be mailed free to any ad drcsa. Swift Specific Co., AllfrsU G. sss Cancer the Breast. X9k Ik VisV iff (r Bw T.T. GEER'S GOLD STANDARD Placed Under the Searchlight of History and Science, Spain and Portugal Fixed the Ratio for Three Hundred Years Complete Analysis and Refutation of His Toledo, Lincoln County, Speech. In Mr. Geer's statement of his pres ent financial views he makes at least one positive statement. His state ment was carefully written out for publication and furnished to the Oi cgonian as the important part of his opening campaign speech at Toledo Lincoln county, and 1 suppoe It will be repeated by him In bis tour of the cow counties. This positive statement embodies the Republican candidates, position on the silver question, and was im. mediately endorsed by the leading editorial in the Oregonlan; so It must stand as the accepted state ment of the gold standard politicians. It Is as follews: "There has never been a time when sliver was cot growing cheaper. If this were not true the ratio of one to one, which prevailed in early ages, would still be the recognized ratio, because, the first change from that ratio could have been for no other reason than to prevent the coinage of too many sliver dollars from a given quantity of sliver bullion. No other reason has ever been given or ever can. From the beginning silver has grad ually grown more ubundant, and therefore cheaper, until In order to sufficiently restrict the number of silver dollars the ratio of 10 to 1 was reached. I have never heard of any unfriendly legislation causing the commercial ratio to change from 1 to 1 to 10 to 1, although many cen turies elapsed during that time. It Isso well understood that the discov ery of increased quantities 01 silver, as compared with gold, made it de sirable to restrict I the number of silver dollars that the stale cry of un friendly legislation was never heard." "The necessity of limiting the num ber of silver dollars has always been recognized. That end lias heretofore been reached by charoCag the ratio to keep pace with the relative produc tion or silver and gold, but during the last thirty years it lias been done by closing the mints Instead of chang ing the ratio." I do not propose to discuss Mr. Geer's present utterances from the standpoint of party politics. To do so would disclose a complete change of the Republican party's position on what is now considered the para mount national issue. As a devoted partisan Mr. Geer would reply: "Party first, party last: right or wrong, my party." It would be an useless appeal to his sense of justice, his Ideas of consistency or his devotion to principle to call his atten tion tD the Republican platforms ad opted by his own votes In conventions which enunciate statements of finan cial science exactly tho opposite from those now proclaimed by him as can didate for govercor. So I will treat his statement from the standpoint of political economy, and trust to the sense of honor, intelligence und pat riotism of all persons who have In the past called, or who do now call them selves blmetullists. Let us take up his first statement of the alleged ratio of 1 to 1. He cites no authority for the assertion that there ever was a legal ratio fixing the bullion value of gold und silver ounce for ounce. The bullion ratio of gold and silver ivhloh Is referred to in the sacred scriptures has been figured out by some mathematicians as being ex actly 10 to 1. But wo will not claim that to bo a lact. Certainly his au thority must antedate the mosaic scripture, und ills ulleged parity of 1 to 1 was probably confined to the Garden of Eden tho first few years It was occupied. There are plenty of authorities du ring the mlddlo ages citing ratios of 8 or 10 or 12 to 1. In Spain in tho fifteenth century the ratio was 101 to 1, Iu tho sixteenth century Spain monopolized the supply of precious metals and fixed tho ratio for tho en tire world at Yi to 1. In tho seven teenth century Portugal obtained control of tho gold supply, nod the gold product of Spain fell otl to almost notulug. Portugal now governed the ratio and in 1C8S raised t bo value of gold to 10 times that of silver. A century later Spain got control of the ratio and as her product was chiefly silver sho raised Its value, In 1775, from 10 tol to 151 to 1 In Europe, but loft it 10 to 1 In her colonies. That act of legislation fixed tho orig inal ratio of the standard American dollar. Franco had a ratio of 14J tol, prior to 3785, when she adopted tho standard ratio of 15 to 1. TI1C80 figures are taken from the Enclycopaedla Brlttunlca, yolumo XXII, page 73, concluding in these werds: "These threo historical ra tios und the bearing nt each upon the others , liavo lutluc -ca all U-gMaf Inu on the subject, m 1: n ihpro wus no legislation tli i ebul lion market for more than two centu ries." Mr.Geer's statement that silver has grown constantly cheaper, and that this is due to over-production, Is completely refuted by Mr. Laughlin In his work on poll tical economy, ne shows that the value of the world's production of gold from 1493 to 1850 was 53,314,550,000 and the value of sil ver produced during the same time was 27,353,450,000, or more than twice as much silver as gold during 357 years, The same authority shows, that tbe value or gold produced from 1850 to 18S5 was W,425,525,000, and that the value of silver produced during the same time was 42,397,475,000, or only a little more than one hair as much silver as gold durine the last named period or 35 years. The commercial value and coinage ratio for nearly 400 years was not affected by "over-pro-duction,"cr either metal. Fjr three and one ha't centuries, when twice as much sliver was produced as gold, the ratio remained as fixed by law. For over one third or a century, when there was twice as much gold pro duced as silver, the ratio remained virtually unchanged, until partial adoption or the gold standard by tbe United States and other nations be gan to givei gold a fictitious appre ciating value, or purchasing power. The detailed statistics and racts or history will bear out this general statement, which completely rerutes Mr. Geer's assertion that silver has been growing constantly cheaper, be cause or over-production. The Sauerbeck and Beerbohm stat lineal iuomis oi inuex numbers are doubtless ramillar to Mr. Geer. They show that gold and silver bullion In the London and Hamburg markets, ror nearly a century prior to the com plete demonetization by the United States, maintained their parity at the ratio or 15 to 1, varying but a rew per cent either way, as the metals were Influenced by the rate ot ex change, with silver generally at a siigut premium, owing to the greater expense or shipment. Thi9 commercial and coinage ratio was undoubtedly maintained by the Tree coinage law or Prance, where tha mint ratio was 15 to 1. But these tables reveal a rar more Important tact, to wit: The Index numbers on staple products In these markets ot the world maintained uniform bimetallic price ievtl during the century or bi metallic rree coinage. In other words products or the soil and or human labor 6old rrom 50 to 60 per cent higher in standard money during all that time than they now bring with tho gold standard more firmly established. But we need not quote these eminent statisticians, who give the prices of products In the world's markets where the American farmer must sell his surplus, and which, In the absence or legislative Influence, fixes the selling price at home. The coustant down ward tendency or prices or rarm pro ducts can be proven frrnn the United States agricultural reports, compiled by d"e year periods, up to 1890. In the report ot the Wisconsin Bureau or Labor statistics, pages 104 and 160,the prices In every case are the cash prices on the rarm. Tho figures quoted on agricultural products for 25 years as follows, to wit: AVERAGES FAKM PKICKS, BY FIVE- YEAR PERIODS. Wheat. Corn. Ot.ts. nay 1870-1874.... $1 12 80 51 $0 41814 2 1875-1879... 100 30 31 9 4: 1880-1884 ... 01 45 33 0 91 18S518S9.... 75 35 27 8 05 1890-1895.... 05 39 31 8 19 The gold standard theorist treats these statistics taken rrom a perfectly reliable non-partisan source, with his rumlllar cry or "over production." When thero Isu rauiinc in India and short crops in other countries, au ad vance in wheat Is attributed to the mongrel financial policy or theMcKln- ley administration. The decline In tho market prices or staple products, affecting tho finances of the nation and the debtor class In general does uot concern the advocate of one-met. allsm. He quotes Daniel Webster's great speech before the New York chamber of commerce, Murch 15, 1835, in support of the single gold standard und a currency confined to one metal, when that able statesman was really making one of the greatest efforts of his life in protesting against confin ing the currency of our country to both gold and silver; and going further ho declared that tbo world would never see tho day when even a bimetallic currency would supply a sufficient circulating medium, and he demanded then, as ho did on all occa sions, that there should be, In addi tion to gold and silver, a supply of ruper currency suulcicnt for tho ne cecities of business aud population. An eminent American, President 'Andrews, of Brown University, some years ago, said: "Our national debt on September 1, 1863, was two and three-quarter billions. It could then hare been paid off wltb eighteen mil lion bales or cotton, or twenty-five million tons of bar Iron. When it bad been reduced to a billion and quarter, thirty million bales of cotton, or thirty-two million tons of Iron wontd have been required to pay it. In other words, while a nominal shrink age ot about fifty.five per cent had taken place in the debt, it had, as measured In either of these two world staples, actually been enlarged by some fifty per cent." It is impossible to set forth here the vat mass of evidence on the subject of overproduction. All of it, bow ever, was presented before the English Royal Commission on Agriculture In 1697. and this is what they cenclude: "Although some witnesses have urged that the falliln prices is due to overproduction, we have no evidence, and wp greatly question if any such evidence could be adduced to show that, compared with tbe Increase of population, tbe rood products or the rorld todsy are mttcrially greater than they were before the fall In prices commenced. "In the case or wheat, indeed the commodity which has fallen more in price thao any other the information which we have appears to point in the opposite direction." (Quoted in Rothwell's "Bimetall ism Explained," page 252.) No one has ever even intimated that any possible harm can come rrom over production ot silver. The authorities quoted establish beyond the mere dictum of the gold standard candidate for governor that there has been no over production ot silver, nor or agricultural products and the only question remaining 10 be de termined is this: Has there been an artifical fapprectation or increased purchasing power given to gold by friendly legislation ? I quote some figures from a table published in the London Bimetallic, giving the ex changeable value at different dates in gold and silver for a period or ten years for bimetallism, and also for the year 1893 when silver had been almost completely demonetized. These prices are in the Londou market table 1. Pounds 10 ounces ot silver would Pounds. buy 1867-77. Wheat 429 Town made Hour .. ..299 Cotton 65.5 Wool 30 TABLE U. 123.27 grains cold would . buy Wheat 171 Flour 122 Cotton 26.6 Wool 12.15 1893. 541 319 I I 35 349 215 52 23.4 Anyone who will study the above tables carctully can come to only one conclusion that the purchasing power ot gold has been artificially en hanced, aod that silver has remained the more stable measure or value. ir the ratio had been changed to keep pace with the relative produc tlon or silver and gold during the last 50 years.the result would have been to make gold cheaper instead ot dearer. I think this completely refutes Mr. Geer's language aboye quoted, where he states just the contrary, because the production or gold has been nearly twice as much as that ot silver, ir the little countries otSpain and Portu gal, mere grease spots on the map or Europe, couldestabllsh the ratio be tween gold and silver for over 300 years, and which Is still the coinage ratio or the world, because they con trolled the supply or precious metals, then why Is not the UnltedStates able to maintain the ratio now, without the consent ot other nations, when we are the greatest silver producing coun try ot the world? The Standard Oil company can fix the price ot oil, be cause It controls the product;-. the sugar trust, with tho help oP,"rriendIy legislation," can control the prices ot sugar; tho rubber trust can fix the price ot overshoes and baby nipples; the cotlln trust can fix the expeuses or our burial; the baby wagon trust can determine whether tired mothers shall grow humpbacked carrying their offspring in their arms, Instead ot having a psrambulator. Every .one-horse trust and combi nation can fix pikes which the Amer ican people can pay with the help or .rlendly legislation," but the igreat Vmerlcan nation cannot establish and nlntaln the coinage ratio ot Its own primary money, Is not this conten tion of the gold monopolist sham, frivolous and irrelevant? One of Mr. Geer's favorito Illustra tions is directed exclusively at the Populists. He says that It is a fun damental Populist proposition that tho volume or circulating medium should bear some relation to the total volume ot indebtedness ot all the people. neexplode3 this fallacy, us he Is pleased to call it, by an illustration liko this: ne says, let ua suppose twenty men were each owing the other w aua one or them has a dollar. He pays half the debt ho ows to the next man, and he pays it to the next until each of tho twenty men has wiped out half of his debt. Then Mr, Geer passes me aouar around again, and wipes out the rest of the debt. There he exclaims, don't that refute your popullstlo fallacy? One dollar has cancelled 840 of debt. This raises a lau'h with the thoughtless, and for a moment would seem to do away with the Ponulist demand for a larger volume or money 1 aua oeari tig some relation in the vol ume ot debt. But fit beneath the sur face, consider the real circumstances ' or the people and look at tho euormitv I of Mr. Geer's fallacy. What iftiml MaMMMeihiMliMiMMBJtMiMwMtMa.j for Infants and Children. The Fac-simile Signature of C&v7&&jtA( V Appears on Every Wrapper, THI CCfTTAU eoff TT NWMIT TCCT. NCWTOHIt CITT. 20 men be uses as an illustration, each owed from one hundred to a thousand dollars, and were paying trom eight to ten per cent Interest, and two or three per cent taxes on the property for which they are In debt, and the wonderful gold dol lar failed to get around as fast as tne Interest ran up on the debt, and the men In debt were becoming bankrupt and loosing their prop erty, would he then consider that the volume or circulating me dium bore any relation to the condi tion ot the debtor clashes? Would he then consider that we had a sufficient volume ot circulating medium? Don't be know that the interest on the national debt alone would require twice as much gold as our country produces? The Salem Sentinel, which brought out Mr. Geer for governor, a Republi can gold standard paper, stated in an editorial May 7, that the original government bonds ot Great Britiin and the German states covered the entire gold stock of the world, which Is four billion dollars, whereas the government b'jnds ot the civilized world amount, to thirty billion dol lars. It the assertion ot Pror. Andrew, which lias been quoted, Is ture, that It takes more products to pay the re maining hair of our government debt than It would have taken to have paid the entire debt at the prices of products when it was first incurred, the gold standard contention becomes not only ridiculous but impossible as a financial system. Not Troubled Now. "From my childhood I have been In poor health. When I was 10 years old I had salt rheum on one o! mv hands. I got a bottle or Hood's Sarsaparilla auu ouiore 1. uaa iaKen an my nana was well. I have never beeu troubled with salt rheum since.'' Mrs. Bertha ueici, liaker City, Oregon. Hood's Pills arc easy to take. Cure indigestion, headache. You can make old clothes look like new, aod remain so as far as color is concerned by using Perfection Dve. But be sure you get them. tf Team Wanted a span or ponies for linht drivers. Innnlrn nt P V Carey with Lewis, Stayer & Mitchell! v.u., oaiciu, O-O- II M. L. Yocuni, Cameron, Pa., sajs I was a sufferer tor ten years trying most all kinds of pile remedies, but without success. De Wilt's Wuch Hazel Salve was recommended tome. I used one box. It has effected a peimamnt cure." As a psrmanent cure for piles De Witt's Witch Nazal Jialve has nc eqnal. Stone's drug store. Excursion Rates. To the G. A. R., encampment at The Dalles, Or., via Steamer Altona and the regular dine. Fare round trip $2.50. Tickets good going Mon day, May 10, returning until May 21. 5-ll-4t The farmer, the mechanic and the bicycle riders are litbh to expect cuts and bruises. De Witt's Hazel Salve is the best thing to keep on hand. It heals quickly, aud is a well, kr.cwn euro for piles. Stone's drug store. Children like it, it saves their lives. We mean One Minute Couch Cure, the infallible emedy for coughs, colds, croups, bronchitis, B"ljl";, "" ii mroai ana Stone's drug store. lung troubles. Thirty-five years makes a cenerMion That is how long Adolph Fisher, of Zane . vine, u, sultered from piles. He was cured by using three boxes of De Witt's Witch Hazel halve. Stone's drug store. It you want the best when dyeing, be sure you get Perfection Dyes. They do not fade. tf As good as, should not be accepted, when you want a permanent dye. iciuuuuu uyo nag no equal. tf Heve You Heard the News? Pure irum camnbnr nt Vrva r store, 63 cents per pound. 10 2t Rich and Rare Such may b3 the banquets of the great, but In Salem an every day citizen can always have a superior meal at low cost at Strong's uesiaurant. 10 3t Experience is the best teacher. Ue Acker' tngluh Remedy in any case of coughs, colds or croup. Should it fail to give immediate relief ouney tefunded. 2$ cents and 50 cents. Co.VTE3T.-The W. c. T. U. medal contest has been postponed until Jionuay evening, May 23. A Lady tried Schilling's Best tea and did not like it. She tried it again and made it according to direc tions, It's her only tea now. es - - W T- FROM A SUFFERER. How A. Cooper Had a Ro n. Healed After 35 Yean. ' Cheiialis, Wash., April 9. im Dr. J. P. Cook, Salem, Or: ' , 1 received your letter and wu y to hear trom you. You want o, v...: i how my leg Is getting alonu. iii. ail right; the Ilesh is growing oatonr the shin bone and is turning wht It Is not straight yet, but I think I will be as straight as the other bi when warm weather comes on. Im work most or the time. The otto doctors told me 1 could neterk cured without splitting Hand sens! Ing the bone, but they are mistake It is getting well without cuttinz scraping, so they do not know as mod anhey thought they did. but mm. all right, for you have done ju3twhi', you said you could do. I will ans any questions you ask about mr b? ' A. Coopfb Dr. Cook's office is at 301 Llbertj ' 31ICCI, k7(llCUi, Moki Tea positively cures sick htijid- ! diink. Removes all eruptions of the ib producing a perfect complexion, ormocejie. funded. 25 cents and 50 cents. Arterone trial you will use no other dye to color goods. Insist on haritj: 1 ciieuiiuu ijes. u O. M.. tTIACK Saceesserito Dr. J. M.'Keese, old Eia Corner, Salem, Or. Parties desiring rdcm operations at moderate feesjin any brucan in especial request. A 4. I ' Art Print Shop 9 O I I I I CONOVER does the finest '.v - k a makes the lowest prices, At DEARBORN'S book Btore, t' t , O.C.T.Co's STEAHER ALTONA, leaves for Portland M nday, Wcdnesnday a.-d Friday. 7 145 a.ir Quick time, regular sei vice and low rates Dock between Mat and Court streets. M. P. BALDWIN, Agent, tulem Are You Out of Soap ? Try our 20Ounce Stat Savon At 5c!a bar or 6 for 25; The b;st and cheapest soap in the world, Star Grocery JOHNSON too COURT ST. & VANDSVEHI. fHONE W UNDERTAKING. J. A. Rotan has moved Jnto the old J. G. Wright stand, 229 CooimeitW street.and handles a full line of under taking goods, furniture, wall PF' auu uiuuiuings. Carpets at Cost 0 close out. Prices on everytW the lowest. Second hand goods Uk n excha nge. Don't miss us j. a. nowK. THE LIGDTOFTOEf OR, OUR SAVIOR IN ART, Cost over $100,000 to publish. Nearly 200 full p3ge Masterpieces ct V Savior and the Muthcr.by Great Masten. A persual of this superb woik is 1' t a tonr through all the art galleries of Ewjrj A glance at these ruatchlesr, twj pictures brings tears to the eyes of fT'z ChrisUin men and women pan"?" homes taking from three to ten orders ot Sells ItseH-,so beautiful when peoph it they want it. - Selling rapidly all the way from the w dike to Rio Jane.10. Neter sold i territory. . Published a year and la its twentieth ''on' d Presses running- day and night call see it. . Ge: wlc management of large 6eW ico agents and you haves f nan", S'tj foco to maa or woman gid c urch sUaW1 10 act M uunoger and cor respondent h. Tall on nr n.l.lr. APT Rldir. i3' ager Subscription Department, 189, Jfiduf Avenue, Chicago, III, J ,B - AtTJiL . hAa Ik .- i. & - 3ii&4