ffJ Cr" EVENING CAPITAL JOURNAL SATURDAY. NOV. 3, 1888. Overland to California VIA Soutlifirn Pacific Company's Lines, ROUTE. Time between Salem and San Francisco Thirty-fix Hours. CAl.IFOnrUA KXI'ItESS TCAIN DAIIl Houtli. M p. m. :30 p. in. 7: W u. in. XvT I.v. Ar. Portland Halcm Han Knin. Ar. I.V. I.v. OCA I, PAWIKNOISH TltAIN ( DAILY CK1TJSITNDAT). 10:10 a. in. 8:30 a. m. 0:30 p. m. EX- REPUBLICAX PLATFORM. fcOO a. in. I.-02 a. rn. 1:10 p. m. I.v. I.v. Ar. Portland Halcm Ktigeno Ar. I.v. I.v. J ,i:45 p. in. 1 12:52 p. in. I :00 a. in. PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS. TOURIST SLEEPING CARS, i'or accommodation of second clas pass senger attached to ox press trains. TlinO A l',. Rut I road ferrv makes con nection with all tho regular trains on tho Knot Hide Division from footol K street, Portland. flest Side Division, Between Portland and Cerrallis: DAILY (KXCKIT BUWIIAY). "7210 a. in. 12:25 p. in. I.v. Ar. Portland Ar. Corvnllls I.v. K'MINNVII.I.E KXl'HK-S.1 TltAIM (MAILY KXCKIT HUNI1AY). SSO p. in. JH-OO p. in. I.v. Portland A"K Ar.MeMlnnvllloIiV. 9.00 a. m. fi:V n. in. At Alhany and Uorvallls connect with trains of Oregon Pacific Uallroad. For full Information regarding rates, maps, etc., applylto tho Company's agent, Halcm, Oregon. K. P. KOHEilS, IU ICOEIIIiKIt, Asit. O. K. and Pass. Ag't, Manager. Oregon Railway and Navigation ;COMPANY. "Columbia River Route.' Trains for tho cast leave Portland at 10: IS m and 2 p m dully. Tickets to and from principal polntu In tho United Htutcs, Can ada and I'uropo. ELEGANT PULMANN PALACE CARS Kmlgnint BlocplntflCurit run throtighpoii uxpiunh trains to OMAHA council iilukps mill ST. PAUI Krer of Clinrge ami Without Cliunso. Connections at Portland forHan Knin ;elscouiidil'ugct Hound points. Vor ntrtliur particulars Inqulro of I. A. Manning, agent of tho company, 215 Commercial sticct, HaUim, Uicgou, or A. K .Maxwell, (J. P. A T. A., Portland, Oregon. A. L. MAXWELL O. P. AT. A. H IIOlCOMB.iaoiil.iMiinagor. THE YA0UINA ROUTE, OREGON PACIFIC RAILROAD And Oregon Development company's steamship lino. ' miles shorter, 20 hours livw timo than hy any other nunc. Flint rlass through passenger and freight lino from Portland and all points In tho Wil lamette, valley to mid from Han Francisco. TIME SCHEDULE, (Kxcept Hundays): lnivn Alhanv 1:00 P M iMwn Ciirvallis 1:10 PM Arrive Ymiiilim 6:'lt) P M 1aiv Yaipilna -.-... . ti;i,r, AM Iamivo Corvallls - . lft.'W A M Arrive Alhany U:10AM O. t C. trains connect at Alhany and Corvallls. Tho iiIhivk trams connect lit YAQUINA with the Oregon Development Cos Line MHtoutiishtps between liuiulna and Han Francisco. HVIUSU PATHS. HTKAWKIW, ritOM HAN KUANCIHCO Willamette Valley Nov. 12th, I p. m. Willamette Valley Nov. 21, 10a, m, HTKAMKltM. VIKIH YAO.UINA. Willamette Valley Nov, Uth 'Willamette Valley Nov. ISth Willamette. Valley Nov. ISOth This company reserves tho right to Iiaugo sailing dates without notice. N. 11. l'ns-.oiigcrs from Portland and all Willamette Valley points win make cloo nmiiivtlon with tho trains of the YAO.U1NA 110UTK at Allmny orCorvnllls, mitt n UcMluod to Han Francisco, should arrange to arrive at Yaqulua tho evening twAin. date of Milling, t'attrufrr sinl Freight liatr Alvravs Ike Uwfjit, For Information apply to Messrs JIU1.MAN ,t Co., Freight and Ticket Agents 200 and AM Front M., 11 tlaud, Or. fcrto O.C HOnUK, Ao't Oen'l Frt. A liss. Agt., Oregon llicltlo H. It. Co., (NirviilllH. Or- Cl H. HAHWK1.U Jr. Oen'l Krt; A Puss. Agt. Oregon Dovelopiiiont Co., SWI Montgomery si.; Hau Francisco, Cal' Tho Republicans ol the United States, assembled by their delegates in National convention, pause on the theshold of their proceedings to honor the memory of their first great leader, the immortal champion of liberty and the rights of the people Abraham Lincoln; and to cover also with wreaths of imperishable remembrance and gratitude the heroic names of later leaders, who have mote recently been called away from our councils Giant, Garfield, Arthur, Logan and Conklmg. May their memories be faithfully cher ished. We also recall with our greetings and with Draver for his recovery tho name ol one of oui living heroes whoso memory will be treasured in the history both of North. Republicans and of the Republic the name of that noble soldier and favorite son of victory, Philip II Shetidan. In tho spirit of those greit leaders, and ot our own devotion to numan noerty, anu with that hostility to all forms of despot ism and oppression which is the funda mental idea of tho Republican party, we send fraternal congratulations to our fel low Americana of Brazil upon their great act ol emancipation, which completed the abolition of slavery throughout the two American continents. We earnestly hope that we may soon congratulate our fellow citizens of Irish birth upon tho peaceful recovery of home rule for Ireland. Weaffiun our unswerving devotion to tho National Constitution and to the in dissoluble Union of the states : to the au tonomy reserved tho states under the Con stitution : to the personal lights and liber ties of cilizeus in all the States and Terri tories in the Union, and especially to tho supreme and sovereign right of "8:15 p. in" I every lawlul citizen, rich or poor, idujV11, nativo or foreign bom, white or black, to cast one free ballot it. public elections, and to have that ballot duly counted. We hold tho free and honest popular ballot, and the just and equal repiesentatton of all the people, to be the foundation ot our republican government, and demand ef fective legislation to tecum the integrity and purity cf elections, which ate the fountains of all public authority. Wc charge that the present administration and the Democratio majority in Congress owe their oxistenc; to tho suppression ol the ballot by a criminal nullification ol the Constitution and laws of tho United States. Wo are uncompromisingly in favor ol the American system of protection. We protest against its destruction proposed by the proatdeut and hi- party. 1 hey servo the inteiests of Euiope; wo will psi'pport Iho interests o( America. We ac- copt tho issues and conhdetitlv appeal to Ihe people for their judgment. The pro tective system must be m.iinta'neil. Its abandonment has always hci-n followed by general disaster to all interests, except thoso of tho usurer and the shcittf. Wo denounce the Mills lull as destructive to Iho general business, the labor ami the farming interests of tin. country, and we heartily eudoreo the consistent and patriotic actions of the Republican Rep resentatives in Congress in opposing its passage. Wo condemn the proposition of the Democratio patty to place wool on the free list, and we insist lh.it the duties thereon shall bo adjusted and maintained so a to furnish full and adequate, protection to that industry. Ihe Republican party would effect a'l needed reduction of the National levcnue by repealing tho lanes on tobacco, which are an annoyance and hmd. n to agriculture, and the tax upon spirits used in the arts and for mechanical purposes; and by such revision of the tariff us will tend to check imports of such article asaru produced li) our people, tho produutiou of which give employment to our lnhor, and release Irom impoitduties those articles of Imuigii pro duction (except luxuries) the. like of which can not oo pioduced at home. If n ere shall still remain a target levcnue ilmi in requisite for the wants ol the government we favor the entire repeal of intun.nl taxes rather than the mii render f any part of our protective system at tho joint behest of the whisky trusts and tho agents of fireign mnnufiuturers. Wc declare our hostility to the mtroduo tion into this country of foreign conti.ict labor, and of Chinese labor, alien to our civilization and our Coiitiiuiinti, nod u. demand the rigid -nforcemeut. of the ex isting laws agaitikt it, and f.ivor such im mediate legislation us will txchide Mich labor from our shores We declare our opposition to all romh:n atloua of capital organized in mitinnr ot'-i r wise, to control arbitrarily loc condition of trade among oiirci'izcus, and u com mond to Congress and to the t ite l.vi. a tu res, in their respecnr juiUiiieiixn. such legislation as will pieM.nl the iv n tion of all schemes loopio.s ihe pt- in. o undue charges on their Mipi I -, "i ' v un just rates for the inuisvittitui.i f "i-ir products to market. W. uppi.ve h eg itlatiuu by Congress to pievci.i o un t burdens and unfair .'-. -i n r tween the States. We reaffirm the policy of appropriating the public lands of the United States to be homesteads for American citizens and set tlers, not aliens, which the Rrpublicnn partv established in 1862, against the persistent opposition of the Democrats in Congress, and which has brought our great Western domain into such magnificent development. T'lie lestorution of unearn ed land grants to the public domain for the uso of actual settlers, which was begun under the administration of President Ar thur, should be continued. We deny that the democratic party has ever restored one aero to the people, but declare that by the joint action of republicans and democrats, about fifty millions ol acres of unearned unci j originally grauicu lor wie construe tion of railroads have been restored to the public domain, in pursuauc- of the comli tions inserted by the republican party in the original grants. We charge the dem ocratic administiation with failure to exe cute (he laws securing to settlers titles to their homesteads, nnd with using appro bations made for that purpose to harass innocent settlers with spies and prosecu tions under false prettneo of exposing frauds and vindicating the law. The government by Congress of the Territories is based upon necessity only, to the end that thoy may become Status in the Union; therefore .whenever the con ditions of population, material resources, public intelligence and morally are such as to secure a stable lecal government therein, the people of such Territories should bo permitted, as a rif hi inherent ir them, to form for themselvea a constitution and State government, and be admitted into the Union. Tending the prepara tion for Statehood, all officers '.hereof should be selected from the bona fide residents and citizens ot tho Territory wherein they are to serve, south Dakota should of right be immediately admitted as a State in the Union, under the con stitution framed and adopted by the people, and we heartily indoise the action of the Republican Senate in twice passing bills for her admission. The relusal of the Democratio House of Representatives, for partisan purposes, to favorably consider these bills, s a willful violation of the sacred American principle oflocal self-government, and merits the condemnation of all just men. The pending bills in the Senate for acts to enable the people of Washington, North Dakota and Montana Territories to form constitutions should be paused without unnecessary delay. The fpubticin party pledges itself to do all in its power to fa cilitate the admission of the tern tones of Now Mexico, Wyoming, Idaho and Ari zona to tho enjoyment of lelf government as states, such of them as sir now quali hed, as soon as possible, and ihe other ai soon as they may become so. Tho political power of the Mormon church in tho territories, a experienced in the past, is a menace to tree institutions too dangerous to be long aiimiiedi There fore we pledge the iepuili.-nn p.u'y to ,ip. proprlate legislation aseitirig ihu -uvei-eignty of the nation in all lemtoucH where tho same is quealiomd, .net 10 furtherance of that cud to pl.-.cc u,u.i the statute books legislation stringent cii.ni,..!'. to divorce the political from the ecclesias tical power, and thus stamp out the attendant wickedness nf polygamy. Tho republican party is in favor of the use of both gold and silver as money, and condemns the policy of the democratic udmtiiistration in its efforts to demonetize silver. We demand the reduction of letter postage to 1 cent per ounce. In a repuhlio like oui's, where the citizen is the sovereign and the official the servant, whoro no power is exercised except hy the will of the people, it is important that the soveriin the people - should possess inielllence. The free school is the promoter of that intelligence which is to preserve us a free nation; tliciufoie, the state or nation, or both comhiued, shou'd support tree institutions ot (raining, sulticteiit to atlord to every child growing up in the land the oppor tunity of a good common school edu cation. We earnestly recommend that prompt action be taken by Congriss in the en ectiiient ol such legislation as will be.t -..cure the lehabiluatiou of our American I it-rchaiii maniK-, and u- protest against rn pia.in by Confess of a Iree ship II , as calculated to work il.jiistioe to I. nor I'i h Kning the v.ac.es of those iiunged 111 prqp.iring uia.emis, as well h (hode ihrtcii) cnipn.yed 111 our ship v,ir.i We dem.iinl J ptoj tl.ite'lis foi tut u.riv 1 bin. "Hi., m ur i.vv ; f.ir the- BOOTS AND SHOES. - -" well as for the payment of the maturing public debt. This policy will give em ployment to our labor, activity to our va rious industries, lucrcase the security of our country, promote trade, open new and direct markets for our produce, and cheapen the cost of transportation. We affirm this to be far better for our country than the democratic policy of loaning the government money without interest to "pet banks." The conduct of foreicu affairs bv the present administration has been distin guished Ify its inefficiency and Us coward ice. Having withdrawn from the Senate all pending treaties effected by republican administration for the removal of foreign burdens and restrictions upon our com inerco and for its extension into better markets, it has neither eflected nor pro posed any others m their stead. Profess ing adherence to the Munroe doctrine, it has seen with idle complacency the exten sion of foreign influence in Central America, uml of foreign trade everywhere among oui neighbors. It has refused to charter, sanction or encourage any Amer ican organization for constructing the Nicaragua canal, a work ot vital import ance to ihe maiutenanco of the Monroe doctrine, and of our national influence in Central and South America, and neces sary for tho development of trade with our Pacific territory, with Soutb America and with the islands and further coasts of the Pacific Ocean. We arraign the present democratic ad ministration for its weak and unpatriotic treatment of the fisheries question, and its pusillanimous surrender of the essen tial privileges to which our fishing vessels are entitled in Canadian ports under the treaty of 1818, the reciprocal maritime legislation of I830, and the comity of nations, and which Canadian fishing ves sels receive in the ports of tho United .States. We condemn the policy of the piesent administration and the democratic majority in Congiess toward our fisheries as unfriendly am) conspicuously unpatri otic, and as tending to destroy a valuable national industiy, and ao indispensable resource of defense against a foreign enemy. The name of America applies alike to all citizens of . - republic, and imposes upou all alike the same obligations of obedience to the laws. At the samo time tint citizenship is and must be the pan oply and safeguard of him who wears it, ami protect him, whether high or low, rich or poor, in his civil rights. It should anil must afford him protection at home, and follow .mil protect him abroad in whatever land he may be on a lawful errand fee 1 j Capita u Willi The Cheapest Newspaper in Oregon! m BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER t. iisinictti 11 .r ei.r.s' f.riihi .itiuiis mid nil... Mo oiiin.'i.ue, .mi ntni-r ip,irovtil 1 o. 111. oeili of .leli'l -e I i, in, ,.iutrC-ii-i t ill iit-teti?el.-h Mith ts and .'.tu; 101 i. I- ft 114. Ol -t jus' , eliMiil.. 1 mo pi .. 11 -; I -r ei ci s ir, toik of -Nsiioiial iukiiuuuic to tiic iiiij.i"oiiuiil 1! niuiiirs t.nil me Channels of internal 0 astwise. ui.ii foreign .iiiiinirii'e; tor 111c oiuiiiuKiiui't't ' tho 8io, pmt. iii'eics.s, . III Glllf.l P 1 S 1 n .11 The men who niundonrd the republican party in 1884 au.l continue to adhere to t tin oemour.uiu parly, have deserted not only the cau-e of honest government, of sound finances, of in, dom and purity of the ballot, hoi espHOMlly have deserted he cniii'O nf ii tm 1. in the civil service. Wo will ii 'i tail to l.ceo our pledges be- i'au-c they havo broken theirs', or because fit ir candidate has broken his. We, thcicfore, repeat our declaration of 18S4, town; ''The tef.iitn of the civil service, auspii'iouslv begun under the republican Hili'iii.islration' .shnuld be completed by the further extension of tho reform system already established by law, to all the grado-i of the service to which it is applic able. The smut and purpose of the re lorm shou.d be observed in all executive appointments, and all laws at variance with the object of existing reform legisla tion should be repealed, to the end that he d-inger to flee institutions which lurks in the power of nfficial patronage may be wisely and effectively avoided." The gratitud of the nation to the de fenders of the uriou can not be measured by laws. The legislation of Congress should conform to tho pledges made by a lnyal ixrople, and be so enlarged and ex tended as in provide against the possibility that any man who honorably wore the lederal unifonn shall become the inmate of an almshouse, or dependent upon private charity. In the presence of an overflowing treasury it would be a public t'.'.iiuul to do less lor those whose valor mis service preserved the government. We denounce the hostile spirit shown by IV, sident Cleveland in his nnmerous vetoes of measures for pension relief, and the ac'ion of the democratic house of ri oresentanv'iis in refusing even a consid eration of general pension legislation. In support of the principles herewith enunciated we invite the co-operation of oitrioiio men of all parties, and especially I all vorkiiignien whose prosperity is seriously tinea' ned by the free trade P" icy of the present administration. IN 'MARION COUNTY. ?)".. Read Our Reduced Terms! Additional plank submitted by Mr. Rintr-lle; nl Maine, and adopted by an .I'tm-sr uunmnious vete: The first ccn o. rn.it ill good government is the virtue nut . h'ti'iv -I live neople and the puiity of in pome The lopuhliccn party ciniuiN )inpiriiizti with all wise and iv 1 1. i -lTr s f ir the promotion of I iv. 1. SGHNKITOHt, DK.Vl.Mlt IN WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. Ktayton, Okkuo.v. KvHiiiaou handii larvfl assortment of Jew- riry, watuhiw Clocks, etc. ltoivnlrlni ! trill eh n the ImmI lMt-mliM 111 WHtehtM of any dealer 7tnvv promptly don nnd warranted. 1 or umi uarHHiiis ill wnti lutlm WllhuutMo valley. IIOWAM) M.0T1IKUS IK) GMenl House Mwig, ltiisiij and lifiiriD yrfc itfomptly donuut rwumbl rtv. Orvton ten at t'AHTAl. Joi'UMAL uffivo sulll IwsslveatlwitUMi. 9-ll-tf THE BEST tsA. SPRIRG WA60HS, BUGGIES H& AND yKihlKlJl AjAjfim :ro.ajd carts WEEKLY, one year, $1.50. WEEKLY, six months,-. -40.75J Now -Read Oar Discount for Cash l- r WEEKLY, onoTyear, $1.00. WEEKLY, six months, $0.50. WAS THERE EVER ANYTHING EQUAL TO IT? NOW ROLL IN THE NAMES, AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR ONE-HIRD OFF FOR CASH. ulmmQ ft. THE BEST- FARM IAG1I -IN THE MARKET- Send for Catalogue and Price List pSHiBROS. Wagon Ocfl baoineu wis. Our Old Subscribers Now In arrears are urged to tako advantage of our big discount, by set tling old accounts aha joining tho grand throng of one dollar subscribers. TO ONE AND ALL We say, send us your named. If you want to tako advantage of our orte third oil for cash," and are not Tvhere you can get postal notes or otner convenient method of remitting, send us your name and state that yon will remit at rlret opportunity. This will ensure your being placed on tne dollar list. THIS IS NOT A SPECIAL OFFER But a Boiid. permanent reduction. Wo havo come to stay.