THK M0RS1N0 ASIOR1AN, ITlWA., NOVEMBER ii, W HIS EES Prices That Count 1 III I 65 Mens Covert Cloth Overcoats 1 Without question the best bargain ever offered. Equal to tailor made garments. Never offered at less than $13.90. . . OUR PRICE FOR THIS WEEK . . 7 (0 i' ; 1 i I I (!) It Will Pay You to Inspect This Line. f SPECIAL. Latest pattern Colored Body or Fancy Bosom Shirt $1,00 8PECIAL.-0ur $3,00 and $4.00 Stiff Hats are tho Bost Values ever offered. S. DANZIGER, -4QO Commercial Street, Astoria, Oregoii. AMERICAN AND BRITISH OFFICERS I Santiago the British military attache ( be wearing his medal of honor tixlay I on the field never would have had the' if he had followed out the plan which chance to writ k sympathetically In j the officer critics of the continental his report of the death of the second I armies declare to be the proper one for the. English officers In South Af rica. In the early part of May. 1S!3 the general, then colonel of the Sixty-first THEIR EXPOSURE IX BATTLE It is a Requirement of Army Tactics Rather Than a Tradition Some Stirring American Examples. lieutenant of dismounted cavalry who, while his little command '; un !-r the shelter of the rocks. t.l rect i watching the enemy through a field 1 glass. K!s men begged him to II down, but he sti there ut:-rlngj I words of enccurag-meT.t until u M.iu i sr bullet gave him Irt death -.wind I Ha1 continental firing-line n- th"ds ' been followed at El Carney th -.me ; British ofnor attar he would i .v t ; have told the story of that ho; rir r of the Held wh-re amid the flying bul lets Co. A. R. Chaffy?, standing erect and calmly smoking a cigar, (suggested to the non-combatant Englishman that he lie down. "A bit if advice I no ticed," afterward wrote the military attache, "that the imperturbable col onel did not deign to follow hlmelf." Down In the mountainous and dewrt Appache country in the year Po whatan H. Clarke, a Louisiana lad Jusi out of West Point, rod at the h-ad daring habit of the quel's officers as of twelve black troop-rs of the Tenth though the custom were confined whol- cavalry Into a narrow, rocky defile, ly to the Bri'-teh army. Many a hard- I There had b-en no sign of an Indian, fought field on the. western frontier and j When well Into the gorg- from th the battle of Cuba attest that the) rocks in fr n:, behind and above New York volunteers. a. In com mand of skirmishers. A liix- of abnt tis had been built, and the New York ers, w ith their M.ixsiu huetts com mander. wer behind It holding off a hord.? of the enemy. Thing were get ting warm for the f-deral force. In crier to encourage hlw m-n Mil' kept jumping on to the al;ittls. thu. making himself the only human mark which the enemy could we. Mll ran EDWARD B. Cl.AP.K. Continental army officers rccxtitly have been busy criticiting the British battle system which ordains that on the firing line when the men have sought what shelt-a- the conformation of the ground affords the officers shall remain erect and exposed. The Eu ropean miU'.ary critics speak of this American officer lt guided on the field by the same feeling and the game rule of conduct that prompts the English man to make of himself a conspicu ous target for the Boer bullet. To one unacquainted with the fH-ld tactics of European armies the wonder is how an officer lying prone behind a r-k on the mizzle -swept firing line is able "constantly to direct and encourage his men," as reads the "tactical Injunc. tlon" to the officers of armies of all English speaking people. The major ity of the officers of the United States army of middle age and younger. Wen Pointers and civilian appointees alike, received their early soldierly i-usten-ance from Emory Upton 'k ;iue Book. There was no paragraph in the whole volume, from "the position of a sol dier" to the "ev V.ution of a brigade," that wa-i so thoroughly cramm-d into tre brains of the cadets in the section rooms at West Point as was that which in teiSf language said that for the encouragement and heartening of his men it was the duty of an officer to expose himself at all times of dan ger. The same rule is laid down In the United States army drill regulations which have recently succeeded the old tactics of Uptown. The position of the captain on the firing line is ten paces to the rear of tho center of hi3 men, who seek what shelter they can while the captain stands erect. An officer of the Unlt-d States army was once court-martialed for cowardice because It was said he Bought the shelter of a tree while his command was skirmishing with the enemy. If the American captains and lieutenants had sought shelter during the preliminary skirmishes before came a shower of bullets. The enemy was Invisible. With carbine un.lung the little band of troopers made its way back to the op-n. The first ser geant, shot through both thighs, drop ping ftorn his mount Just as the en trance to the defile was ra-hed. Clarke Ud his men at a dead run for a diK tance of 150 yards. Th-n they Wer dismounted and thrown into a skir mish line. The trained hots' lay down upon the desert sand and the men used them as shelter, Clarke, however, standing er-ot In the center of the line. The inn-ant that the lieu tenant had dismounted ard givn the order for deploying, the men with straining ey-, Paw hltn on foot dart forward alor.g the path over which they had just come, lie was running! like a deer straight for the gateway f the gorge. Uj troopers as one man started to foil .w hlrn, but he waved them back to their t-h-lter and kei.t on. Clarke's oathAav town.nl the ,ie. file was marked out all the way with spiteful ilttle sand puffs as the bullets fron the rlf! -s of the hidden savages pattered about him. He reached the objective point JMnJured. Once there he lifted his wounded black sergeant to his shoulder and staggered baek across the 150 yards ,,f optn t n command. The nay back was made through a perfect fusillade. The es carc from Injury was a marvel. For this deed Powhatan H. Clarke after ward wore the coveted medal of honor, and he woi it pinned on his blouse when six years afterward he met his death in the Northwest In the sight of the same troopers whom he had led In Arizona. Cenc-ral Nelson A. Miles would not i along the abartls inspiring his men by his voice. He simply wan following out the Instructions which every American army officer receive. Miles fell final ly, so badly wounded that for a long time It was thought he could not re cover. In the late 70s' during the campaign against th Nei Perces, it became nec essary Is order to dl."lodge the Indians to send some troops up the shelving side of a mountain that wa utterly without cov.T and was slippery with Ice. It looked like certain death for all the command engaged. Before the start wan made Lleuunarvt Frank . Baldwin, a staff officer, volunteered, In order to put heart Into the men, to go up the Icy Incline alone to nhow the command that it could be done. He started, and the savag-s opened on him from every crag and peak. The men did not let him get far before they were following In his footsteps, but the whole savage fire oentep-d on Baldwin. That Impalpable protecting arm which seems sometime to be thrown around heroes saved him. He would have been glvon a medal of honor had not one already been pinned on his blouse Just outside a pocket which contained a certlflfAU? of m-rit for personal gallantry on the battle field. The example given are few. The rule is general and is ulways followed. It may be that the military critics of the continent must find some recipe for changing the Anglo-Saxon charac ter before th'y can hop, to change the Indeed a proud tribute to the Nebraska statesman. "Klzal, Bryan and Agulnald.i nr- the glorious trinity of our politloaJ redemp tion," exclaims the eloquent illtor "f th. Ifidendeii('la Manila. It may be disappointing to Atkinson not to find himself Included Is tins glorious group, but the rhetorical exigncl'- w .uld admit but three, and even At kinson hou!d rejoin that Bryan's s. r vii es are thus fitly recognized A Klllplno publication which n-.iches iih by way of Hotig Kong sjieaks with appropriate c.Uirv of "the vain a'- tempt to sulslue this heroic nation ' made by "McKlnley and his Coterie of distlsgulsh.-d ldlcil harlots, wind- i galb d politician, Algi-rlt.-s. Merr.tts, : would give him a Agulnal l himself f-- n. ld. Ths Is p-.Uly Bryan's opportunity In sltu of his l.xiien-, th Flllpltio r. tuie not flourish In the Unlt-d St.iti s and tlo- k! .noun il-r.it.r lm not mi t ,n ,i.p , Int Ion. In I,tixon ll. Weill I ilnl lllllll -iliUte ogtlltloll. I. Is views) tip hi ftimiiiv a. i ird mon el.welv vntli tl. r. ,.f ill,. Filipino than Willi til iso 'union')' in.lv . In lliln oiuiirv. ami Vgilli.iMo oii. Jnn I' it r 1 1 1 y Is 'n ii'iiM'i'i.ili.,n of u ts (lulckly rurra dyspepsia and Indtrmitlon. For sale by CHAIU.KH llCHHCItH. Collntrrul up or thut up. :urltl-g urn kiiIi.t put I wouldn't without tXiWltt'i Wiirli lUiel Halvo for any Consldrra ti .11." irrltM Tliod. II. Rhodes, Cctitr 11. id. '. InfllllblK for pile, cuts, buns 4nd skin dlicaaen. 1 1.' warn of e. iiixei felts. For sal by CHAttMCH ItitfiKIIS. It will not m a surptis to any who nr.- .ii nil fnmllUr with lh good quail- II .a ..f I !. ii i.lu.rl n I ft'a lr.llvK HamailH In Th- ,.v.-Ht is rip- f .r hi. n tpl., ni.i kmJW, ((mt . eVrrywlw. uk. h- should t.ik.- the field iii If I ii r mure K iflatlna' thi-lr exnrrlenc In Mi Kihley's IiIi'-1iiii;h shoiil I mil , . I i n.ennwliilo In tlwlr fiendish dinlgil of o.mevoli-nt ajwlmllation," he could at hoist count mi the Flllpltio delegates and that Vatlco,i hireling utid Inquls nor, r.. n. utis, and otner joiiiiers " i No doubt the writer of this charming pamphlet shar-s In his colleague's en- i thuslasm for Bryan, and If that distin guished g-ntleman would only go out to the sc."ne of strife and run for pres ident of the Philippines, It Is likely that l and might add to Unit of Nebraska the electoral vot of Luzon. It l u gr-iit rhatic- that ought not to ! missed. . Mi - iMe of that splendid inedlrlnn and In telling of the lienefit they have r-I'.-Ivi'd from It, of liod colda It has ruri'd, of threatened attacks of pnu- ri'onla It has averted and of the chtldrra It has saved from attacks of croup and whooping rough. It Is a grand, food medicine. For sale by Chas. Rogers. FOR 8ALB. Scrofula, a Vile Inheritance. Scrofula ii the moat obstlnata of blood trouble!, fl Is often th rtuh of an Inherited timt in the blood. S. S. S. la the only remedy whiofa bom deep enough to reach Scrofula; It foroe out rery traoe of tho di lease, and ourea tka worst eaiei. My son, Charlie, im tfflloMd from lofanoy with Scrofult, and ha aUtrta' so that It waa uopoanlbU todreat him for tkraa yean. Hll kaad and body ware a suns of auras, as d bis lyMtghl alao becana alTcctad. Mo treatment waa spared tbst wa uiougnt wooia relive aim. oui ue Kf'w worse onill hia ooudlilon was fiidx-d plnabJa. 1 bad aiiooit deapalrad of bin rer being curd, when y tba advlexof a friend wis ny him 8. f. H. (wift Bueelflel. A de. elded ininroriuent was tba rcault.anil aflei be hiil ukn a dozen hottlea. no nm. lm kma m'thods of American an British of- ' hi" former drwlful eondlUon would havt ,n th .TMl..Hel,l Ipcogiilwd him. All lha aores on his body fleers on the battlefield. ,(.,. , rt hla akin m tu.rf,.n. .i... .Ji tmooth, and he has been rratorrd to rxrfeol Hh. Maa. H. H. Masrt, SOU Kim Ht., Macon, oa. For real blood troubles it is a waste of time to expect it euro from the doc tors. Blood disease are beyond tholr kill. Swift's Specific, SSSMlood reaches all deep-seated cases whloli other remedies have no effect upon. It Is the only blood remedy guaranteed purely vegetable, and con tarns no pot ash, mercury, or other mineral. Books mailed free to any address by Swift Speeiflo Go., Atlanta, Oa, Improved ranch, consisting of 120 acres, on Young's river. Apply to John L. Hayseth, Wle, Or. Dr. W. Wlxon, Italy Hill, N. T..says: "I heartily recommend One Minute Cough Cure. It gave my wife Immedi ate relief In suffocating asthma." Pleasant to take. Never falls to quick- ly cure all coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles. J. D. Bridges. Kdllur "Democrat." Lancaster. N. II., says: "On Mlnuto Cotigtl Cure tha beat rvtiM-dy for croup I evr used." Itnmrdlaioly r llrvrs and curra coughs, colda. croup, asthma. Pneumonia, bronrhltla. grlpi and all throat anl lung trouble. It prevents consumption. For aal by t IIAKI.K.4 ItOHKItrt. fnllle pe i.lo ar.. like br. k pri-.- I f. r rash. always It's a very ixsir mule that don't work both ways. rsfen nr British boi.dikbs in AF1UCA. Pblllpiilnes he would sell thein to Ja- pan not however. for several llui.-s $;,0Hi,(wH, I Copt. C, O. Dcnnlson la well known all over Africa as the commander of the forces that captur'd the famous rebel flallshe. riwW date of Nov. 4. 1SW, fiom Vryburg, liecliuanaland, he writes: "Before stnrtlng on tho last , campaign I iK.ugtit a quantity of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used myself when J troubled with bowel complaint, and hail Riven to my men, and In every case It For sale by CM Mir:itI.AIN' PAIN I1AI.M CI'llKS OTIIelltS, WHY NOT YOU? My wife hns Ix-ori using Chamber Iain's Pa In Italm Halm, with good r aiilis. fur a lame shoulder that haa pained Wrt coiitltumly for nine years. We have tried alt kinds of mdlclne ii ml doctors wl'hoiit rti-eivtng any lien eflt from liny of them, one day we saw an advertisement of this mllclne ami thought of Irylng It, which we did. with the best of satlnfnotlon. Hlle him used only one bottle and her shoulder la al most weli.Adolph I.. .Illicit, Man chester. N. H. For sale by Chas. Rog-ers. Modenty a-ldoni nhoua up u, good iidvaulng o In the dark. pr ved most beneficial." I i II..I rt ,,i9nfu LaGrlppe, with Its after effects, an nually destroys thousands of people. It mny be qutegly cured by One Min ute Cough Cure, the only remedy that produces Immediate results In coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis, pneu monia and throat and lung troubles, It will prevent consumption. For sale by CHARLES ROGERS. The mercury never gets warm In Its race In lower tho record. WH'iilRE BRYAN IS APPREOIATKD. Philadelphia Times. Whatever may be thought of Brother Bryan Is other parts of Uncle Sam's domain, outside Nebraska, it Is evi dent that he is running well in the Philippines. He is Juat the man for the Filipinos. Not only Is he champion of Iheir cause, but he has Just the style of rhetoric they like. It Is not surprising to find how highly they es teem the orator of the crows of gold, picturing him In Filipino history "In efiual glory with Agulnaldo." This is, You never know what form of blood poison will follow constipation. Keep the liver clean by using DeWltt's Lit tle Early Risers and you will avoid trouble. They are famous little pills for constipation and liver and bowel troubles. For sale by CHARLES ROfJ. ERS. Age make om others stubborn. people wis" and "f had dyspepsia fifty-seven years and nover found permanent relief until I used Kodol dyspepsia Cure. Now I am well and foci like a new man," writes S. J. Fleming, Murray, Neb, It la the best dlgestant known. Cures all forms of Indignation. Physicians every where prescribe It. For sale by CIIAS. ROGERS. DEAFNKSH CANNOT RE CURED !;y local application, n Ihey cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way lo cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. nearness is caused ny an Inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of tha Eus tachian Tube. When this tube Is In flamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is sn tlrely olosiid, deafness Is tho result, and tinlera the Inflammation can be taken out and Oils tul restored to Ita nor mal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine casus out of ten are enured by catarrh, which Is nothing but nn Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Hundred Dollnm for any case of Deafness) (caused by ca tarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's. Catarrh Cure. Rnd for circulars; fres. F. J. CHENEY A CO,, Toledo, O. Hold by druggists, 25o. Hall's Family Pills are tho beat. Most women prefer husbands and let tert.opcr well ruled. Oeo. Noland, Rockland, 0 says "My wife had plies forty years. DeWltt's Witch Hazel Halve cured her. It Is the best salve In America," Tt heals everything and cures all skin diseases. For Sale by CHARLES ROQER8. Some barefaced lleg are old enough lo wear a full beard, Dr. H. H. Haden, Summit. Ala., says. "I think Kodol Dyspepsia Cur is a splendid medicine. I prescribe It, and my confidence In It grows with contin ued use." It digests what you eat and RAILROAD FARE FREE PORTLAND AND RETURN. I Jones, He Pays the Freight! f Jones, He Pays the Fare! f If you don't wimt to com,, lo Portland, mail your f ordor and got Ml cents allowance for fare. Orders must ? .amount to fill) or over. No freight paid on Hour, feed i .or potatoes. I- reight paid to all stations on railroad lie- I tween Portland and HcHHido. Also all river points 7 reii.lm.I l.y Portland bonis. K, for the "Buyers' ' I undo," 2-1 pages of low prices. 7 JONES' CASH STORE, I log and lip Front Htre.l, Portland. Oregon.