The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 27, 1901, Image 1

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    I) c Hit II co
mMbl lit mil cle.
VOL. XIII
THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST
1901.
NO. 164
. - .mill" "E'l''"'-'
,i.n,m.'i.tUlnf;it. -Hit ,.'n '
ANcgctable Preparalionfor As
similating foe Food andRegula
Hii'4 the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes I)ige3tion.Cheerfur
ness and Rest Contains neither
Opitini.Morphine norlineraL
ot Narcotic.
Hmpe rfOltltirSAMUELPtTCHKfi
stniw Srttl
a BmwmMMi
llirm.frril
rlmfinl Uimt
Wntmpvnt norm:
A, perfect Remedy forConslipa
fion , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss of Sleep.
Facsimile Signature or
NEW YORK.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
BOERS CAPTURE
68 BRITISH
ma
A
m m mm
i
EXACT COFr OF WRAPPER.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
Interstate Trolley Line.
V . ; Wai.i.a, Wash., Auk. 20. It
ia promised hy the management of the
proposed electric railway system which
ie to connect Umatilla county. Oregon,
with this city, that work on construction
will begin within a few weeks, and ttiat
not later than two months from now a
lare force of man will be engaged in
tlic work. At present it would be im
possible to get men from ttie harvest
field, and until the crop is all iu the
warehouses and the Fall farm work
cauuiit up, farmers will not give up
their help for anything. It is expected
to begin work as soon as men can be had
readily, and the construction will be
carried on ail winter.
Question AUMvvered.
Yes, August Flower still lias the largest
eale of any medicine in the civilized
world. Your mothers and grandmother!
never thought of using anything else for
indigestion and biliousness. Doctors
were scarce and they seldom heard of
appendicitis, nervous prostration or
heart failure, etc. Ttiey used August
Flower to clean out t lie system and stop
fermentation of undigested food, regu
late the action of the liver, stimulate the
nervous and organic action of the sys
tem, and that is all they took, when feel
iQK dull and bad with headaches and
other aches. You only need a few doses
of Cireen's August Flower, in liquid
form, to make you satisfied there is
nothing serious the matter with you.
tjet Ureeu's prize almanac. Clarke A
talk's. 1
It May Have Been Murder.
McMlNMVltUi Au. 26. The body of
the unknown man found in a wheat
kid near McMinnville Friday morning
last, and over which an inquest was held
hy Coroner Chapman same day, result
ing in a verdict of suicide, has not yet
been identified. Those who first saw
'he bodv declare that it is a case of
murder and not suicide.
When your hair appears dry and to
have l,)9t its vitality it wants something
W give u life an(i vigQTt We have what
Ifti hair needs when it gets in hat con
dition. We have the Cvywn of
Beianoa Hair
oeoanut Cream
will
Grower and
Tonic. They
''lire dand WM mil' inH all
oeip diseases. For sale at Frazer's har
oer shop. Price, 60c and 75c a bottle.
Eruptions, cuts, burnt, scalds and
Bores of all kinds quickly healed by
DaWltt'l Witch Hazel Halve. Certain
IN fur pile.. Beware of Counterfeits.
Be sure you get the original He Witt's.
Clarke & Falk's P. O. Pharmacy.
Well-Knowu AetresH Dead.
San Fbanoiboo, Aug. 26. Mrs. Louise
Sheridan, better known as Louise
; Davenport, the actresp, died in this city
j last night from cirrhosis of the liver,
i She lived in extreme poverty in this city
j for several years past. Louise Daven
j port was the wife of the old-time Shakes
pearean actor, W. K. Sheridan, and under
his training developed into an actress of
recognized ability . On the death of her
husband, several vears Bgo, Mrs Sheridan
i abaudoned the stage. She was about
j 59 years of age and native of Canada.
Tut Caiman Night Alarm.
"One night my brother's baby was
, taken with Croup," writes Mrs. J. C.
' Snider, of Crittenden, Ky., "it seemed
! it would strangle beiore we could get a
j doctor, so we gave it Dr. King's New
1 Discovery, which gave quick relief and
; permanently cured it. We always keep
j it in the house to protect our children
from Croup and Whooping Cough. It
cured me of a chronic bronchial trouble
mat no other remedy would relieve."
Infallible for Coughs, Colds, Throat
and Lung troubles. 50c and If 1.00. Trial
hottlee free at G. 0. Blakeley's drug
tore. I
Pound Quid lu Town.
Bakkk City, Aug. 20 Reports have
been received here of a great strike in
Whitney that has set that town agog.
While excavating for the new city scales
this morning the man struck a rich
ledge of free-gold ore that will run $500
to the ton. The find aroused great
excitement in the town, and people who
own town lots are prospecting for ore.
What will be done w ith the property on
j which the gold was found is not known,
but it ie reported that the owners pro-
posed to do development work on the
j ledges.
t'axtor Will Come 10 1'ortlaud.
lIPIpiHOBMOl, Aug. 20 Rev. Albyn
: Ksson has been in Monmouth this week
! arranging to move to Portland, at which
place he is pastor of one of the Christian
churches. The Monmouth Christian
j church, the scene of his recen' pastoral
duties, is one of the largest churches in
! ihe state of that denomination, and is
1 without pastor for the present.
j Mrs. S. H. Allport, Johnstown, Pa.,
says: "Our little girl almost strangled
to death with croup. The doctors said
she couldn't live but she was instantly
I relieved by One Minute Cough Cure.
j Clarke & Falk's P. O. Pharmacy.
Subscribe for This Cukoniclk.
Column Sent North of Orange River
Colony Surrounded bv a Superior
Force One Was Killed and Four
Wounded.
LONDON, Aug. 28. A dispatch from
Lord Kitchener, dated from Pretoria,
today, says :
"Three officers and sixty-five men
who were sent north of Ladybrand
lOrange River Colony 1 on the right of
Klliot's column, were surrounded on un
favorable ground and captured by a
superior force August 22. One man was
killed and four were wounded. The
prisoners were released. Am holding
an inquiry.
"Have received a long letter from
Steyn containing an argumentative
statement of the Boer case, and saying
he will continue to tight ; also a short
letter from Dewet to the same effect.
"Botha writes, acknowledging the
receipt of my proclamation and pro
testing against it, and stating that the
Boers intend to go on fighting. On the
other hand, the surrenders lately have
increased considerably."
Notahle Yield of Wheat.
Salem, Aug. 20 Dexter Field, a
farmer living two miles east of Salem
sowed three bushels of wheat last Janu
ary on one and five-eighths acres of
ground, and from winch he harvested
the crop the last day of July, threshing
it August 20th, and obtaining a yield of
eighty bushels, or fifty bushels to the
acre. The ground had been well manured
and had not grown wheat for some years,
but it is an ordinary, uudrained field,
and it is thought the general wheat yield
of this valley could he brought to Bbout
that amount by proper cultivation and
attention to change of crops, manuring,
etc.
Hartmaii IlecldeH tu Eat.
Abtoiua, Ang. 26. Fred Hartman.
the Salvation Array man who is confined
in the county jail, to serve a sentence
for illegal fishing, has, after nearly six
days of fasting, decided to eat. LaBt
evening the captain of the local army
corps called on Hartman and the latter
agreed to eat, provided the army would
prepare his food and send it to him.
This arrangement was made, and in the
future Hartman will have his regular
meals. He, however, stayed with his
determination not to eat the prison fare.
Mummer KscuraluiM tu tin- Sea Cuaet.
Only $0.50 for the rouud trip from
The Dalles to Long Beach, Tioga, Pacific
Park, Ocean Park or Nahcotta, Wash.,
good for return until Sept. 15, 1901.
Baggage checked through to destina
tion. The steamer T. J. Potter will
leave Portland daily except Sunday and
Mouday, and the Hassalo daily except
Sunday, at 8 p. in., and 10 p. in. on
Saturdays, making direct connections at
Astoria and at llwaco for all points on
Oregon and Washington beaches. Call
on Jas. Ireland, ageut, The Dalles,
for through time card to all beach
points. jl3-2m
Voqt Opera house
K. J. CLABKBi Manager.
TUESDAY. AUGUST 27th,
one Ntght Only.
Uncle Tom's
Cabin.
The BABNU11 of them all.
The Greatest ( at, the mor-t ( .orgeous
Scenery ever given this touching master
piece. 30--PEOPLE--3O.
Best selected company on the road.
Special Scenery. Special Cars.
Kuaervt-d Heutej, dOc. Children, SICi
KuMiraed u will h on U- at Clarke A
Falk'e Drugstore.
Lincoln
Sale V V
Yes, Abraham Lincoln, grand Old Abe. The idol of all honest men. The
incarnation of truthfulness, fidelity and justice. Verily a name to conjure with.
No man, or set of men on the face f this earth holds the Illustrious name in
in greater veneration than the partners of this concern, and when we tell yon this sale
is named "Lincoln Sale.'" in order to impress on yon the absolute trutHful
ness of tHe statements used Herein, yon may believe us, tor
the man who'd use Abe Lincoln's name as a certificate of character for a shady state
ment is a horse thief, and yon know that is not our measure.
Too much faith in Spring weather leaves us today with font- thousand dollars
worth more stock than we had last rear this time. This won't do, shoes don't im
prove with age, and what is more we need that money for fall goods. 'Lincoln Sale''
will he the most uncommon price cutting time.
Children and blind men can come and he as sure of real bargains as they are
of their lives.
This sale will especially appeal to reasonable folks who can tell a straight
story when they hear it to economical people who know a cut price when they see
it, and to doubting Thomases who have been fooled much and often by counterfeit
price cutting:
Lincoln Sale now on and will continue all week.
On tHe 90c Table
there is an uncommon lot of Children's
Lace and Button Shoes, in black and
chocolate kid, with good, comfortable
broad toes capped. Sizes run from 8'to
11: values to $1.75; and sizes from 5 to
8. for little tots good strong soles, roomy
toes : black or tans.
There are Hoys' Shoes stout and
honest, but not all sizes. A few pair of
blacks, also a few tans: sizes to tit most
boys: Shoes that were $1.35 and $1.75.
There are also a few pair of Ladies'
Black Kid pera Slippers; cheap at the
regular price of $1.25. Some liner Ox
fords in small sizes: narrow toes; were
$2.50 and over.
On tHe $2.50 Table
you will find a line each of Ladies' and
Men's Stylish, I 'p-to-date Shoes, suitable
for fall wear.
The price should not lie a cent less
than $3.50 what we intended them to
sell for at time of purchase.
The Ladies' Shoe lias a medium sole,
broad round toe, patent leather tip, and
is made of a good kid stock.
The Men's Shoe is a vici kid made
on the' popular broad last and welt sole;
has all the lines and curves of a $5 Shoe.
On tHe $1.20 Table
is a lot of Ladies' Kid Button Shoes that
are worth the regular prices of 2.50, $2.00
ami $1.75 ever' day in the week or they
are not worth a cent.
A batch of Men's Shoes that, still carry
a $1.50 tag yes, and several pair are 2.50
goods. The only drawback being that they
are in large sizes only '.), 10 and lis.
Shoes for little girls on this table, too
sizes running from to 2; nice dressy
Shoes thai will be just right for school wear;
good materials, honestly made. They were
$1.75 and $2.00 tans and black,
Ladies' fine 4 strap black kid Sandals;
French heel. Were $2.25; if you are in time
you may get your size.
On tHe $2.00 Table
are shoes for men and shoes for women.
Good enough for anybody for they are
bang-up good ones. The price on the
cheapest shoe on this table was Some
ot them $:.;() and still more.
Men's patent Calf Oxford ties; some
tan call Skin shoes and some vicis. Nunc
extra good things in ladies' black kid street
shoes welt soles, military heels and
fashionable round toes, pat. tipped.
THe $2.15 Table
is covered with Pingree'i composite $3.00
shoes for women- that never sold tor less
than $'. (Jood styles every one of them.
A. M. Williams L Co.
Just wet the affected part freely with Subscribe for The Chronicle.
Mysterious Pain Cure, a Scotch remedy.
aiKUhe pain i. gone. Sold hy Clarke k AdVCrtiSO in the ChrOmCl