THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1896. DRESS GOODS, Black and Colored Silks, Black Dress Goods, Ladies' and Missess' Cloaks, Linen Table Damasks, Towels and Toweling, White Bed Spreads, Comforters and Blankets. Gents' Light Overcoats. Gents' Underwear. Boys' Underwear. ' ' Hats and Caps, &c. BOSS CASH STORE. The Weekly Ghfoniele. BTATB OFFICIALS. Governor W. P. Lord Secretary of State H R Kincaid Treasurer Phillip Metschan Bnptof Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attnrnev-General C. M. Idleman .. (G. W. McBride Benaton - Ij.h. Mitchell IB. Hermann Congressmen jw. R. ElUs State Printer W. H. Leeds COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge .' Geo. C. Blnkeley Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk A. M. Kelsay Treasurer Win. Michell . . (Frank Kincaid Commissioners U s Blowers Assessor '..F. H. Wakefield Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner W. H. Butts TBS DALLES ... OREGON SUBSCRIPTION SATES. BY KAIL, P08TAG rRIPAID, IN ADVANC. Wtekly.lyear. I 1 SO " 6 months '. 0 75 3 OH) Pan;, 1 year. 6 00 " 6 months. 8 00 per " 0 50 Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dulles. Oregon. the platform: wanted. "When the great council of Repub licans, conies together to represent the wishes and the needs of Ameri can citizens, its declaration on one question will have supreme import ance to the people. Every man has a direct personal interest ia in the question, saj's the New York Tribune, of duties on imports. Four years ago a great many working men were persuaded by leaders and demagogues that neither their wages nor their employment would be ma terially affected by any change of the tariff that was possible. Years of bitter experience Lave tr.ught them better. They know now, be- yond all possibility of dispute, that reduction of duties may, and in many branches of industry actually does subject them to an enormously increased foreign competition, which lessens the number of persons who can be employed in this country and the wages that can be paid to them It is no longer a vague theory which they have to confront, but a prac tical experience which will riot be forgotten so long as the worVers of this generation live. Thejr have seen their employment, reckoned in .days or hours, reduced by a large percentage in consequence of this foreign competition. At the same time thev have seen wares of labor . generally reduced more than at any other time for twenty years. The .wage earning millions form -the main body of every political party. Practical politicians, who are accustomed to run thiugs in villages and wards, or in districts and states, think much of the distribution of offices and contracts. But these thing3 interest at the most 200,000 or 300,000 persons. The waes of labor and the condition of indus tries directly interest more than 20, 000,000, many of Vhom are voters. If the convention finds a' candidate and adopts a platform which ex presses in the most distinct and em phatic manner the desire of the wage earners respecting foreign competi tion ana duties on imports, mere will not be very profound interest felt, -it is possible, in the rest of its deliverance. . The people will vote for Republicanism and prosperity, implicitly trusting the Republican party to protect the national honor in foreign affairs or in monetary matters, as it has done for many years. . It is therefore important that the convention should be prepared to GENTS' HATS that cost $2.25 each, take your choice at $1.15. CLOT jcxra'C3r Tia,llor X'-P . A' AO V' 9W . PiVrO "V V V declare its position on the tariff question so distinctly and unmistak ably that there shall no loDger be the shadow ot an excuse for any man to pretend that he is a Republican if he subordinates the protection of home industries to his notions about cur rency, the coinage of silver, or any other question. It does not answer to be a Republican provided one can have his own way, against the will of nine-tenths of the people, about some question of that sort. The people need defense of their indus tries, whether they get something else or not.- They need genuine Republicans to make their laws,. not men who have gone so far in their devotion to the silver interest or some other that they are ready to destroy national prosperity if their pet theories or wishes are thwarted. When the national convention pledges the utmost efforts of the Republican party to restore full pro tection to home industries, it does not mean that a Republican will do this after le has done something else, or provided he can do something else, but will refuse if he cannot. Men of that stamp need to be told in the most emphatic manner by the national convention that they must either serve Republican principles unconditionally and faithfully, or cease to be reckoned with the great party which has never yet paltered with its pledges from the first elec tion of Abraham Lincoln in this hour. If a man has the notion that lalior cannot be sufficiently protected with-l out cheaper money, that is not an honest reason for refusing to give labor such protection as he can. If he finds a measure pending which is not half what he wants, that is not an honest reason for refusing to do what he can in the direction of his principles and pledges, Neither is it an excuse for refusing to carry out one pledge of the Republican party that a man considers it has also promised something else which nine tenths of its members never meant to promise. The national conven tion will need to be decidediy blunt and explicit, and cannot speak too plainly for the 20,000,000 of wage eirners. HISTORY RECALLED. The newspapers of Spain prcfess their inability to understand the at titude maintained by the American people regarding the Cuban revolu tion. The Spaniards accustomed for centuries to monarchical rule fail to realize the passionate desire for freedom, which the' people of the Western Hemisphere possess. Captain-General Weyler expresses aston ishment that a nation like the United States, which has long been on good relations with Spain, should declare its sympathy with the men who are struggling against Spanish domina tion in Cuba. - The circumstances in this instance are peculiar, ine situation is not that of two nations fighting for supremacy, but of one people strug gling for independence, for release from foreign rule, which has ever been cruel, exacting and but little removed from barbarism. General Weyler can find the answer to his queries in the history of the former Cuban revolution, which occurred some twenty years ago. The whole story of that pei lod is black with , Trunks, Valises and Telescopes. Lace Curtains, Bed Tickings, Black Alpacas, Bleached Muslins, Bleached. Sheetings, Ladies' and Children's Underwear. Ladies' Hosiery, Ladies Corsets,. .. . Ladies' Umbrellas, Lace Embroderies, . Ribbons, Velvets, fcc, &c. - IMCa'C3L. M. HONYWILIi Spanish atrocity, no incident of which tells a more fiendish tale than. that known as the Virginius massacre, This occuirence is recalled by the publication in an illustrated weekly of the pictures published in 1873 depicting this bloody slaughter. The Vireiniua was an American steamer which had been purchased by friends of the Cuban revolutionists, In 1873 she set sail for. Cuba, but a ' break in her machinery caused temporarv stop at Jamaica. After leaving that port the Virginius was pursued and captured by a Spanish man-of-war and taken to the port Santiago de Cuba. Notwithstanding the fact that the Virginius was cap tured in British waters while flying an American flag, the Spanish offi cials disregarded all rights of foreign intervention and by a drum head court martial condemned the cap tain and crew to death. The number of the unfortunates exceeding two hundred, it was nec essary to divide them into dctach- ments,and within a few hours af ter their condemnation tbirty-six men were led to the slaughter house for execution. The men were lined alons a trench with their 'backs to the soldiery, and, as described by an eye witness,-"the commanding i cers gives the fatal signal, the men fire, and the wretched objects of Spanish hate and vengeance fall headlong into the shallow trench, some dying and others wounded but alive. Then comes the crowning barbarity. A company of artillery, till now kept in reserve, gallops for ward and crushes, with the broad and heavy wheels of the guns, dying, dead and wounded into one undis- tinguishable mass." The remainder fortunately were saved by the time ly arrival of a British war ship. This was Spain's mode of warfare. It is the same yet, and if the occa sion arrive, like crue.'ty will be shown. It is the recollection of the Virginius massacre, and such atroci ties that makes America sympathize with Cuba and long to aid her in this final struggle for independence. The cause of Cuba is just and whether cr not it is officially sanctioned by this country, the hopes and sympathies of freedom -loving Americans are with the patriotic revolutionists. Postmaster General Wilson; who lectured Saturday in Middleton, Connecticut, was given an ovation by the students of Wesleyan Uni versity. If the causes were analyzed it would be difficult to see the reason for such a demonstration. The gen tleman in question has proven a monumental failure in everything hej has undertaken-' save, perhaps, in the vocation of school teacher. As the author of the infamous "Wilson bill, he contrived a measure which has brought untold misery upon the American people; as postn-aster-gcneral he has succeeded in making that office remarkable for its deficits; even as chairman of a national Dem ocratic convention he showed his in capacity to govern a body of men, Altogether thi3 pscudo statesman is of a cheap-John variety, and the sooner he is sent back to his West Virginia honde relieved of the cares of state, the better it will be for the nation he has helped to mismanage. Kb more BOILS, no more PIMPLES' Use Kinersly's Iron Tonic. The Snipes Kineraly Drug Co. Telephone No. 3. THE ADVANTAGE OF SITUATION. Pendleton is greatly exercised be cause through a change in the O. R. & N. time card, traius from Spokane to Portland go . through Wallula instead of -making connections at Pendleton ns formerly. It is thought by some pessimistic souls that the change "will injure Pendleton some what iD a business way. While this fear is undoubtedly unfounded, yet a city that depends entirely upon rail road commurication doesnot pos sess the resources for growth that belong to a place situated as The Dalles is upon a navigable river. The Dalles, once was dependent upon the whim of as ingle railroad, but that condition has been done away through fhe labors of energetic citizens, and by the agency of our boat line we have competitive rates that prevent exorbitant freight charges. Either with or without the open ing of the locks, The Dalles will find its gieatest treasure the Columbia river, upon whose broad bosom the commerce of a great empire will some day float to the sea. The building of good roads into the interior and the establishment of one or more manufactories will give this city such an impetus that atten tion will be attracted to it from all over the coast. FROM. THE FRYING PAN INTO THE FIRE. Already the rush to Alaska is having disastrous results. The in flux of miners has been so great that there is neither food nor accommo tion for those who have rushed northward in search of gold. The stories that come from Juneau indi cate that trouble is imminent and that the men who have been disap pointed iu their hopes will resort to extreme measures. The eagerness with which these deluded men took advantage of the cheap transportation rates to seek another land is only another evi dence of the unsatisfactory condi tions that exist in this country, The good times promised by the Democratic party have failed to come, and in their place we have dis organization and distress. jNot until a protective system is again in force and a currency estab lished beyond danger of debasement will the conditions change for the better. It is idle to talk of revived prosperity till these conditions are brought about. Until that time cap ital will be unwilling to invest, and without capital there is no work for the laboring man. Tonight the Commercial Club will hold an important meeting. The subject of the Fossil road will be considered. No matter of more im portance to the town has come be fore our citizens for many months, and a large number of business men should attend this evening and by presence, at least, leud encourage ment to the work the Commercial Club is trying to do. Merchants, capitalists and professional men are all interested in th expansion of our city's trade. The opportunity is offered us of attracting business from a rich and extensive count ry, and it is a patt of wisdom to hasten an acceptance. A large attendance at the meeting tonight will show that our business men are awake to the citys needs and encourage those to whom the work of investigating the project will be delegated. The Oregonian has gone into the letter publishing business again. The printing of some interesting communications yesterday illustrates the old apothegm that it is safe never to write a letter nor burn one. COMMENT ABOUT THE LOCKS. Vancouver Columbian : The Dalles Chronicle has had its X rays- focueed upon the Cascade locks and after giving credit to its congressional representa tives says : The men whom we distrust are the government engineers and the contractors. Our faith in them is at a low ebb. In the interest of a suffering people it is to be hoped that if this money is secured from congress it will be so distributed that the purpose for which it was appropriated may be served. ... Troutdale Champion: Is it possible that for fear pf not getting the last ap propriation granted, which was at that time thousrht sufficient to complete them, that this work was not taken in consideration, thus not only deceiving congress, but the farmers who have waited so long and patiently to see the uascaue iocks completed It is about time the government put a stop to this procrastination as to wnen. tne locks should be opened by granting the neces sary funds and insisiLm upon the entire work being completed with no more spasmodic jobs tacked on. Walla Walla Statesman : It was an nounced a few months ago that the locks at tna uuscades would be completed by aiarcti 1st. When that date came it was suddenly discovered that the walls of the channel were not eat'e, and that many thousands of dollars and several years of labor would yet be necessary in order to make the locks of any practical service. The people of Eastern Wash ington have about lost all patience with theso repeated delays. They demand that the work be pushed to immediate completion, and they are ready to vote for a representative in congress, regard less of party, who will do most toward haying the work of improving the channel of the Colombia pushed to an early completion. They should make their will manifest in the congressional conventions, and thus make sure that there shall be no further trifling with this vital question. PASSED THE HOUSE. The S20.000 Appropriation for Locks Went Through Today. the A dispatch received today from Hon. W. R. Ellis says the senate resolution appropriating $20,000 for the immediate use at the Cascade Locks has j let passed the house. Having passed both houses of congress, all that now remains is to get the signa ture of the president, which in this case, is a mere matter of foim. The whole amount will thus tie at once available, and will be used to complete the middle lock. Work at ths Locks lias been temporarily stopped on account ot the high water. The contractors have sent for a 40-foot dipper and will start the dredger again as soon as it arrives. A SUIT FOR $25,000 DAMAGES. Badly Injured In an Accident at ens- cade Locks. Henry Smith yesterday filed suit for $25,000 damages in the state circuit court at Portland against J. G. and I. N. Day, and The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Nav igation Company. Smith states, says the Oregonian, that on December 10, 1895, be engaged pas sage on the steamer Dalles City, which was then lying at a floating wharf at Cascade Locks, and was on board of the boat with other passengers; and that at the time J. G. and I. N. Day were en gaged in blasting rocks. Smith com plained that they well knew that the passengers on the boat were in danger of being struck with flying pieces of rock, and, by their negligence and careless ness, he says, be was hit by a piece of flying rock, occasioned by a blast from giant powder, producing rupture of the drnm of the right ear, and causing paralysis of the muscles of both eyes and destroying the use of both eyes, and causing great and irreparable damage to his head, ears and brain, and which in juries he believes are of a permanent character. Smith further alleges that he was taken by the defendants, after the acci dent, to St. Vincent's hospital, and that he has expended otherwise (50 in medical treatment. He charges The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navigation Company with imprudence in permit ting the steamer Dalles City to be moored in proximity and within reach of the blasting. Smith in conclusion' says he was for merly a robust man, and is now inca pacitated from performing his accus tomed business and labor. It is thought in The Dalles that while the D. P. & A. N. Co. is a party to the suit it is very doubtful if the charges of carelessness made by the defendant can be successfully maintained. Died. John Austin Gilliam died suddenly at his home at Lyle, Wash., yesterday. No premonition of bis death was given. He had eaten a hearty breakfast and gone to the barn to saddle his horse. An hour later, about It o'clock, he was found across the manger, dead, the horse having been bridled and saddled. He bad been subject to epilepsy, and there is no doubt that this was the cause of hie death. He was aged 36 years. Funeral sen ices will be held at Lyle to morrow at 10 o'clock, Eev. Wood offi ciating. Mr. Gilliam was well known in The Dalles, and was the son of the late Porter Gilliam. His brother, Mr. S. R. Gilliam, his mother, Mrs. S. C. Gilliam, O. W. Cook and wife and two children, and Mrs. Emery Campbell took the Reg ulator this morning and will attend the funeral. : Died. Peter, the son of P. A. Johnson, who was injured at play, died at 4 o'clock this morning. The cause of his death was being struck in the abdomen by a plank revolving on a pivot, which re sulted in inflammation and his death. The funeral will take 'place in the Catholic cemetery. The Dalles Commercial Cine. . The Oregonian of yesterday thus speaks of The Dalles Commercial and Athletic Club: The newly organized Commercial and Athletic Clnb at The Dalles has the best appointed and cosiest rooms of any zssz For Infants and Children. Caatorla promotes Digestion,, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, ond Feveriahnesa. Thus the child Is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castorla contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. " Castorla is m wll adapted to children (hat I recommend It as superior to any prescription 'known to me." H. A. Abcbkr. M. 11., Ill 6outh Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. " For several rears I hare reoommerifcled jxynt 'Castorla,' and shall always continue to do so, aa It baa in variably produced beneficial remlta. Edwiji F. Pardis, M. D., 125 Lh Street and 7th Ave., Mew York City. "The l of 'Castorla ia so universal and Its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are thein- telitgent families who do not keep Castorla wiuuii easy roacu. - UUUMAUKTIfl, New York City. Tna Cshtaub Oomfast, 77 Hurray Street, N. T. club in the state outside of Portland. The bowling alley is built on the same plan as that of the Multnomah Club in this city, and the gymnasium is fully equipped with all the latest devices for muscular improvement. The club has a membership of over 200, with' Mr. J. S. Schenck, president of the First Na tional bank, as president, and Roger B. Sinnott, secretary. The reading-room is supplied with all the latest papers and periodicals, and furnishes a con venient place for the members to pans an hour in useful enjoyment. Follow ing the example of other clubs, there is no bar attached to the clubrooms at The Dalles, which meets with geVeral ap probation of the citizens. 100 Reward SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science baa been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a consti tutional treatment. - Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building op the con stitution and assisting nature in doing iis work. The proprietors Lave so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to- cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. fiSSold by Druggists, 75 cents. 'The Confederate Spy." "The Confederate Spy" is to be pro duced at the Baldwin opera house April 9th by local talent, assisted by Prof. Rasmus, the well-known actor of Port- and. It is a play of thrilling interest and contains many pleasing musical specfaltie?. . A synopsis of the piny will be published later. The following is the caet : (ieii. Wntermiin (a young Unionist). N. J. Sinnott Pnlilp iirHdiey (auonieuerute spyjK. u. LonulHle Fred Alnsley n rebel) K. W. Wilson Maior-Cicncral BHnks (O. 8. A.) D. C. Herrin Colonel Willard (U. 8. A.) J. R. McAvoy omcer Aiuigarry (one oi me nnesi wnen out of danger). John Hampshire Clay (a gemnien of color what knows whar de chickens rootit John Hnrtnett Sockery bchnel.lkbecker ( the drafted Dutch man) Wm. Rasmus Rastus (the unknown) Lonsdale-Hampshire Mrs. Waterman (mother of George and wid ow of Cspt. Waterman... Mrs. G. C. Blakcley Maud Bradley (a Southern belle and sister of spy) Rose MicbeU Nora McLeggin (down on the "hay then Chi neezer'' Lillian Snell Rose Southwick (lady presenting flag) Lena Snell A Bank Failure. AN INVESTIGATION DEflANDED. A ecneral nankin? business is done by the human system, because the blood de-. posits in its vaults whatever wealth we may gain from day to day. This wealth is laid up against "a rainy day " as a reserve fund we're in a condition of healthy prosperity if we have laid away sufficient capital to draw upon ia the hour of our greatest need. There is danger in getting thin, because it's a sign of letting down in health. To gain in blood is nearly always to gain in whoU' some flesh. The odds are in favor of the germs of consumption, grip, or pneumonia, if our liver be inactive and our blood im pure, or if our flesh be reduced helow a healthv standard. What is required is an increase in our germ-fighting strength. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enriches the blood and makes it wholesome, stops the waste of tissue and at the same time builds up the Strength. A medicine which will rid the blood of its poisons, cleanse and invigorate the great organs of the body, vitalize the system, thrill the whole being with new energy and make permanent work of it, is surely a remedy of great value. But when we make a positive statement that cj8 per cent of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the early stages of the disease, be CURED with the Discovery," it seems like a bold assertion. All Dr. Pierce asks is that you make a thorough investigation and satisfy yourself of the truth of his assertion. By sending to the World's Dispensary Med ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., you can get a free book with the names, addresses and photographs of a large number of those cured of throat, bronchial and lung diseases, as well as of skin and scrofulous affections by the "Golden Medical Discovery." They also publish a book of 160 pages, being a medical treatise on consumption, bronchitis, asthma, catarrh, which will be mailed on receipt of address and six cents in stamp. Subscribe for The Chronicle and get the news.