7 e o ; rOL. iy. THE DALLIES. OREGON. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1892. NO. 146; (1; Li PKOFBSSIONAL CAKD. II. H. RIDDELI Attoit-it-Law-Offioe Court street, The Dulles, Oregon. D11LALL Dbntibt. Gas given for the iinltw8 extraction of teeth. Also teeth er on dowed alumi-Uin plute. Rooms: 3ign of ibe Golden Tooth, Second Street. . E. 8ANPKKS, iraduateof thtUi lvernity ot Michigan. Suo ewwor to Dr. Tuoker. office over French" Bunk, The Unlit. Or. M. ssALYER, Civil, Enginbbbino, Su ey ing, and ArcMticture. The Dalles, Or. DK. E8HK1AN (HOM KOPATHICJ PHYSICIAN and Sobgeon. Calls answered promptly, dny or night, city or country. Office -No, 36 and S7 Chapman block. . , wtf DK. O. 1). D O A N ' phybictaK add tux aon. Office; rooms 6 and 6 Chapman Ki,Kk. ResicK-uce: 8. K. earner Oourt and Fourth streets, sec nd door from the comer. ce hoars 9 to 12 A. M., a to 5 nnl imiP. M. B. B. DOFCB. fank Miiimi. DUFCR, k" KNB attoknbts - at law Rooms 42 and 43, over Post Cltlw Building, Entrance on Washington (street The Uallea, Oregon. 11 H. WILSON ATTOBMBT-AT-lAW Rooms . and 6:, New Vogt Block, Second HU-eet. The Dalles, Oregon. A BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- nee in Schanno's building, np stairs. The Ballet), Oregon. . r. MATS. B. B.-J MAYS. BDNTIN NBY8-AT-IW Flint Nntioiml Bank ks a. s. nuK. 4 WILSON ATTOB French's block over D les. Oregon. JOHN PASHEK, IflBicW - Tailor, Vext door to Wasco Sun. Jnwt Received, a fine stock of Suitings, Pants Patterns, etc., of all latest Styles, at Low Prices. Madison 'e Latest System used in cutting' garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. . Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. mas. ITVBUK. OWB WILA S. Stubling & Williams, The Germania, SECOND ST., THE DALLES, - OREGON Dealers in Wines, Liquors and fjngars. Milwaukee fseer on uraugm. "The Regulator Line" Tic Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigni ana Passenger Lins Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con . necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. . FAsBBNGBK ATBS. One way. .-. . Round trip. .$2 00 . 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, lay or night, and delivered at Portland An arrival. Live stock shipments jpucited. Dan on or address. W. C. ALLAWAY, Oeaeral Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, Oeaaral Kaautgow. THE DALLES, OREGON Are Ytu Interested In Low Prices? - . We offer a magnificent new stock for Fall and Winter at prices the lowest yet named for strictly FIRST-CLASS GOODS. High Grades in Every Department, v - True 'Merit in Every Article. v Honest Quality Furs, muffs, Fur Trimmings. Silks in. Every Shade and 1 Style. Umbrellas, mackintoshes, Rubbers 6 Overshoes. V We show .the latest novelties and keep . the jery finest selection in all standard styles. nn Ma O RUGS Snipes & -THE LEADING- Wholesale and Mi Dropls. TT IIEFL :E SDFLTTGr Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent medicines and Druggists Sundries HOUSE PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents iri the City for The Sherwin, Will ams Co.'s Paints. i -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper, j Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. . 129 Second Street, Dress-Making Parlors FaghioqaMB Dfe Gutting and Fitting a Specialty. Room 4 over French & Go's Bank. J. O. FiplE WlNEp DOMESTIC KEY WES1 CIGARS. FRENCH'S Wl WOOHD STREET, : t f"-i. KinerslY; ARE - The Dalles, Oregon and flloaMaing MRS. GIBSON, Prop MACK, and LIQUOR THE CELEBRATED PABST BEER. BLOCK. : THB DALLB, OR. Williams & 00o MCE HUNTERS ARMY A Growim Apprehension in Case of ' " "Pailnrs ib Cneci It. THE BITTER CONTENTION OF 188j. The Worst Trouble is that Many Who - , : " " -" " , Want Office Are Incapable. THBI AK ALL AIMING HH1H UP Cold Water Mnat Be Poured ra the Aspirations of ttae Kn tire Tribe . So Tliey ' 8ay- , - Special Io.Tbb Chronicub. '1 Chicago, Dec. 6. There is a growing apprehension among local democratic managers that unless sotnethiitg is done to prevent the impending struggle, their party organization will be torn into tatters, by the personal rivalries and factional fights arising out of the battle for places. Those who recall the bitter contention that followed the election of Cleveland in 1884 need, not be reminded of the extent and character of these fights. . And . the democratic managers realize that the voting population of the party has more than doubled, while the offices are scarcely any more numerous than they were eight years ago. ; .. The difficulty is not wholly, due to the over-supply of office-seekers. The great trouble is that many of the men who want places are not of the sort who ought to have them. " Men, for example, who would make fair clerks or superin tendents of divisions have their eyes on the fpostmastership. They are all aim ing high. Lawyers who have not been a year in practice are abroad soliciting names to petitions f6r their 'appointment to the district attorneyship. - Expectation has rttached sucn a pitch that the democratic managers begin to realize that cold water must be poured on the aspirations of the entire tribe of place-hunting en thusiasts. It is to be hoped that the hunger for office can be kept within reasonable bounds. The public does not care to see any painful exhibition of ra pacity. Neithej can ... the . democratic party afford to spend its time for months to come in fighting over the offices. For these reasons the many pilgrimages to fNew iTork which Chicagoans are now mftkiDg, should result in the adoption ot some decent method of giving out the offices.. . ' Keelamatlon Scene. Review; The indications are that Lewiston, Idaho, will have a very lively growth during the coming year. Work will soon, begin on opening the fiats just across the Snake river from Lewiston, hy some California capitalists, who will expend in the neighborhood .of $400,000 ia reclaiming a vast body of land that comprises about 300,000 acres. All that is neceeaary to push Lewiston to a large commercial center is the advent of a railroad, and it looks very much like thak'a.nt might be supplied the coming year, i' -J- - ? Portland's Pupils. Welcome. There are several boys wearing the uniform of . the ' Bishop Scott ..academy that reflect no credit on that institution by being seen on the streets vigorously sucking the end of a cigarette or 'blowing the smoke of a vile ,r -in tne. laces oi paBsers-ov. T ine anAjboya. aJUtfLHaun t LiUies'l fuuuie the city and would-be far .better off at home thatr engaged ia the questionable recreatio.a they often indulge in. ' ' f Queer 'world I Queer people ! Here are men and women by thousands suffering from all sorts of diseases, bearing, all manners of pain, spending their all on physicians and "getting no better, but rather worse," when right at hadd there's a remedy which says it can help the.ii because it's helped thousands like them, "Another patent-medicine ad vertisement," you say. Yes but not of the ordinary sort. The medicine is Dr. Pierce's Goldehl Medical Discovery, and it's different trom the ordinary nos trums in this : It does what it claims to do, or it eoita you nothing! ; " , The way is 1 lis : You pay your drug dist $1.00 for i bottle. You read the directions, am I you follow them. You get better or ) u don't. If you do, you buy another bottle, . and perhaps an other. If you ion't get better, you get your money tyck. And the queer thing is that so man; people are willing to be eick when the temedy's so near at hand. ADVANCE OF THB WEHTi The' Sffete Kast Must Hereafter te Con tented With "eeond Place. In -aome quarters there is .democratic rejoicing tbit New York is no longer the pivot upon whkfe that party . revolves. Cleveland, although, he carries New York, had plenty of electoral votes with out it. Rumor has it that he informed some of Tammany's leaders that be owed them nothing, since . it was the whole country which contributed to his success and not the Tammany tail of it. Editor Jones of the St. Louis Republic in a speech the other day celebrated the emancipation of his party from the thralldom ' of New York,, and decent- members of the party ; all over the country, will be glad, that so vicious an organization as Tammany must keep its fangs out of national politics if it does. New York's political record for 30 years has been an odd one. It has-never gone in favor of either party in two suc cessive elections. It has, according to' the following table swung regularly to and fro in eight elections, all of them in leap years: 1864. 1868. 1872. 1876.; 1880. 1884. 1888. 1892: ' Republican. Democratic. Republican. . Democratic. Republican. Democratic. Republican. Democratic The Sun further says that the result of this year's battle strengthens and clinches the sanguine expectations of the republicans that they will win in New York in 1896. Probably they will if this pendulum of a state oscillates as impartially between the two parties in the future as in the past. . y New York has been a democratic pivot rather than a republican. The re publican party has never nominated a citizen pf, New York for the presidency. It baa never nominated any but a . west ern man for president in its history but once, and he was defeated in 1884. The democratic party has not selected its presidential nominee from any other state since 1865. . It has won twice for a term of eight years, with a New York nominee, while the republicans have won seven times, for a term of 28 years, 24 of it continuously, with western can didates, -v " If the democratic party sapiently con cludes that can get along' without New York hereafter it will certainly fol low the example of the republicans . and come to the west for candidates. In that event the lightning of presi dential nominations will play about the states of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The j "effete east" must be content with j second place hereafter, for the west is a sure winner for the capital prize. . Cleveland on Silver. " : Boise Statesman. Mr. Cleveland em phasizes his continued opposition.' to silver by making his first offer of a cabi- I net position to ex-Secretary Fa'rchild as secretary of, the treasury. Mr. Fairchild is a representative gold bug and can be relied upon by Wall street to do its bid ding at all times on questions pertaining to the currency. . AN OPBN BIVKB CONGRESS. Successions of the Baker City Demo crat on the Subject. The Democrat is in receipt of a letter from Mr, Linus Hubbard of The Dalles, together with photographs of. steam boats . loading freight at The Dalles. Mr. Hubbard is certainly taking com mendable interest in the completion of the locks at the cascades and an open i river to the sea, and Bhould le encour i aged by concerted action on the part of i the people of the Inland Empire, with j out which there can be little hope of iaucr-esw. li In ' his "tetter -arT Hubbard's views are certainly correct and the peo ple of Eastern Oregon, Washington and Idaho should take steps at once to as sist this laudable enterprise. An open river congress the Democrat, suggests s the proper thing. An assemblage of representative men of the Inland Em pire would bring about an influence for an open river that would accomplish the desired end. . ' Lost. A silk umbrella with the name of Earnest Jensen engraved on the handle. Finder will please leave at this office. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. WILL BE RESTRICTED. Secretary, Foster's; : Detemination . Ei : florsed Generally. V NO MORE COMING IN STEERAGE: Reasons Strictly of Self-Defense Prompt '' : ing his Policy. '" ' ' -; PHILANTHROPY AT A DISCOUNT. High Time to Crapple With the Ques tion In s Statesman-like Manner Minor Topics.. Washington, Dec. 6. Congress met at the usual hour today. Secretary Fos ter meets with general endorsement be cause of the announcement that he will presently issue an order forbidding the entrance of. all immigrants who come as steerage passengers. The conditions of the order leave the way open for the oc casional immigrant who may he sorely anxious to enter. If the inducements -bringing him are strong enough he can come by paying cabin-passage rates. For the multitude of others the order will, of course, be virtually prohibitive of entrance. The reasons prompting this policy are simply reasons of pelf-defense. However much philanthropic persons may regret the barring out of foreigners in need of elbow-room, they' cannot deny the danger which has been threatening this country at a most criti cal moment in its history. With free immigration and a very probable spread of cholera abroad, it would be almost im possible to keep the pest away ; more, to keep it from seriously injuring the World's-Fair and the multifarious inter ests devolving upon it. The immediate reasons why this step is to be taken are, of course, in their na ture temporary. -Presently they will, cease to exist. But it is high time for the beet statesmanship in America to grapple with the immigration problem again and for permanency. A nation's first duty is toward itself; else it can be of service to neither itself nor to others. How far fidelity to this duty will justify the keeping out of oppressed foreigners ifiintmstinn urilh flhnnlrl hft flnnrnAnhAjl only with the highest and broadest un derstanding of its gravity. That immi gration, can be stopped is not to be. doubted. With only moderate precau tions and imperfect regulations the im migration during the month of October was reduced to 4,691. During tbe same month last year, nearly 37,Opoimmigrants were landed on these shores. Thus it appears that immigration can be stopped. And the stopping of immigra tion now will reduce the danger of . the importation of cholera to the minimum. It Is HIa Business. Miseoulan.. It is denied' that Mr. Cleveland in his reply to Lieutenant Governor Sheehan said" he "would be damned if he would make any. pledges or. promises to Tammany." If he didn't say it he should have said it, and he thought it anyhow. Besides it isn't a swear word, and if it is, it isn't any body's business but Grover's. There After Thirty Vears. Sprague Advertiser. After thirty long years of wandering in the wilder ness and being now on the very bordec of ""the , promised - land, it would have been a terrible disappointment to the democrats had the comet smashed things terrestrial and put an end to it ail. A Chance fr Americans. Walla Walla Statesman. The Turkish government has issued an edict prohib iting army officers below the rank of major from having more than one wife. Here is a chance for Americans who take more interest in the oppressed of foreign nations than in those of their own to get up an indignation meeting. '