O VOL. XI THE DALLES, OREGON. THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1899 NO 298 (comuoHTto) ADMIRAL. GEO. DEWK.Y OUH OPE NING DRY Clothing Department ON MONDAY NEXT, the same being the 27th. day of the month, we make formal display of our flEW STOCK OF CLiOTftlflG. To make this a red-letter day in the history of our Clothing Business, we have laid under contribution the best and fore most makers of fine and popular-priced Clothing in the United States, and to inspect their newest and best productions for the spring season of 1899, we cordially invite you to attend next Monday. "Ladies, bring your husbands. Husbands, bring your wives." (4iJy X"7 TV i (copyrigktcd) ADMIRAL W. S. SCHLEY O O (cOPYRIGHTEd) GEN'L riTZHUGH LCC (cOPYRIOKTCo) -OL. THEO. ROOSEVELT (c3PVBIGHTEo) GEN'L KZLSOff A. MILE: A. b . miwm & go. CLOTHING ELEGANCE. Our display of high-grade Suits will particularly interest the man who is still under the impression that to posaeES a thoroughly stylish, perfect fitting euit of clothes he must needs patronize the merchant tailor. We can please him in ev ery wav at about half the merchant tailor's price. We can fit the Hard-to-Fit." iycic3cir ay,rajgTc jsy jhc jf- j. jiV 5 -J -p j- -- jt- j. jk. jyp. -gpf js -f- -"t- -HpjF- -"f- yF -"r- Jy- S ADMIRAL W. T. SAMPSON A. Ivl WILLIAIvIS & 00. 1 ; : , CAUGHT IN A FIRE TRAP Twenty Lodge Ladies Suddenly Snr ronnded Dy Fire. TWO DEAD, MANY INJURED Lose Their Heads and Jump From the Window to the Pavement Below- Injured Doing Well. late. The fire swept through the door and down the single stairway. Those nearest the door fled through the blind ing smoke and reached the street with hands and faces bnrned and blistered. The rest faced the solid wall of flame. There was a fire escape at the south front of the building, but not one of them seems to have thought of it. They rushed panic-stricken to the windows. In anothor instant the spectators, at tracted by the elouds of smoke, were horrified to see one after another spring from the open window and fall heavily to the pavement. Most of them were bleeding from severe cats and bruises, and all were burned until their torn and blackened skins hung in threads. In a few minutes all. except Miss Taylor, re covered conRcionsnens. and the nhvsi-J cians and nurses, hastily summoned, did all that was possible to relieve their Bufferings. . Omaha, March 21. Comparatively insignificant in material destruction, but appalling in its harvest of death and Buffering, was a fire that partially destroyed the Patterson block at Sev enteenth and Douglas streets this after soon. Two of its victims have died ; one more is not expected to live, and about twenty others are suffering from broken limbs and burned and lacerated flesh. The blaze started just after 3 o'clock from a gasoline stove explosion in a room In the rear of the third floor of the building and next to the elevator shaft It was not discovered until it had spread to the adjoining apartments, and the entire floor was filled with smoke and flames. About twenty members of the women's lodge of Maccabees were at tending a committee meeting in a wait- ingroomin front of the middle of the building, on the same floor. They were unconscious of danger until the janitor threw open the door and told them to get out before the flames cat them ' off. The warning came too CORBIN DECLINED THE PROMOTION Would Not Stand in the Way of tne Generals of the line. WAS IN THE RIGHT PLACE Injured Doing Well. Omaha, March 22. Most of the in jured in yesterday's fate in the Patter son block are progressing favorably. There is a suspicion that the fire may have been of incendiary origin, as sev eral people have informed the coroner that two women were seen to hurriedly emerge from the basement near the foot of the elevator shaft a few moments be fore the fire was discovered. Htory of m -SlmTe. Te be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of diseaee is the worst form of slavery. Geo. D. Williams, tf Manchester, Mich., tells how such a slave was made free. He says : "My wife has been so helpless for five years that she could not turn over in bed alone. After using two bottles of' Elec tric Bitters, she is wonderfully im proved and able to do her own work.' This supreme remedy for female dis eases quickly cures nervousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, headache, back ache, fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godsend to weak, sickly, run down people. Every bottle guaranteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by Blakeley and Houghton, druggists. 6 You need have no boils if you will take Clarke & Falk's sure cure for boils. Number of Major Generals Were Limited and All Were Needed in the Field. Nbw York, March 22 A dispatch to the Tribune from Washington eays : In the furthcoming army register, the first to be printed for more than a year, which will be issued by the war department by theendof this week, official corrobora tion is given to the report that Brigadier General Corbin refused to accept a com mission as major-general of volunteers which was. tendered' to him by the president in recognition of his services in the war with Spain. From the new official register it appears that such a commission was made out for General Corbin August 31,' 189S, and declined. - This entry :a notably conspicuous in the. register7 because in the 300 pages of the volume, containing the complete military records of all the officers in the army, there are few eimilar instances of an appointment by the president having been followed by a declination. ' General Corbin, when asked why he did not accept, said : "The number of major-generals was limited, and we needed every one of them in the field. I could not stand in the way of any man who was in the fighting line. I wanted them to have their pro motions first. My place was here. The law did not specifically provide that the adjutant-general of the army, large as it had grown to be, should be' increaeed in rank. It did permit an increase of major-generals in the line,- and I thought the officers of the line ought to have all the vacancies as long as we needed them."' JOHN SHERMAN NOT DEAD Yesterday's Dispatch Announcing Bis Demise on the Steamer Paris Was . Erroneous. . John Sherman is .not dead. The dis patch received by the New York Evening Telegram Tuesday and put on the wires by the Assocaited Press, was erroneous. Mr. Sherman is now reported improving, with fair chances for recovery. Washington, March 22. Mrs. McCal lam, daughter of Sherman, received a telegram from Mr. Wilberg, who is ac companying the former secretary of state on his tour of the West Indies, announc ing Sherman's continued improvement. The Chicago will probably arrive at Santiago tonight, ' and if Sherman and his friends are still of the same mind they will take him on board and bring him home. - Mrs. Sherman is the one person of the senator's household who suffered neither from the first announcement, or rejoiced over the second. She was not informed of either. Mrs. Sherman has been quite ill from paralytic attack for several months, and had never been informed even of the senator's serious illness, for fear of its effect upon her. - It was felt, when the news of his death came today, that it wopld have to be broken to her, but all hesitated to make the announce ment. It was ultimately decided to postpone the sad duty until tomorrow. She was thus saved the shock.' . Already ' many telegrams of condol- BSOIUTEIY fruRE Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAL RAKrWJ POWDER CO., NEW YORK. ence and personal calls of sympathy had been received at the house. How the Mistake Was Made. Santiago dS Cuba, March 22. In vestigation regarding the false report sent out yesterday saying that John Sherman was dead reveals the facts in the case. The chief signal officer here. Captain Leigh, received the news from the signal- office at Guantanamo. The men on duty at the latter office got the story from the French cabl?, and having no reason to doubt the correctness of the statement, at once advised Captain Leigh. How tbe French company made the mistake is. not stated. Sherman continues to improve.. As the season of the year when pneu monia, la grippe, sore throat,- coughs, colds, catarrh, bronchitis and lung troubles are to be guarded against, nothing "is a fine substitute," will "answer the purpose," or is "just as good" as One Minute Cough Cure.- That is tbe one infallible remedy for all lung, throat or bronchial troubles. Insist vigorously upon having it if "something else" is offered you. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. . ' . - The Pope's Condition. Rome, March 21. The pope's physi cian, Dr. Lapponi, and Professor Maz zaoni visited his holiness at 5 o'clock this afternoon and found his general health good and the seat of the recent operation in excellent condition. While conversing ' with them the pope ex pressed deep grief at tbe false stories circulated as to his health, especially reports about a second operation, which had so disturbed Catholics deeply in terested in liia welfare. Rubber and cotton garden hose 4 cent 8 per foot, and higher, at Maya & Crowe's. " Boarders ai?d todrs Day Uqel( or montl?. 5or. 4tl? and Union. Pablie Boauling Alley . Next to Columbia Hotel. Open Day and Night. Courteous treatment to all Bouilevs... Special Attractions For Bowling; Parties. Patronage of the public respectfully aoliciled. Hapy Esping, Proprietor.1 ILLS ONE FOR A DOSE. ReraoT Pimples, Prevent Biltonsnees, Porifj the Blood, t"'h' The, in.lth.r or"Jk?nf T?SS SJiSZ mil wnpln free, or fall box iSr-