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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1899)
CI 1 sSk-lJi fflL JJulllp0 xJ) VOL. XII THE DALLES, OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1899 NO 66 OPERATIONS ARE SUSPENDED Caiapaip Will Cease Until Bat Weather is EnM, THE FILIPINOS GET A REST Meanwhile, Otis' Force Will Be In creased to 40,000 Men Before Fighting Is Resumed. Washington, June 28. Secretary Al ger, Adjutant Corbin and Colonel Bird, assistant quartermaster - general in charge of transportation, had an bonr'a consultation with the president today relating to the question of reinforce ments for General Otis. A definite de cision was reached to continue recruit ing men at all the recruting stations, and Secretary Alger said after the con ference that General Otis would have 40,000 when the rainy season, closed for resumption of active operations. The enlistment are to be for eervice in the regular army and recruits are to be organized into regiments or assigned to regiments already formed after enlist meat. No organizations are to be ac cepted if sufficient recruits can be ob tained by regular enlistment. General Corbin said the enlistments would be for three years. Arrangements are to be made at onca for increasing the transportation necessary to get these additional troops to the Philippines. The decision to reinforce General Otis by the end of the rainy eeason ia inter preted to mean that active campaigning will cease until the bad weather ends. By remaining quiescent under good shel ter during the rainy season it ia hoped that the health of our troops will be conserved and the danger front climatic fevera reduced to a mininum. General Otis haa cabled to the war department that he has .the skeleton organizations of two of three regiments which he pro poses to raise in the Philippines. At the war department this is said to mean that General Otis haa the officers for these regiments selected and that they are now to be filled with enlisted men. The war department eaya that the recruits now being enlittol cannot be u?ed for the volunteer army, although it would be an easy matter to transfer these men with their own consent t the volunteer service if it should be deter mined to raise additional trooje. Mad Woman's Fortune. St. Louis, Jane 28. In a dingy, stuffy little room" in the rear of So. 1221 South Third street, Officer Hanrahan found concealed in a dirty trunk and a valise a sum of money exceeding $15,000 in government bonds, gold and bills of large denominations. The police think that this small fortune is the property of Mrs. Walbonger Wackerle, an aged German woman who is now a patient ac the in eane asylum. But little is known by the neighbors of Mrs. Wackerle. They say that fot years past she has been living in that neighborhood ; always reticent, eccentric and demur. ABANDONS WESTERN TRIP jSTyf U5'vLid IftftVBMEE&- bsclutee Pure Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAl BAKIWJ POWOEB CO., NEW VOIK. tir e is decidedly worse thap since she has been in the White House, and the president will remain in Washington probably all summer, and will take very little vacation out of the city. President McKinley'a projected trip to the Pacific coast, which had been looked forward to in anticipation of en joyment to himself and improvement in Mrs. McKinley'a condition, has been abandoned. His trip to Minnesota has also been abandoned. The unfavorable turn in Mrs. McKin ley'a condition is attributed to a cold, which ehe contracted just before ehe left Washington. She ia never strong and this cold seemed to weaken her to such an extent as to make it advisable to avoid the exertion which would have been necessary had ehe remained away as long as it had been intended. THE OLD WAY Of Treating Dyspepsia and Indigestion by Dieting a Dangerous and Useless One. Reduced Rates to M. E. A. He Will Not Be Able to Come Eyen as Far as Minnesota on Account of Mrs. McKinley's Health. New York, June 28. A special to the Herald from Washington eays: The state of Mrs. McKinley's health at this We say the old way, but really it is a very common one at the present time and many dyspeptics .and pbyeicians as well consider the first step to take in attempting to cure indigestion is to diet, either by selecting certain foods and re jecting others or to greatly diminish the quantity usually taken; in other words the starvation plan ia supposed by many to be the first essential. The almost certain failure of the starvation cure has been proven time and again, but still the moment dyspep sia makes its appearance a course of dieting -is at once advised. All tbisia radically wrong. It is foolish and unscientific to recommend dieting to a man suffering from dyspepsia, be cause indigestion itself atarves every organ, every nerve and every fibre in the body. What the dyspeptic wants is abundant nutrition, which means plenty of good, wholesome well-cooked food, and some thing to assist the weak stomach to di gest it. This is exactly the purpose for which Stuart'a Dyspepsia Tablets are adapted and this is the method by which they cure the worst casea of dyspepsia; in other words the patient eata plenty of wholeeome fcod and Stuart'a Dys pepsia Tablets digests it for him. In this way the system ia nourished and the overworked stomach rested, because the tablets will digest the food whether the stomach works or cot. One of these tableta will 'digest 3,000 grains of meat or egga. Your druggist will tell you that Stuart'a Tablets 13 the purest and safest remedy for etomach troubles and every trial makes one more friend for this ex cellent preparation. Sold at 50 cents for full sized package at all drug stores. A little book on cause and cure of j stomach diseases mailed free by address- j ing F. A. Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich. A Thousand Tongues Could not express the rapture of Annie E. Springer, of 1125 Howard et., Phil adelphia, Pa., when she found that Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption had completely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made life a burden. All other remedies and doctors could give her no help, but ehe aaya of thi8 Royal Cure "It soon re moved the pain in my chest and I can now sleep soundly, something I can ecarcely remember doing before. I feel like sounding its praises throughout the universe." So will every one who tries Dr. King's New Discovery forany trouble of the throat, chest or lungs. Price 50c and $1. Trial bottle free at Blakeley & Houghton's drug store; eyery bottle guaranteed: 5 Use Clarke & Falks Rosofoam for the teeth. - tf For the National Educational Asso ciation meeting to be held at Los Angeles, Cal., July 11-14, 1899, the O. R. & N. Co. will make the following rates from The Dalles : Going and re turning all rail route via Portland and Southern Pacific $44.15; rail to Portland and steamer Portland to Los Angeles port of call, including meals and berth on steamers, returning same route, $39.15 ; rail to Portland, steamer to San Francisco and rail via Southern Pacific from San Francisco to Los Angeles, re tnrning same route, $39.15. Tickets on sale June 30th, July 1st and July 4th to 9th inclusive, final limit for return Sept. 5th. For further information cail on or address Jas. Ireland, Agent, O. R. & N. Co., The Dalles. iO-J Dreyfus Looks Old. New York, Jnne 28. A dispatch to the Herald from Paris says : La Martin has interviewed the mate of an Ameri can eteamer which paseed the Sfax at Cape Verde islands on June 19. He saw Captain Dreyfus on deck and he eaya he looked broken down, and like a man of sixty. The captain of the Sfax ordered them to keep off. Captain Dreyfus sa luted the flags when the salutes were ex changed. Would Not Suffer So Again for Fifty Times Its Pi Ice. I awoke last night with severe pains in my stomach. I never felt so badly in all my life. When I came down to work this morning I felt so weak I could hardly work. I went to Miller & McCurdy'a drug store and they recommended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy. It worked like magic and one dose fixed me all right. It certainly is the finest thing I ever used for stomach trouble. I shall not be without it in my home hereafter, for I should not care to endure the sufferings of last night again, for fifty times ita price. G. H. Wilson, Liveryman, Bur gettstown, Washington Co., Pa. This remedy is for sale by Blakeley & Hough ton, Druggists. A diseased stomach surely under mines Leilth. It dulls the brain, killa energy, destroya tha nervons system, and predisposes to insanity and fatal diseases. AH dyspeptic troubles are quickly cured by Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. It has cured thousands of cases and ia curing them every day. Ita ingredients are such that it can't help curing. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. Gun-shot wounds and powder-burns, cute, bruises, aprams, wounds from rusty nails, insects stings and Ivy poison ing quickly healed by DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. Positively preventa blood poisoning. Beware of counterfeits. De Witt s is safe and sure. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. For Sale. Three houses and four lots in The Dalles, as a whole or separately. Lo cation healthy and desir able, near school. Pays exceptionally good inter est on investment. Prop erty in good condition. Address, Mrs. A. Fitz Gerald 839 Golden Gate Av., - San Francisco, Cal. NO ROOM FOR ALGER AJmiiiislralion DistarM Oyer the PlEjxee Alliance. IS NOT LIKELY TO RESIGN Politicians Have Advised the President to Put Him Out of the Cabinet. Washington, June 27. The adminis tration ia thoroughly disturbed over the Alger-Pingree affair. Alger waa down to meet the president aa soon as he ar rived today, with the intention of show- ng his utmost concern and friendliness to the chief executive. Other members of the cabinet saw the president and gave him to understand that the latest developments ought to create a vacancy in the war department. Several poli ticians have been in the city, and they, too, have given strong intimation that a Republican administration haa little room for Alger after hia alliance with Pingree, who is an evident anti-admin istration man. Alger is considerable of a Dulldog, how ever, and he never struck a job that he liked any better than secretary of war. He also must realize it ia probably the last position he will have, and he wants to hang on to it as long as be can. There is no doubt that McKinley ia in a tighter place than he has been during the ad ministration, and Alger docs not intend to leave him by voluntary getting out. It will take all hia effrontery to remain when he sees that every man with whom he associates thinks he ought to get out and relieve the president of the embar rassment which ia caused by hia political alliance. Alger -sill probably find him self more and more ignored aa secretary of war and snubbed by every member of the cabinet; but he won't resign unless kicked out. Deafness Cannot De Cared. by local applications, aa they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There ia only one way to cure deafness, and that ia bv constitutional remediea Deafnesa ia caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus tachian Tube. When thia tube ia in' flamed you have a rambling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed, Deafness ia the result, and nnless the inflammation can be taken out and thia tube restored to its normal condition, bearing will be destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which ia nothing but an in flamed condition of the mncoua sur faces. . We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh -Cure. Send for circulars ; free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O. j"Sold by Druggiste, 75c. 6-10 Hall's Family Pills are the beat. Mt. Lowe Railway Sold. Los Angeles, Cal., June 28. Valen tine Peyton, who waa the heaviest in vestor in the Mount Lowe railroad prop erty, at the foreclosure sale, haa pur chased the Chicago intereet, that was represented by A. B. Cody. The pur chase price ia not known. The other Chicago interest ia still held by the Singer estate. . For the Fourth of July the O. R. & N. Co. will sell excursion tickets to any rail station within 300 miles from tell ing station at one fare for the round trip. Tickets on eale July 2nd, 3rd and 4th and will be good for return passage up to and including July 6th, 1899. Ate Phosphorus. Lebanon, June 27. Word waa re ceived today of the death of the 3-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mra. A. T. Thompson, of Foster, fifteen miles from tbia place. Saturday evening the child ate the phosphorus from a block of matchea. All night she suffered intense pain. 0 t . o o & 0 ay y p u jjp -jp- -yp- 'T- -TJT- -"P" JT- -- J? It's Oar? CUay of doing business. Keeps others gucs3ing; stepping lively to keep up. People wonder how we do it. Other dealers shake their heads and make unworthy insinuations, but we continue to offer surprises; invite you to call and look, examine, compare and investigate to your heart's content. We never make a claim that we do not substantiate; do just as we advertise to do always. THIS WEEK We will continue to sell Ladies' $1.25 black figured Dress Skirts, full lined and velvet bound, at 69 cents. Ladies $2.50 black serge Dress Skirts, made as you would have them made yourself; this week at the special price of 97 cents. Ladies' fine vesting top, tan vici kid, lace shoes; spring 1899 styles; an elegant style and a bargain shoe at $3.50; this week, Special, $2.65. Ladies' fine black kid Oxford Ties, with vesting top, new coin toe ; turn sole ; 1899 spring style; worth $2.50; this week re duced to $1.90. See Our Windows. IA. M. Williams & Co. I sa. mm mpulse si I8-lnch Motor. and lOfOrS MANUFACTUHED BY AMERICAN IMPULSE WHEEL CO. SUITABLE FOR DRIVING GENERATORS AND STAMP MILLS, ELEVATORS, PRINTING PRESSES, ETC. Circulars and particulars furniBhed on application. F. S. GUNNING, Agent, jan26 THE DALLES, OREGON. DEALERS IN fill kinds of funeral Supplies Grandall&Bupget UNDERTAKERS EMBALMERS The Dalles, Or. IJobes, Bufial Shoes, Ete.