cn If DTTf THE DALLES, WASCO. COUNTY, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 31. 1897. VOL. VII. NUMBER 18. I; J UJ Ay FLOODS IN ILLINOIS Waters Show No Signs of Abatement as Yet, , STILL HIGHER WATER EXPECTED Weather Bureau Warn, People to Pre ' 1 para for it--Suspension of Traffic Threatened ' 1 1 Virginia, 111 , March 26. The Sanga mon and Illinois rivers continue to rise, having risen two or three inches daily for the past two weeks. The high -water marks of former years are passed and the situation grows alarming. Many families have vacated their homes on the lowlands, going to the bluff for safety. Toe Illinois is still below the high water mark six inches. . The mayor of Beardstown has called a meeting, to devise some way and means to protect the Beardstown-Frederlck road, which ia now threatened with de struction. ' '. . further It Is To Come. ' ' Qcisct, 111., March 26.- The Mississip pi river here re, isters 13 feet 5 inches in 24 hours. The lowlands are submerged, and many farmers can not get into the "citv. The government weather bureau has sent out warning that the river will be 14 feet by Saturday, . So far the water has offered the rail road no interference, but it ia probable that it will in a few days. The track of the St. Louis, Keokuk, & Northwestern . between here and Keokuk, is being rais ed in low places. The officials say the track will stand a rise of eighteen inches more before their trains will have to be taken off. - The Flood at Metropolis. ' Metropolis, 111., March 26. This city presented a sorry appearance' today in consequence of the flood. . The river is a vast sea. There are not to exceed' 25 dwellinz-honses along the river front where the occupants have not been flnv . en out bv the water a. , Fences and out- : houses are all gone. The Southern hotel and a dozen other houses are wrecks. The overflow extends from Fillmore Btreet to Belmont bayou, on Calhoun street, from Second street to Ferry, where the water spreads to Market Then it goes farther nntil it reaches Third street. KNOCKS AT OCR DOOR. Hawaii Wants to Be Annexed to the United States. Washington, March 26, It is said that formal application for annexation to the United States probably will be made soon by the government of Hawaii throught its minister to the' United .States. The application will be present ed to the state departement, and it is expected will be transmitted to congress. Ex-Minister Thurston, Attorney-General Smith and General Harwell, of New York, have been here since the in auguration in the interests of annexa tion. Mr. Match, the Hawaiian min ister, and Mr. Smith saw the . president yesterday, and he listened attentively to - the arguments they had to present. Meesers. Hatch and Smith also have seen Secretary Sherman in regard tq the question of annexation, and presented to him arguments in its favor. . They decline to discuss the attitude of the president or his premier on the subject, except to say the situation is - encourag ing. Everything, said Minister Hatch, is as yet in a tentative shape, and noth ing formal has been done. Attorney-General Smith,- who . has , been in the city several weeks, will start . next week on his return to the island. FRIGHTENED TO DEATH. . The Strange Case of a Tonus; Woman in Chicago Chicago, March 26. Elizabeth Paul son, aged 18 years, is dead from the ef- - fects of fright. Such is the opinion of the attending physician, and the coroner bo found after listening to his testimony and that of the family. Miss Paulson was the dadgbter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Paulson, respected German people. She , was a comely young woman, and was the anjwi.l Mm nf rnr maranfa ' althnnah r - - i e there were other sons and dan?htera in their household. Last Friday evening Elizabeth and a younger sister, Thora, were alone with t fitkir mnt.hfir- W hftn thft tvn trivia vAnf. to their rooms to retire they took no can dle with them, for their chamber was but-a step from -the living rooms. Thora fonnd occasion to go back to the other part of the house and left her sisr ter alone for a ' moment. . An instant later a frightful scream came from the room and Elizabeth rushed out, calling piteously for help. Mrs. Paulson came to her assistance, bat it was some time before the girl could speak plainly enough for her mother to understand the cause of her sudden terror. At length she was able to say there was a strange man in her room. To everybody's sur prise, hoWever, nothing was found that approached the likeness of a man more nearlv than a woman's cloak and hat which hung on the 'wall in a position where the light from a neighboring gas lamp cast a strange shadow about it. All efforts to calm the girl proved fa tile. She seemed to be in a constant condition of terror. Symptoms of epi lepsy developed, the periods of uncon sciousness grew more protracted, and yesterday she died. Mr. Paulson, the father, said. "I have no doubt they are right in saying she was scared to death.' CRETANS ARE STARTING. The Dead Lie Unburled side. by the Road London, March 28. The Daily Mail's correspondent eays' that Admiral Can a viro, commanding the international fleet in Cretan waters, has wired to the Italian government to send immediately a large land force, which is imperatively necessary to cope with the Cretan in' surgents. . - - Admiral Canavirp, it is said, asserts that conditions in the interior of the island are so terrible as the result of famine that even the lepers ere leaving the lazar house; the inhabitants are panic-stricken, and the dead lie by the roadside unburied. A Times' dispatch from Athens says that when It became known Saturday that. Crown Prince Constantino would leave the city in the evening for the Greek camp'at. Larissa, to take -command of the Greek armies in the field, a large crowd gathered on Constitution square adjoining the palace. As. the evening approached, the crowd increased to a multitude, and the streets adjoin ing were filled with an excited . throne, cheering, singing patriotic songs and firing reoief9. The populace shouted "For nnion and war!" and cheered continually for the crown prince and the army. Cornered the Onion Market. Kansas City, March 28. James " Mo Kinney, a produce dealer of this city1 is credited with having cprneied the .on ion market of the country. Within the past month the price of onions has mov ed np from 60 and 80 cents per bushel to $1 50 and $1 75 and the person reaping the lion's share of the profit is said to be McKinnev. Germany Steps Out. Constantinople, March b.Lt is asserted here tonight.on wbat'is regarded as reliable authority, that in consequence of the refusal of Lord Salisbury to join in a blockade of Greek ports, Germany has given notice to the powers of her in tention to withdraw from the concert. The man who eats becausehe is hun gry js, thus far, on the level with the brutes. The man who stops eating the moment bi hunger is appeased is the wise man. Nature needs no more food than be calls for. Continued excess brings about" indigestion or dyspepsia, with loss of flesh,' strength, sleep, am bition and mental power, and an ac cumulation of aches, pains - and . many dangerous local maladies. .. ' The stomach now can do. nothing alone. We must appeal to some artific ially digested food which can also digest other foods. That is to say, we must nse the Shaker Digestive Cordial. The effect is prompt and cheering. The chronic pain and distress ceases. Appetite presently revives. Flesh, and vigor gradually comes back, and ' the sufferer recovers. But he must be care ful in future. A trial bottle for 10 cents. Laxol is the best medicine for chil dren. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil. Drowned at a Ford. Gainesville, Tex., March 29. Miss Ruby Smith, daughter of Alderman Smith, of this place, and Albert Thomp son, a young man who was accompany ing ber from Era to ' this city, were drowned last night five miles west of here in attempting to ford a creek that bad become a raging torrent, as a result of the unprecedented rainfall of yester day and last night. : A Valuable Prescription. Editor Morrison of Worthing ton, Ind., "Sun," writes: "You have a' valuable prescription in Electric Bitters, and I can cheerfully recommend it for Consti pation and Sick Headache, and as a gen eral system tonic it has no equal." Mrs. Annie Stehle, 2025 Cottage Grove Ave., Chicago, was all run down, -could not eat nor digest food, had a backache which never left her and felt tired and weary, but eix bottles of Electric Bitters re stored ber health and renewed strength. Prices 50 cents and $1.00. Get a Bottle at Blakeley and Houghton's Drug Store. . . . . ':.:' ,(6) BIG GUNS FOR CUBANS Expedition is Successfully . Landed on the Island. ACTIVITY OF INSURGENT FORCES Famine in the District of Sanetl Splr- itus. Due to the Failure of Sugar Crops. Havana, via Key West, Marh 27. An expedition carrying arms, ammunition and heavy field pieces has been landed successfully at' Boca de Jarnco, to the northwest of Havana. It is reported that a well-known Havana merchant Colin de Caidenas, was among those landed with the expedition. The outskirts of La Paste wore raided by the insurgents, who Backed and burn ed a number! of bouses, retiring after light skirmish with the government soldiers. Numerous insurgent forces have been gathering at a point about eieht miles from. Canaiuani, under di rect orders from Maximo Gomez. La Lucha yesterday attacked the mil! tarv censor at.tbe palace, claiming he knocks out the news under any pre- tenfee," adding that the censor's policy of keeping the papers from printing news will "go against him." Famine has commenced to invade the district of Sancti Spiritus. The failure of the sugar crop is the principle cause. The planters have abandoned all hope of grinding thiB 'season. Laurada In the Delaware. Philadelphia, March 27. The fa mous filibustering steamer jauraaa passed the Delaware capes at 6 :30 to night. The Laurada, after having had her boilers examined and pronounced in an unsafe condition, sailed from Bal timore, ostensibly for Wilmington, Del. for repairs, about Feornary 20 last. It was reported at the time the -filibuster had gone on another expedition, but Captain John D. Hart, her owner de nied the story emphatically.' Since that time, however, the Laurada has; been reported but once. Gurley, which arrived here Wednesday, March 24,-from Jamaica. He stated that he had seen the Laurada, March. 10, off Wattling's island, one of the Bahamas He said she had a cargo of'some kind on board, and was heading to leeward. The captain of the Gurley was positive in bis identity of the Laurada, saving he was near enough to read her name. MISSISSIPPI FLOOD . A Crisis Prevails at Qulncy News From the Lower Rlrer. Quincy, 111., March 27. A flood crisis prevails here. At 6 o'clock,, the Mis siesippi passed the 14-foot mark, and is still rising at the rate of one-third of an inch an hour, in spite of the fact that the river is from three to eight miles wide ' above and below here, Ferry-boats mo red a number of families and droves of stock from Hortdn'a island, which is now almost covered with water. Residents on the opposite side of Quincy bay were forced to abandon their homes. Farmers have been fighting the rising water night and day on the levees north of town. It is feared that all the levees will go by the board tomorrow, unless the .rise ceases. The first break will mean the flooding of thousands of acreB of valuable farm lands. . . Danger Threatened at Vicksburg-. Vicksbubg, Miss., 'March 27. The rise in the river threatens most serious damage to (he levees. The latest re ports from as far north as Greenville, Miss., and from both sides of the river, are that the levees are being held at all points. . ' . A special from Lake Province, La. complains of lack of tools and material, of which large quantities, however, are now en route from this city. It istioped they will arrive in time. The situation is daily becoming more grave, and a crisis seems near at hand. The people everywhere are displaying the most de voted, courage and endurance.; The river here rose six-tenths in the last 24 hours. The guage at 6 p. m. reads 48.1 feet. ..' . .The Situation at Cairo. Cairo, 111., March .27. The situation here continues to improve. The guage shows a fail of about an inch. . It reads 51 feet tonight. The winds last night were very severe on the levee in this neighborhood. At Beard's point,- the situation is distressing. Twenty-five or thirty houses there have been washed from the foundations. A. large amount of the Cotton Belt tracks have been washed away, and from 75 to 100 yarde of the levee there! ia gone. This evening however, the water stands on both sides of the embankment. WARNED ONCE KORE. Powers Demand That All Troops Recalled Trom Frontier.. Be Athens, March 28. The Crown Prince Cpnstatine has arrived at Voli. During the passage of the canal EgripoB, Prince George went on board and bade his brother a touching adieu. The ministers of the powers held conference today and it is stated drew up the terms of a collective note to the Greek government, requesting that the Greek troops be recalled from the fron tier. It Is understood that a similar note will be presented to the porte, and that if either power refuses, ita principal ports will be blockaded. A meeting of the Cretan delegates will be held shortly at Athens to draft reply to the admiral's proclamation autonomy. ' Alleged to Be Greek Strategy. Of London, March 28. The Daily Graph ic understands that the British proposal to Greece and Turkey to withdraw their armies from the frontier actually ongi natedat Athens. . The Turks now occupy all the passes in the mountains, and the best strategical positions. According to the Daily Graphic, the Greeks proposed a simultaneous withdrawal in order tq be able to capture these positions by rush attack after making a feint of com pliance. - y Ready to Take Constantinople- London, March 28. A Times dispatch from Vienna says that, owing to the keen anxiety felt at St. Petersburg, as to what may occur in the near future at Constantinople, or in the vicinity, the czar has ordered the concentration of 200,000 troops in the four governments ot South Russia. The Russian volcnteer fleet is now available to transport troops when evere required. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all otbe diseases put together, and until the last few years was' supposed to be incurable. For great many years doctors pronounced it local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and there fore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrah Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teasDOonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to care. Send for circulars and testmonials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo', O 6T"SoId by Druggists, 75c. 7 -.Six Children Drowned. Seneca, Kan., March 29. Six chil dren of John McGrath, a farmer resid ing in the western part of Nemaha coun ty, were drowned near their home Sun day evening while attempting to ford Pole creek, which la running bank ' full. Bucklen's Arinca salve. The best salve in tne world for cute, braises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped, hands, chilblains. corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no nay required It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Blakeley and Houghton, druggists. At the Greek Cabinet Meeting, Athens, March 29. At a cabinet meeting today, important resolutions were adopted relative to making pro vision against the contingency of coerc ive measures .upon the part of the pow ers against Greece. For bale or Trade. A desirable ranch of 160 acres, within ionr miles of Dalles City, with one span mares, harness, wagons, plows and other property. Fine fruit land and abun dance of water. Will trade for Dalles City property. Inquire of A. S. Mac Allisteb, ; Real Estate and Insurance Agent. Chronicle office. The Dalles, Or. Admirals Call for More Troops. Canea, March 29. In order to insure the security of the occupied towns, the admirals have telegraphed to their re spective governments for additional men They have decided to occupy Akrotti. . Fatal Holler Explosion. Augusta, Ky., March 29. The" boiler of a sawmill exploded today, killing two men and fatally injuring three others. The killed are : Calvert Boone and J. D. Tucker. : ' Hot Clam broth every day from 10 a. m. to 12 :30 p. m. and 4 to 6 p. m. at Stabling & Williams. mch4 Tom McCoy had opened his new barber shop opposite the Clarenden restaurant on Second street. - m4-lm RIVERA IS CAPTURED Maceo's Gallant Successor Taken Prisoner. IT WAS A HARD-F0CGHT BATTLE A .Colonel and a Lieutenant Fell Into the Enemy's Hands Along With Their Gallant Commander Havana, March 29. General Hernah dez Velasco, continuing operations in the hills of Pinar del . Rio, with' the troops under bis command, was engaged yesterday morning at Cabazeadas, Rio Hondo district, with an insurgent force of .100 men under General Ruiz Rivera The insurgents were dispersed, and their position captured after an hour'a fighting. The troops .captured .a number of prisoners, including Major General Ruiz Rivera, his chief of staff, Colonel Bacallao and adjutant, Lieutenant Terry, General. Rivera' and Lieutenant Terry were both wounded. . Rivera, who succeeded Antonio Maceo in command of the insurgent forces in Pinar del Rio, is considered next in military importance to General Maximo Gomez. The Insurgents left ten men killed. The troops, pursuing the enemy, 'cap tured a quantity of arms, ammunition, dynamite, caps, ete. The troops had one man killed, and Lieutenant Wol- gesraffen . and twenty-four ' soldiers wounded. General Rivera and his chief of staff, Colonel Bacallao, were brought in pris oners at San Cristobal, Pinar del Riotf last evening. .Lieutenant lerry, ad jutant 'of General Rivera, who was made prisoner at the same time died on the way to San Cristobal. He was wounded by the explosion of a Spanish shell dur ing the engagement at Cabazeadas. . OWEN MELTON IS DYING. He Cannot jlluch Longer. 'Withstand Prison Life in Cuba. Havana, March 29. Owen Melton, the American newspaper correspondent who is confined with the Competitor crew in Cabanas, is reported to be dying. , A lady who went to Cabanas recently to see relatives incarcerated there, states that Melton is so weak, that be is able to speak only in a whisper. He could not raise himself to the window without the assistance of his companion. Melton's cell is damp and foulsmell ing. A fellow-occupant of. tne ..same compartment with Melton died with typhoid fever a few days ago. Melton has had no medical attention, .and is now a mere skeleton. Be told the lady mentioned above that be felt that his end was hear, and that he was fully resigned in his fate, preferring death here now to transportation in chains to a Spanish penal station off the African coast later on. ' An American Killed in Cuba. - Washington, March 29. The follow ing dispatch was received' from Consul General Lee, dated Havana, yesterday : rC. E. Crosby, of New York, repre- tentative of the Chicago Record, is re ported killed while watching, with field glasses the combat between Spanish and insurgent forces near Arroya Blanco, close to the boundary of Puerto Principe, and Santa Clara. He came to the island January 30th, and is said to have gradu ated at St. Cyr, France." , LEVEES 'ARE IN ' DANGER. Situation Along the Mississippi Shores Is Serious.' Washington, March 29. Colonel Gil lespie, president of the .Mississippi commission, has telegraphed General Wilson, chief of engineers, from Vicks burg, nnder date of yesterday as fol lows : "The ganges along the - river from Memphis to YickBburg give A flood read ing varying from IK t 3 feet above any previously recorded readings.' - The feel ing everywhere is one of uneasiness. all the state levee boards are battling gainst the rising floods regardless of cost. As yet no widely spread damage baa ' been reported, though several breaks in levees above Greenville, on both banks, have occurred. The levees are seriously strained at all points." Crevasse at Greenville. Greenville, Misb.,' March 29- A crevasse occurred last night in the levee, seven miles south of Greenville, on thai Mississippi side, through which an im mense volume of water -is pouring into the Black and Steele Rayou country. The opening is 500 feet wide. Unless it can be stopped, which is highly Improb- its! Absolutely Puree Celebrated for its great leavening strength and healthiulness. Assures tne food against alum and all forms of adulteration common to tne cheap brands. . Botai. Baking Powdkb Co. New York. able, all the country west of Deer creek anil the most prosperous part of the Delta' will be overflowed south of the Yazoo river. This break relieved the pressure somewhat on Greenyile front. Situation In Illinois. Alton, III;, March 29. Conditions be come grayer every hour. Men were put to work this morning overhauling all the levees protecting higher bottom lands. The railroad companies are putting their tracks in American and St. Charles bottoms iq the best possible condition to withstand the floods, for less than 12 feet more of water will bring the stage of 1892, when the tracks , of all railroada were submerged between Alton and St. Louis. i The guage shows an advance of .four- tenthB of a foot in the last twenty-four hours. The' river is within less than feet of the stage reached in the middle of May, last year, and with nearly two months ot wet weather ahead, the out look is gloomy. Thousands of dollars have already been swept away in crops products, and it is raining again , so that- the prairies, even back from the river, look like lakes, and the preparation of land for spring crops is again deferred. . ' Situation at Quincy. , Odincy III., . March 29. The Miss issippi keeps up its record at this point, and other rise Js registered,' making the stage fifteen feet above the low-water mark. Thousands of sightseers line the banks and bluffs to eee the muddy water, which has submerged all of the islands and etetched back orer the Missouri bottoms for several miles with only the tops of trees and partly Bub merged houses visible here and there to mark the former ' places of abode of thrifty farmers. The situation on the levee is the same as yesterday. A large force are working heroically to strengthen the week places, and thereby save their homes and crops, but it is now believed to be a hoplesa one, aa old river men say that the river will go beyond the mark of nine years ago. '''.'" Reports from the north are very dis couraging, and tee rain storm wnicn prevailed Sunday increased the feara of the owners of land in the levee districts. Minnesota Rivers Rising. St. Pacl, March 29.-r-The rivers of Minnesota are rising very rapidly, fol- lowing a day of heavy thawing. The Mississippi at this point has passed the 10-foot mark, and ia still rising steadily. Water is flowing in from the Minnesota in a torrent. A telephone message from. South Park, five miles south of here, says a gorge of ice twenty feet high was formed there. Aa tbe prediction is for warmer weather, it is believed the gorge will break without doing serious damage. The water is now running through tbe Bohemian flats, and the residents of that locality are moving out. The base- mente of many concerns on the west Bide are full of water. Much higher water in the Mississippi river is reported at Little Falls, St. Cloud and Grand Rapids. There is still about a foot of enow on the ground. Dangers of the Grip. The greatest, dangers from La Grippe is of it resulting in pneumonia. If rea sonable care is used, however, and Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is taken, all danger will be avoided. - Among the ten? Of thousands who have used this remedy for la grippe, we have yet to learn of a single case having resulted in pneumonia, which shows conclusively that this remedy is a certain preventive of that dread disease. It will affect a permanent cure in less time than any other treatment. The 25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by Blakeley & Houghton. s Dallen-Moro stage thA Umatilla house 8 a. m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. DOUGLAS AILita, irivp.