Tiie Dalles Daily Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. AMD WASCO COUNTY. Entered at the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BT MAIL (POSTAGE PREPAID) IN ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year 1 50 8 g months 0 76 " 8 " 0 60 Dally, 1 year. 6 00 6 months 3 00 " per " 0 60 Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. OREGON AT THE WORLD'S FAIR. The following is a list of the superintendents of the different departments of the world's fair commission. Anyone who has anything to ex hibit should correspond with the proper officer, one of the following: W. F. MATLOCK, department of agriculture, forestry and forest products, and live stock; Pendleton. C. W. AYERS, department of mines, mining and metallurgy ; Ashland. DR. J. R. CARDWELL, department of horti culture, including floriculture and viticulture ; Portland. GEO. T. MYERS, department of fishing and fishing apparatus, manufactures, electrical and mechanical Inventions; Portland. MR8. M. PAYTON, Salem, (until July 1, 1893) and MRS. E. W. ALLEN, Portland, (after July 1, 1893), department of woman's work, comprising the fine arts, household economy and products thereof. E. B. MCELROY, department of education, including educational exhibits, literary, special, general, music, etc. ; 8alem. GEO. W. McBRIDE, department of civil gov ernment, including state and county ; Salem. TUESDAY APR. 18, 1893 REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS A GOOD SAMARITAN. The following correspondence by Thomas Harlan upon the political situa tion is a true resume of the past and a prophecy for the future. The points enumerated are all within the domain of fact, and the conclusions are their legiti mate outcome. Mr. Harlan is a well known ex-politician of Nebraska, who is as well known to tbe Nebraska press. In naming Robert Lincoln for tbe stand ard bearer of the republican party three years hence it is believed he coincides with the present general sentiment of republicans, who, though now so de moralized, Mr. Harlan believes to be again destined to victory. Mr. Editor Having been requested by a reporter of your paper to contribute something concerning the political par ties of today and the cause of the defeat of the republican party in the last na tional campaign ; also something con cerning our hope of success in the future, I have to say that I do not feel able to make a post mortem examination of the remains of the once "grand old party" and tell everv cause of its demise. One thing, however, is certain, whatever the cause was, the republican party that Lincoln and Grant belonged to is dead Blaine, Logan, Garfield, Grant and Lin coin are dead. The mass of the people are always right. A large majority of the Ameri can people are republicans in principle The party has lost nothing in strength ; but they will never put the republican party in power while it is controlled by by the present political bosses, who manipulate its conventions and domin ate its actions in the interests of spoils hunters. It is an army without a gen eral. Give it a good general and it will win. The managers of the party may publish calls for conventions, and pass resolutions that the party still lives and that the people will know more and be wiser when they are told more about the McKinley law ; but they are gener als without an army and have no power. As an existing fact the old party is dead There was no other way of getting the old leecheB loose. The machinery of the republican party killed the party. It had become a disgraceful scramble of mediocrity for spoils. Thousands upon thousands of republicans bolted Harri son in all of the states because he was the machine nominee, the nominee of the spoils hunters, many voting for Cleveland, a few for Weaver, and many not at all. Ingersoll was silenced, or rather kept silent ; Gresham went over to the other side ; in fact the heart of the old party was torn out of it. The party without a heart then became close communion. Weaver had no real fol lowing. There was really no third party, and there is none today. They had no principles to follow. The demo crats gave Weaver the states that he carried to keep Harrison from carrying them. The disaffected and disgusted republicans went everywhere and any where to get away from the political hyenas, and they will stay away until the hyenas are properly disposed of. Of all the republican states Nebraska has suffered the most from republican misrule, and yet Nebraska, fairly man aged with an unpacked convention with the old professional politicians laid aside, would be overwhelmingly repub lican. The same is true of Kansas in a less degree, and pre-eminently true of Colorado and Nevada. None will doubt that Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin and Connecticut are republican states, if fairly managed. The principles of the republican party are as good now as they were in 1858, when the martyred Lincoln sounded its principles in his immortal words, that this nation "cannot exist half slave and half free ;" that "a house divided against itself cannot stand;" and later when the flag had been trampled upon, that "the union must be maintained between all the states if it should take a drop of blood for every drop of sweat that had been wrung from the brow of a slave." The modern democratic party, like the wreck of the republican party, is a party of spoils hunters. It is already going into factions over the distribution of spoils. It cares less for principle than for office, and will be worse divided as the administration goes on. A new generation of men has come upon the stage. They know what is the matter. They must have a new, clean, and fair management of affairs, which affects tbe present time and the rising generation. The old party of Lin coln and Grant is torn to pieces ; it is dissevered and mangled and bleeding at every pore. We want a Samaritan to bind it up, to heal it, and to save it. This is a free country and we are free men, and we must choose. Now comes tbe more delicate part and vital question, t. ., who can be that leader? A leader whose views upon the tariff question are known to have been extremely liberal is the only leader who will do. ROBERT T. LINCOLN is a broad-minded, liberal republican of the Blaine style, known to be conserva tive upon the principles of tariff and reciprocity. He may not be the ablest man in the party, but he belongs to this generation of men. He ia of the right age, and has shown enough ability to prove that he would make a good presi dent, and the fitness of things points to him as being the man now in sight that it would be in the power of the republi can party to elect. Lincoln is not a politician ; he is a statesman that can be supported by all. With Robert T. Lincoln at the head of the republican ticket in 1836, the repubi licans would sweep the country. Not because he is the son of Abraham Lin coln, a fact that Robert would scorn to take advantage of ; but because he is a modest, unassuming, able, capable man. In fact, as above stated, the republi can party has lost no strength. Fairly managed it is stronger today than it has been for the last twelve years. And upon a platform framed according to the wishes of the republican voters ; with a new set of men at the helm young men the men of today, it can take con trol of the government at the close of this administration and hold it indefi nitely. Thomas Harlan. Wool men have doubtless observed that through rates to the east from San Francisco are now reduced to 75 cents per hundred pounds. The way to avail themselves of this big reduction, as they probably have also as astutely ob served, is to ship by the D. P. & A. N. Co. to San Francisco, by which means the total cost for carriage from The Dalles to Boston will not exceed a cent and a third per pound, as compared with 2.40 to 2.65 cents per pound heretofore. This means a saving of many thousands of dollars. The installments given us every few days from Hawaii have all the horrifying fascination of a continued story. It may be that the finale will be as insipid as is the last chapter of a love story. Burled Alive. The sad news was received in Baker City Saturday of the death of a young man by the name of Flick under pecu liar circumstances. The young :inan lived with his father, Mr. Michael Flick, a farmer and wool grower on Snake river below the mouth of Connor creek. The father and son also owned the placer mines in the vi cinity of their home which they worked every spring. On Thursday afternoon last, the young man was engaged in digging a ditch through which would be con veyed water for use at the mines. While at work in a cut about 20 feet deep the bank suddenly gave way and he was buried beneath tbe heavy weight of earth and he was unable to extricate himself, no one being near to render him assistance. At supper time when the young man failed to put in his appearance at home, his father went to where the boy had been to work and was horrified when the awful realization dawned upon him that his son had been killed by being caved on. One hand extended above the debris, being the only portion of the boy visible. The father hurriedly gave the alarm and hastened to extricate his son in the hope that life was not yet extinct, but without avail, as the body was life less when removed. The parents have the full sympathy of all in their sad affliction and irrepar able loss. There is one unvarying rule for wom en, married and single. It is never right, says Harper's Bazar, to sign one's name with the addition of Miss or Mrs. You are Mary Emily Jones, not Mrs. Patrick Fitzgerald Jones, to whomsoever you may be writing. If it be necessary to notify your corre spondent of vour married style and state you may dp so, and in one of several ways. Please observe that a correspondent should not be left in doubt as to this, much embarrassment being frequently caused by the omis sion, in letters between strangers, of exact information as to whether the writer is married or single. You may easily indicate all you wish to tell. You may plaoe Mrs. P. F. before the Mary Emily aforesaid, in brackets. You may write Mrs. Patrick Fitzgerald out fully and plainly in the left-hand corner of your 6heet, below your proper sig nature. Or you may simply inclose your engraved visiting card in your let ter, this being on the whole the most elegant and also the most convenient method of showing one's relation to society. The more Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy is used the better it is liked. We know of no other remedy that always gives satisfaction. It is good when you first catch cold. It is good when your cough is seated and your lungs are sore. It is good in any kind of a cough. We have sold twenty-five dozen of it and every bottle has given satisfaction. Stedman & Friedman, druggists, Minne sota Lake, Minn. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists. ISucklen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever soretfT tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin ersly. Fenetentlary Toy. A Paris toy merchant has brought out a novelty in the shape of a doll wearing a Panama hat. On pulling a string the hat disappears and its place is taken by a convict's cap. At the head of all blood-purifiers is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. But it's different from all of them. What ever is claimed for this, it's guaran teed to do. The money is refunded in every case where it fails to bene fit or cure. It's because it is differ ent that it can be sold so. All diseases originating from a torpid liver or impure blood yield to it. It cleanses and purifies the system, freeing it from all manner of blood poisons, no matter from what cause they have arisen. For Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Scrofula, Salt -rheum, Tetter, Erysipelas, or any blood taint or disorder, it is an unequaled remedy. Nothing else can take its place. " Golden Medical Discovery " contains no alcohol to inebriate, and no syrup or sugar to derange digestion. It's a concentrated vegetable ex tract ; put up in large bottles ; pleasant to the taste, and equally good for adults or children ; works equally well all the year round. Ask your Dealer -FOR THE- General Arllar Hand Made M.A.GUNST&CO SOLE AGENTS, PORTLAND, OREGON. COMPLETE MANHOOD AND HOW TO ATTAIN IT. At last a medical work that tells the causes. describes the effects, points the remedy. This is scientifically the most valuable, artistically the most beautiful, medical book that has ap peared for years ; 96 pages, every page bearing a half-tone illustration in 'tints. Some of the sub jects treated are Nervous Debility, Impotency, Sterility, Development.Varieocele, The Husband ThoseJ intending Marriage, etc. Every Man who would know (he Grand Truth, the Plain Facts, the Old Secrets and New Discov eries of Medical Science as applied to Married Life, who would atoneor past follies, and avoid future pitfalls, should write for this WONDERFUL LIT TLE BOOK. It will be sent free, under seal, while the edi tiou lasts. If convenient, enclose ten cents to pay postage alone. Address the publisher!, ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. CHA8. STUBUNG. OWEN WILLIAMS. Stubling & Williams. The Gefmania, SECOND ST., THE DALLES, - OREGON Dealeis in Wines, Liauors and Cigan igars. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. H. M. BXAU. Cashier. First Rational Bank. "HE DALLES. - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIREOTOH3. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schenck. En. M. Williams, Geo. A. Lie be. H. M. Be all. FRENCH 8t CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav rable terms. THE DALLES National Bank, Of DALLES CITY, OR. President - -Vice-President, -Cashier, - - Z. F. Moody Charles Hilton M. A. Moody General Banking Business Transacted. Sight Exchanges Sold on NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, CHICAGO and PORTLAND, OB Collections made on favoreble terms at all accessible points. House Moving! Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at reasonable figures. Has the largest hortse moving outfit in Eastern Oregon. . Address P.O.Box 181, The Dalles w. f. wiskman. war. mardkrs. Hliseman & Marders, Saloon and Wine Rooms The Dalles, Oregon. Northwest corner of Second and Court Streets. The Snug. W. H. BUTTS, Prop. No. 90 Second Sreet, The Dalles, Or. This well known stand, kept by the well known W. H. Butts, long a resi dent of Wasco county, has an extraordi nary fine stock of Sheep Herder's Delight and Irish Disturbance. In fact, all the leading brands of fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Give the old man a call and you will come again. the Dalles AND Prineville Stage Line J. D. PARISH, Prop. Leaves Tbe Dalles at 6 a. m. every day and ar rives at Prineville in thirty-six hours. Leaves Prineville at 5 a. m. every day and arrives at The Dalles in thirty-six hours. Carries the D. S. Mail, Passengers and Express Connects at PrtD-ilIe with Stages from Eastern and Southern Or egon, Northern California and all Interior Points. Also makes close connection at The Dalles with trains from Portland and all eastern points. .' courteous infers. . Boot accommodations along the road. .' First-class coacies and norses used. Express matter handled with care. AU persons wishing passage must waybill at of fices before taking passage; others will not be received. Express must be waybilled at offices or the Stage Co. will not be responsible. The company will take no risk on money transmit ted. Particular attention given to delivering express matter at Prineville and all southern points in Oregon, and advance charges will be paid by the company. STAGE OFFICES: SI. Sichel & Co. Store. Prineville. Umatilla House. The Dalles. 6. SCBKNCK, President : DKALERf- IN: Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hay, Grain and Feed. Wasonic Block. Corner Third and flew Qolumbia Jfote . THE DALLES, OREGON. THE DALLES MERCANTILE CO, SOLE AGENTS FOR THE DALLES. BRAINARD & ARMSTRONG'S . . . . SPOOL SILK FINE LINE OF UNDERWEAR No. 390 to 394, 2d street, The Dalles "There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its flood, leads on to fortune." The poet unquestionably had reference to the DnNht Sail! i -m Fnmitm & Camels at CRANDALL -el I in t , e goods MELT.. BRICK, PAUL KREFT & CO., -DEALERS IN- PAINTS, OILS And the Most Complete and the Practical Painters and Paper bherwin-Williams and J. W. JVlasury s Faints used m all jur work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chemical combination or soap mixture. A first class article in all colors. AD orders promptly attended to. Faint Shoe corner Thirdand Lace Curtains, Have your Lace Curtains, Shirts, Col lars and Cuffs laundried "by THE TROT STEAM LAUNDRY, of Portland, Or. Leave your bundles with Thos. McCoy, No. 110 Second St., "before Tuesday noon, and get them on Saturday. . . . . . 5at'sfaet'9 (iuaranteed. MINHNS 5 HE NEW TOWN has been platted on the old camp ground, at the Forks and Falls of Hood river, with large sightly lots, broad streets and alleys, good soil, pure cold water and shade in profusion, perfect drainage, deligh"tful mountain climate, the central attraction as a mountain summer resort and for all Oregon, being the nearest town to Mt. Hood. It is also unpsralled as a manufacturing center, being the natural center for ISO square miles of the best cedar and or timber, possessing millions of horse power in its dashing streams and water falls, easily harnessed. Where cheap motive power exists, there the manu factories will center, surrounded by soli and climate that cannot be excelled anywhere for fruit and agriculture, and with transportation already assure you will find this the place to make a perfect home or a paying investmeat TITLE PERFECT W. RossWinans. Freeborn & Company, DEALERS IN mall Papep and Room fllouldings 295 ALDER ST., COR. FIFTH, Old Ndmbek 95, Court Streets. The Dalles,Oregon. This Popular House Has lately been thoroughly renovated and newly furnished throughout, and is now better than ever prepared to furnish the best Hotel accommodations of any house in the city, and at the very low rate of $1 a day. First-Class Meals, 25c. Office of the fast and commodious opposition Stag to Dnfar, Kingsley, Tygh Valley, Wapinitia, Warm Springs and Prineville is in the Hotel and persons going to Prineville can save $4.00 by going on this Stage line. All trains stop here. &, BURGET'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. - - UNION ST. AND GLASS, Latest Patterns and Designs in Haneers. None bu t the best brands of the Washington Sts., The Dalles. 0re-o See me on the ground, or address me at Hood River, Wasco County, Oregon. Portland, Oregon.