CD VOL. XI THE DALLES, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1899, NO 237 CKEAT AE!E3UAL IR3EElTORY CLEARANCE SAL! Continues with greater vim than eyer. We are pleased to note the liberal returns daring the opening week of our Sale, and to remind our customers that 'all lice advertised laf t week, at eame reduced prices during the entire month of January, This week we add new items, good seasonable items to which, in turn, will be added other lines as we progress. will continue Men's Heavy Ribbed Underwear. The value is 75c per garment. The weight and color for warmth and service. Our clear ance sale price is Our Clearance Sale of Table Linens and Napkins at 25 Per Cent Discount will be remembered is still on. Boys' and Girls' Hosiery. We have decided to close three linea of black- cotton Hos iery, extra values, which we advise all mothers to sec. 15c and 20c Miss' and Child's im- n ported black cotton hose..-. -LUC pair 25s Bovs' heavv black cotton school . Hose, bes't quality J-OC pair c J?V Tifir jJc a lifk iftt jAc jrfW 3& dSt nfteiJV jfisJ Men's Extra Pants Made of .a heavy solid wool kersey cloth; colors a gray mixed ; seams warranted not to rip. Anyone wanting a warm durable pair of Pants sure ly will be interested in these. The price of $2 is now reduced to $1.55 Men's Duck Coat. Special! This coat is made of a heavy brown or black Duck, lined with a heavy wool blanketing and interlined with rubber, making the garment perfectly wind ana water proot. The value is $2.45 Our Clearance OK Sale Price is. ... p.00 "TTTV if n (mrCtimO rr barDer8 butchers, VV lllbt v-Ucl Lo . bartenders and waiters wear. An entirely newstock. ' QrOr1 Q 1 We have placed on sale today a O LIOLlcUL. heavy 36-inch bleached cotton Towel at $1 per dozen. Men's Colored Dress Shirts 68 cents. These shirts sold readily earlier in the season at $1.00 We bad a liberal lot of them. We sold a great many of them. The balance of some three dozen are now selling at 68 cents. Study ebirt economy in this buying, there's money to be saved by it. Mackintosh Coats that are cut right, fit right fit right and look right. Bhould be quite in demand in this kind of weather. That reminds us as having an all-wool Covert Cloth, light brown, double breasted box Mackintosh Coat, that is the perfection of style, at only which is three dollars and a half below real value. $6.50 BOVS' Long Pants Suits for Boys- -'KJjf a from 11 to 19 years are in the r4- A n o majority with ns. To re VJAJ I JLliJ.g . verse matters we will offer during our Clearance Sale, four lines of popular priced, reliable winterweiglit Suits in the above sizes, at following reductions. $5.00 Suits For $4.12 $6 50 " 5.35 $7.50 " ' 6.15 10.00 " 7.90 If your hat is turning slightly shabby, it may in interest you to know that we have a special counter of fine hats. worth from $2.00 to $3.50, which are sell ing at $1.25. Costs nothing to look at them. Fur CollareUes, fine Cloth Capes and Jackets may be bought now ot us at less their regular price, S & CO. PANAMA PROJECT THE BETTER Unite! States Colli Sscnre Control of tlit Frcncn Canal THE VIEWS OF GEN. ABBOTT Cost of the Panama Will Be Much Less Than That of the Nicaragua, and of the Two Routes, When Com pleted, Vessels Will Prefer the Panama. der active construccion with 3000 work men and a large force of engineers. Thus far about fourteen miles of the tide water part of the canal cn the At lantic side have been completed and are navigable to vessels drawing twenty eight feet of water. There are a few bars which only need dredging to make it passable to ships of great depth. Beyond that point there has been con siderable excavating to the twenty-one miles from the Atlantic. Over four miles on the tide water work on the Pa cific side of the canal have been com pleted. General Abbott says that the new plans for the completion of the Panama canal are perfectly feasible, and that.the tanal can be completed in half the time and at much less cost than it will take to dig the Nicaragua canal.' FIRE AN A JAPANESE CRUISER Nkw York, Jan. 10. Brigadier Gen- ral Henry L. Abbott, U. S. A., retired. has arrived here from France on the steamer La Champagne. He was accom panied by M. Choron, who is said to be connected w fth the new Panama Canal Company. General Abbott, who was a member of the International Technical Commission, composed of engineers of the. United States, France, Germany. Russia, England and Colombia, which recently made an inspection of the plans and work and suggested changes in the route of the Panama canal, is on his way to Washington to lay before the United States government all the information he possesses regarding the inter oceanic waterway at the isthmus of the Panama. i .He eaid that the French government bad no longer anything to do with the proposed canal and that the new com pany could dispose of its interest in the work to the United States without op position from any source, provided the terms offered were satisfactory. He further Baid that the new canal com pany with the 65,000 000 francs which it possessed when it secured 'passesBion of the big cut has simply been doing the preliminary work necessary on account of the mistaken ideas of the old en gineers. Now all the obstacles, each as the overflow of the Chagres river during the period of freshets, have been ar ranged for, and the old idea of making the connection between ocean and ocean a tide water one has been modified so that the part that is yet to he finished will be built on the lock principle. Two fifths of the entire canal work is now actually completed, and the balance un- Several Members of the Crew Burned to Death and Many Injured Ves sel a Partial Wreck. FRICTION IS EVI DENCED AT HAVANA Disagreement as to Who is in Control of the Police Force. Seattle, Jan. 10. News by steamer from Japan says: The second-class Jap anese cruiser Kaimon Kan has reached Amoy a partial wreck, as the result of a fire that broke out during a-storm at sea. Several of the members of the crew of the cruiser were burned to death and many others badly injured. The Kaimon Kan was a wooden vessel of the old style, and had on board a number of soldiers besides her regular crew. When a few days out and in the midst of a gale a fire was discovered in one of the bunkers to the rear of the engines. The Japanese crew behaved with great bravery, and streams of water were soon playing on (he fire. At this junc ture an accident to the machinery made it necessary tor some one to go down the alley. It was a case ot almost sure death but two men volunteered to go down. Before they got to the machinery in need of repair the smoke overcame them. No one would go in after them and the fire Boon consumed their bodies. The engines were kept running or the vessel would surely have foundered. The ves sel is repairing at Amoy. The news reached Tokio some time ago, but has only. leaked out through letters from home; UNCERTAINTY AS TO OUTCOME Matter Will Probably Be Referred to Washington for Arbitration Ap pointment of Cubans to Some Very Important Offices Will Be Made in the Near Future. That Throbbing Headache Would quicklv leave you, if you need Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for sick and Dervous headaches. They make pure blood andstrong nerves and build up your health. Easy to take, Tr them. Only 25 cents. Money back if not cured. Sold by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. 1 Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powders are the greatest menacers to health of the present day. ROVAL BMtlMO PQWOEB CO., HEW YORK. 'New York, Jan 10. A dispatch to the Tribune from Havana say's i-' ,- , Some friction exists in the army 'over the government of Havana. It was sup posed that Washington orders creating a separate department with Gen. Lud low in command were explicit enough to prevent conflicts ofauthority, but this expectation has not been, fully realized. The present turmoil relates to the con trol of the Havana police force. When General Greene was here Col. Moulton of the First Illinois was des ignated as military chief of police at Gen. Greene's request. He has been organizing a force with the assistance of ex-Chief McCullagb, of New York. More recent plans contemplate placing the department under the control Col. Evans, formerly governor of North Car olina, and now on Gen. Lawton'a staff. This uncertainty retards the organiza tion. Appointments of Cubans to offi ces in Havana will soon be made. . By placing Cubans in prominent positions some of the responsibility for minor po sitions will be shifted. to them. The in surgents have been complaining that appointments already made in the cus tom house and other places have gone to Cubans who stayed at home during the fighting. When leading ineurgente are in the chief positions complaints will have to be directed against them rather than against the American au Cuban officers are holding meetings daily trying to determine their own sta tue. A majority of them are inclined to co-operate with the American authori- , ties and to facilitate the diebandment of the insurgent soldiers if any provision can be made for their payment. They have gijren notice to Gomez of their views, and in order to maintain his in fluence Gomez will have to leave his camp in Santa Clara province and put himself iq touch with events in Havana. Recent reporisT represent him as more conciliatory toward the Americans. Sickness among American civillians is causing uneasiness. Mr. Doane, the custom house inspector, is the only one who has yellow fever. The health of the troops is good. Evidences of financial speculation were apparent today when Spanish sil ver took a jump forward of five per cent. The amount in the island has not ma terially diminished, and American sil ver is getting into oirculation. SHE C0MMITED SUICIDE BY HANGING Despondent Young Woman Hangs Her self in San Francisco. San Fkancisco, JaD. 8. Mrs. Charles McQuenan, aged cbout 32 yeare, com mitted suicide today by hanging herself with the trunk strap in ber apartments in a fashionable family hotel. Her mother, Mrs. Miner, wife of judge Miner of Salt Lake, returned, from a shopping excursion to find the dead body of ber daughter banging by the neck by means of the strap, which was fastened to the top of the wardrobe. - Mre. McQuenan is the wife of a prominent business man of Grand Rapids, Mich., and came to this city several weeks ago with her mother for the benefit of her health Her condition improved somewhat, and the best was hoped for by her friends, but an attack of melancholia seized her and, she took her life to escape the tor ture. She left a letter aeking forgive ness and praying for the future of her i child. . . JUST ONE NIGHT, MONDAY, JAN. 16, TUB COMEDY NOVELTY ON THE Ma IT EP A PURE STORY OF TRUE SOUTHERN HEARTS. A SMILE, - A LAUGH, A YELL. A SIG-H, A SOB, A TEAT?. A CAREFULLY SELECTED COMPANY. NEW. AND FETCHING SPECIALTIES. OLD AUNT LINDY IS A WONDER ALL SPECIAL SCENERY. Back Seats 50c. Reserved 75c. Children 25c T f a narrow escape. Thankful words written by Mrs. Ada E. Hart, of Groton, S. D. : "Was taken with a bad cold which settled on my lungs ; cough set it and finally termi nated In consumption. Four doctors gave me up, saying I could live but a short time. I gave myself up to my Savior, determined if I could not stay with my friends on earth, I would meet my absent cn-s above. ' My husband was advised to get Dr. King's New Dis covery for consumption, coughs and colds. I gave it a trial, took in all eight bottles. It has cared me, and thank God, I am eaved end now a well and healthy woman." Trial bottles free at Blakeley & Houghton's drug store. Reg ular size 50c aDd f 1. Guaranteed or price refunded. 1 Mrs. T. I. Teeters. Arlington, Or., Jan. 9 Mrs. T. J. Teeteis, wife of Postmaster Teeters, of Castle Rock, died last merit of paralysis, Mrs. Teeters was an estimable ludy, and bas lived at Castle Rock for 15 years. Her remains were brought to this city for banal. Public p Next to Columbia Hotel. Open Day and flight. CoavUous treatment to all Boulters... I-Speeial Attractions For BowIlDg Parties. Patronnge of the public respectfully nuliciied. Estebenet & Esping, Props. Branch Offlc Oregon Viavi Company, Room 7, over French ' Bank. Office hours, i to 4 p. m- Chark tte F. Roberts, Local Manager