o ) ill THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY. OREGON. SATURDAY. MAY 8. 1897. VOL. VII. NUMBER 23. BEPORTED TO SENATE Tariff Bill Gets Past the Fi nance Committee. - JONES VOTED WITQ REPUBLICANS Retroactive Clause and Hawaiian ' Reciprocity Stricken Oat Name r ous Change In schedules. Washington, May 4. The vote in the Benate finance committee today to ort the tariff bill was surprise. The vote stood 6 to 5. Jones of Itevada vot- ; ed with the Republicans to report ' the Democrats voted no. " All Washington, May 4. Senator Aid rich presented the tariff bill to the sen ate today and gave notice that it would be called up Tuesday, the 18th Inst, The time ior the bill to take effect is made July 1, instead of May 1, as pro vided by the house, and the words of the first paragraph, "or withdrawn for con sumption" are stricken out. The re troactive clause of the Dmgley bill is thus stricken from the senate bill. The entire house provision relating to reciprocity is stricken out and sections substituted providing that whenever country shall pay a bounty upon the ex portation of any article of merchandise and dutiable under this act greater than the duty upon the importation of any such article into the United States, there shall be levied upon it, in addition to the duty imposed by this act, a duty ' equal to the net amount of such bounty to be ascertained by the secretary of the .treasury. . The house provision keeping in force the Hawiian reciprocity treaty is strict en out, tue effect being indirectly to abrogate the treaty and impose the same duty on Hawaiian sugars as on Sugars from other countries. MASt CUBANS ABE BTAKT'lN'G.' Coacentradoes Dying- bj tbe Hundred in Fortified Towns. Chicago, May 4. A special to the Tribune from Washington says official reports of the most' serious character have recently come to the state depart ment regarding the starvation and misery in Cuba, and Secretary Sherman has issued special instructions to all the consular officers in Cuba requesting de tailed reports as to the situation in their districts. In the course of a long confidential re' port from Matanzas, United States Con sul Alexander C. Bryce Eaid : "Over 7000 persons have been concen trated at this place, three-quarters of whom are entirely . without .. means . of - support. Women and children are dying on the streets from starvation. Death : and misery walk hand in hand. Among these people there are several Americans. "Yellow fever, smallpox and other; dis eases are prevalent. . All is the result of General Wevler'a inhuman policy Aid .'for these sufferers should come from the United States." Other reports of a similar character have been received from the regularly accredited agents of the United States, and have been placed before President ; McKinley. ATTACK WAS ABANDONED. Turk Made No Headway Against Greeks at Velestino. Athens, May 4. A dispatch from Pharealos says : The Turks avoided making any further ' attack on Velestino, contenting them 1 selves, with reconnoitering the neighbor hood of the place. The Greeks, it is an nounced, occupy stroDg positions which enable them to repulse the superior , forqes. ', ' A Battle In Progress. London, May 4. A dispatch from Ar U this afternoon says a 'force of 6000 Greeks, commanded by Colonel Barac tharis, while andvancing on Penteplgndia " was engaged by the Turks. A battle is now in progress." The Attack on Telestlno. Athens, May 4. Following is the first ' - story from a correspondent with the Turks, fighting near Velestino between the forces of Turkey and Greece. . Turkish position before Velestino, Theesaly, Friday, April 30. Delayed in ' transmission) Fighting has 4een in progress here since 5 o'clock this morn ing. The mountains form a semi-circle, of which Velestino is tbe center. The Greeks occupy a strong position on the hills in two wings. Tbe Turks commenc ed the attack under & sustained artillery fire. The Greeks responded feebly. Our troops gradually gained ground, a battery planted on our right, where the crnnnd was not bo steep, covering the advance. - Although the Turks .were met with i furious fusillade, they pushed forward and gainsummit after summit, and at the preeent moment are occupying strong positions while waiting the com inar of the rest of the troops. Our left had a difficult task. Tbe Greeks were holding a precipitous mountain, but the Turks, feigning an attack on the front, turned the Greek position and forced the enemy to retire to the second line of defense, which he is now holding. Our center remains quietly before one of - the enemy's earthworks, while the Greek batterv is commencing a duel with a battery planted on our right wing The beat is intense, and constant sup plies of water have to be sent to the troop9 engaged. -. COLONIAL RUINS IN GEORGIA. . S Some Stranfre Reinindera of an An cient Settlement. - . Xear the town-of Lexington, in the eastern part of Georgia, are located some of the most interesting' and his toric ruins that are to be found in the south. The pen, of the historian has failed to'record the adventures of those to whose handiwork these remains of ancient fortifications are attributable. and the story of the ancient settlement has only been preserved in the tradi tions of the comtnumtj. Away back in 1770, five years prior to the declaration of independence, six men and their families dwelling in Wyoming valley, in the colony of Pennsylvania, gathered together their effects and with their families started on a long, journey toward the south. They were Scotch Presbyterians, and, not being in touch with their Quaker neighbors in Penn's colony, they decided to try their for tunes in the wilds of the lands of the Cherokees. ' Through, Maryland, Virginia, Xorth and South Carolina they took their way, and not until they had crossed the Sa vannah river and were beyond the juris- diction of the lords proprietors of the colonies of the Carolinas did they make a halt within the- borders of the vast and fertile territory claimed by the Cherokees. The Indians had at that time become inrolved in a quarrel with ihe. Vyte colonists at Savannah, and a desultory warfare was going on which deterred the travelers from proceeding further southward. They selected the highest hill in all that section as a coign of vantage, where they constructed at first a rude blockhouse, surrounded by a tan palisade, ana tnen .cleared tne slopes of the trees and underbrush so the savtege foe could not approach with in bowshot without being discovered. The corner stones of the old fort still remain in their places, huge flint bowl ders that supported the rugged walls. the stones of which arc scattered on the barren hill slopes around the old settle ment. Upon, the mossy gravestones are rudely inscribed the names of va rious members of the six original fam ilies. Newton, Richards, Baldwin, Lan- drum, Martin and Gilliam. Many are the legends and traditions. that cling about the environs of tbe ancient set tlement, and the strange adventures of ' the valiant pioneers have been handed down from sire to son. Were they collected they : would make an entertaining addition to the history of the early settlement of this country. N. Y. Post.- Veneer Used for Wrapping;. Wood veneer is used to some extents for doing up bundles, instead of paper. Curtain pole manufacturers, for in stance, when shipping or' delivering poles in small lots wrap, -them up in veneer, at costs a little more ; than paper, but not much, and it is much bet ter for the purpose.- Poles thus wrapped up ere less likely to be crensedrtJTthe cords tied around them, and the veneer' is a better protection from bruises in handling. The veneer used for this pur pose is usually of elm wood and made in the same factories where the poles are made. Veneer is also used for wrapping up picture mouldings. N. Y. Sun. . NOTICE. The partnership heretofore existing in Tygh Valley Flonring Mill, under the name of W. M. Mcuorkie & eon, is this day dissolved by limitation, J. M. Mc- Corkle retiring. W. M. MeCorkle will continue, and will pay all legal claims and collect all debts of the late firm. Tygh, Or., April 2, 1897. " W. M. McCobkxb, ; a7-lm J. X. McCorkle. ;' We can afford to say: Get every sort of Schil ling's Best tea of your grocer, and get your money back . on what vou don't ike." ' , - Your tea-trade for the rest of your life is worth the risk and besides, there is no risk. " A Schilling & Company dan r rancisco 497 AN AWFUL CALAMITY Results Worse Than at First Reported. MOKE THAN TWO HUNDRED DEAD Hanv Bodies Have Been Denuded of Every Distinguishing Mark So- merons Prominent Paris- . f -' lans Among Dead. Paris, May 5. The terrible fire at Grand Bazaar d8 Charate, a temporary wooden structure, . 1UU yards long ana sixtv vards wide, erected in the Rue Jean Goujon, for the annual charity fair of which All tbe most prominent society ladies of Paris are ' patronesses,: has thrown the French capital into' mourn ing. The conflagration, "which broke . out shortly after 4 o'clock yesterday, in Kinetomagraph booth, near the stall of Dnchess d'TJzes, while from 1500 to 2000 people were present, is believed to have cauBed.the loss of over 200 lives.' As this dispatch is sent, early Wednesday morning, 111 charred corpses - have been recovered, together with twelve portions of bodies, the identity of which may never be established. Since 5 o'clock this morninc, crowds have been flocking to the Palais du L'Industrie, where many bodies and in jured persons were taken. At 6 o'clock detachment of the garde repnblique selieved the detachment of infantry which had been on duty all night about the scene of the catastrophe. : ' SEARCHING THE RUINS. The search for the dead continues, Quantities of coins, watches, rings, neck laces and braclets "have been picked up in the debris. As soon as bodies are claimed by anxious relatives or others who have been hovering in despair about the spot throughout the' night, they are placed in carriages and taken to their former homes.... '. . .: - The scene . at sight was remarkable Long lines of infantry were drawn up in cordon around the dreadful spot. Bonfires, torches, electric lights and gas jets used to illuminate the scene, re; fleeted upon the bayonets and accoutre ments of tbe soldiers, and threw a ghastly illumination upon the house's in the vicinity, the windows of which were crowded ' during the most of the night with people watching the work of horror Now and then a hearse would be called from the line of vehicles stationed in proximity, a black mass would be ten derly lifted into it, and another unfor tunate victim of the conflagration taken to one of tbe temporary morgues in the Palais du L'lnduetrie or tbe neighbor ing-Hospital Beanjen. Frequently as many as a dozen hearses were gathered together in the court yard and opposite to the entrance to the Palais da L'ln- duslrie. Hundreds ' of comns ' were ranged ready' to receive - the bodies, in most cases charred beyond recognition ' '"'' GRIEF OF THE SUBVIVOBS. Upon several occasions a distracted father or mother half, mad with grief would endeavor to force bis or her way way through the line of soldiers or the inner line of police drawn about the blackened ruins. Children were there weeping for lost parents, and the oldest, youngest, -and middleaged joined ' in murmurs of lamentation and exchanged hopes and fears. ! The atmosphere at the hall in the Palais du L'Industrie, where the burned bodies were ranged, was almost unbear able, and there again . heartrending scenes were witnessed. Men, women and children passed up and down, weep ing distractedly before the lines of black bodies, eagerly scanning tbe terrible re mains, and now and then throwing themselves . down by tbe side of some seemingly unrecognizable corpse in which they by instinct, which no out sider could understand, made ont some dearly loved and missing relative. ' TURKS WKRI ' DBIVBN OFF. Another Attack Upon Telestlno Re pulsed by the . Greeks. Volo, May 5. The Turkish forces made a fierce attack today on the Greek troops at Velestino, but 'were repulsed. There were heavy losses on both . sides. Fighting is -proceeding between . the opposing armies at two other points. Greeks Leave Tolo. Voj.o, May 5. Fifteen thousand Greeks have retired upon Domokos.- The Turks are centering a large force there, and an important engagement is expected. ' Turks Occupy Mount Rilberni. Constantinople, - May 5. Hifza Pasba, commander of the Turkish force in Epirus, telegraphed yesterday tbat the Turks bad occupied unopposed tbe summit of Mount Kilberm, dominating the Blopes opposite Arta. The Greeks retired. " ,-. - - . .' Tnrks Moving on Kardltxa. Athens, May 5. Crc'wn Prince Con stantino telegraphs that ' two. Turkish regiments are1 marching -on Carditza, and the Greek commander there has asked for reinforcements. i' Tassos to Leave Crete, s,. May 5.rTh government is negotiating with .the admirals in com mand of the fleets of the foreign . powers in Cretan waters for permission to send a Greek warship to Crete to bring off Colonel Vassos and other Greek officers who have been recalled. In Battle Array at Pharsala. Athens, May 5.-5 p. m. A dispatch from the front say tbe Turkish forces : at noon today were, drawn up in battle array on the plains of Pharsala,- facing a Greek army numbering 23,000" men. Salonlea to Be Blockaded - New Yoek, May 5. A dispatch to the World from Volo says : ; : Tbe Turkish squadron refuses to leave the Dardanelles to meet the Greek fleet. Prince George has gone with a fleet of torpedo-boats to blockade Salonica and intercept the ' Turkish . reinforcements from Smyrna. The Turks were routed today in an en gagement near Nicola. The State Made a Iiw Record. San Feancisco, May 4. The steamer State of California arrived from tbe Co lumbia river today, having made a new record for tbe run. Sne came from Portland in 43 hours, 50 minutes, and from Astoria in 36 hours, lowering her own previous record by one hour, and the beet record of the Queen by - three- quarters of an hour. Captain Green says there was a very heavy sea all the way down, and when he came through the north channel, the Potato. Patch was breaking badly. Colored Ex-Preacher Banged. Somebville, N. J., May 5. Jacob Johnston, colored, an ex-preacher, was hanged here' today. 'He (fieff protesting his innocence. - He was convicted oq circumstantial evidence of tbe murder of Annie Beekman, who lived at his house, and whose body was found September 12, 1895, bearing evidences of strangula tion. ,- Forty-four Favor and Twenty-six Op pose It. Washington, May 5. The arbitration treaty has been defeated in tbe senate by a vote of .44 to 28. It thus failed to receive the necessary two-thirds required by the constitution. FBARSA1A IS TAKEN. Tnrkisb Troops Under. Edhem Pasl Occupied It. Larissa, . May 6. 4:20 p. m. The Turkish forces under command of Edhem Pasba have captured Pharsala. Greeks Again In, Retreat.! Athens, May 6. A dispatch from the front announces ' that. Prince Constan tino's army retired yesterday evening in perfect order upon Domokee,- about 13 miles from Pharsala, where the Greeks will wait the attack of tbe Turks. -. Gen era! Smolenski remains at Velestino .to protect Volo. - Pharsala has been abandoned and tel egraphic communication has been cut off. Velestino to Be Evacuated. Athens, May 6. General Smolenski's brigade of Greek troops ia about to re treat from Velestino. . Smolenski may fall back on Volo and try to bold that with the protection of tbe Greek fleet, or he may retreaton Almyro (Halmyros,? with a view:, possibly of effecting a junct ion later with the main body of the Greek army. . . Word From Idhem Pasha. i . ... Constantinople, May 6. The ministry of war has received the following dis patch from Edbem Pasha, tbe Turkish commander in Thessaly, dated yester day evening. The Turks today won a great victory. Turkish shell are commencing to fall near Pharsala. Details will be' forward ed later. Sabah says a division of Turk ish troops commanded by Hakki Pasba carried the first line of Greek defenses at Velestino and the attack is proceeding gainst the other lines." Notice to Taxpayers. , Notice is hereby given that by order of the county court, the sheriff will re turn the tax roll for 186 to tne county clerk on the first Monday in April. 1897. and all taxes tnen remain ing unpaid on the roll will be declared delinquent, - and thereafter the sheriff will not receive taxes until tbe delin quent roll is given him. By order of court. A. M. Kelsat, -m23-4tw . - Clerk. THE PARIS HORROR Vivid Description of the Ghastly Scene. BURNED PAST ALL RECOGNITION Bodies Found Filed In neapsThe Dead the Women or-France's Oldest and Noblest Families. New York, May 6. A dispatch to the Herald from Paris says : The scene on entering Porte Eight, of the Palalse de L'Industrie last night, when ; the bodies of the victims of tbe Eue Jean Goujon were taken there, was of a fearful description. There had been placed the charred corpses of what had been a few -hours before beautiful women of the very best families of Paris, The bodies were laid oat on roughly im provised platforms of boards taken from anywhere about the place. They were charred beyond recognition. Almost all the bodies were burned about the bead and feet, while. the middle of tbe body remained comparatively intact. . Ambu lances kept coming up in a stream bringing more and more of the unfor tunate victims, the crowd outside giving way in awe-stricken silence. The Rue Jean Goujon was almost impassable. Of the bazaar building, in which only a few hours before everything bad been fair and beautiful, there remained only a few charred poles. Inside the wrecked building there was nothing but pitces of rags, wood and human renlains. The firemen were digging among the "debris in search of the bodies. There were not enough ambulances, and the bodies bad to be placed in wraps. ; Then came sol diers, police and firemen to carry away tbe dead, and they all worked in silence and with a will. The soldiers carried sheets in which to wrap and transport bodies.' ' There were women nurses from l'Hospital Beaujon, also, with sheets waiting to cover up tbe dead before they were taken away in tbe ambulances. Near the western hall, which bounded what had been tbe bazaar, bodies were literally found piled in heaps and their position see uled to indicate that a terror stricken rush had taken place, or an in stinctive huddling together in the face ot death. ' There were pieces of under skirts all over the ruins and -fragments of woolen garments and coreet covers. Tiny little slippers were everywhere to be seen, crisp and charred by the heat. On one side was a pile of valuable jew els, etc., guarded bv policemen. There were bracelets and rings, completely free from flesh, showing how- terrible bad been theflames in their fury. . statements of spectators. -1 spoke to two women who wen standing near the ruins. The elder one was Mme. Rochezautier, and the younger was a servant. i;,- ; .. . , " We were attracted by the cries of the ladies," said Mme. Rochezautier. 'Oh 1 such cries ! We called to the men in the Hotel de Palais, which fronts on 17 Cora de la Seine. It was the work . of a mo ment to tear down the iron bars of tbe windows and to throw out a chair.. We hauled the poor women in, there. . They were bo frightened that they did not stay long. They were so terror-stricken that many could not cry. But many were lost and I saw several rush out from the flames and drop dead. We saved, at least 150." . Mile, le Comte, of 22 Eue Jean Gou jon, said : ' "The fire broke out at 4 :30 o'clock. It was terribly sudden., ine beat was worse than the smoke. You could not go into the street for fear of the heat; The bazaar burned up just as if the wood had been soaked with kerosene. I should think there were 3500 people there, because, you know, the nuncio was there during the afternoon, and tbat made an extra attraction. He had hardly left when the flames burst out. They seemed to spring up all over. So fierce was the heat that all win dows and shop fronts opposite -were cracked or burst open.- Birds in tbe windows . dropped dead . from their perches as if struck by lightning, and many of the neighbors were so: para lyzed by fear tbat they did not know what to do. The fire lasted only twenty minutes, but such a twenty minutes I shall never forget I Women ran shriek ing into the Btreet and fell dead in the roadway overcome by the heat, burning from head to foot." A big Frenchman, a marchand de vin named Corbel, eaid : . r- "All I could think of doing was to get a hammer and rush to the burning building and break down the sides, for you know no one could get out7 of tbe main entrance, or no one seemed to able to get out. i We , hammered away and fij ' " patsy Absolutely Pure. Celebrated for Its great leavening strength and healthfuloess. - Assures tbe food against alum and all forms of adulteration common to the cheap brands. r . ... Eotai. Baking Powdkb Co. Kew Yoek. smashed down some of the signs of the shops inside of the building and saved people tbe best we could. They were all rich people. Some had. their clothes literally in flames ; others were burning about tbe breast and neck, but the great- 1. 1 1 .1 li TT7- r uumucr uuu wieir units iu iiuuietj. we tore their hats ol, pulled the btfrniug hair from their beads, and all the time they shriekedj 'Oh. Mon Dieu! Mon Dien!' I saw one young and beautiful girl rush into tbe middle of tbe etreet. Her hair and hat were in . flames. She fell stricken by the terrible heat. We could hardly stand the heat." A cabdrivet, said i "I stopped to take two ladies from near the Louvre. They were middle aged and richly dressed. They told me -to drive to tbe bazaar. . This I did, and I was waitingior tnem when . tbe fire broke out. I have not seen them since. origin or the fire not known. Various theories are being advanced by the police and people who were eyewitnesses.- Some say the fire was caused by a. spark from, a cinematograph. Others say it was caused by tbe . explo sion of gas from a stove. Others again said that a lamp which was smoking burst and set the place ' on 'fire. But what struck me was the unanimity Of all as to the suddenness of the conflagration and the way in which tbe flames spread. SCENES AT THE MOBGUE. In the extemporized morgue at the Palais de l'Industrie. there are crowds trying to identify remains of victims of the great fire. It was a - difficult task. A terrible looking body was brought out to the door so as to iJave as much light upon it as possible. The police became suddenly more stringent than.ever, and no one was allowed to enter the build ing. rom mouth to moutn passed tbe word V that is the Duchess d'Aiencon," but now to recognize such a -charred mass? In tbe face of such a difficult problem the relatives and friends of the bereaved family had recourse to the - laoaily dentist. The latter remembered certain fillings of the . teeth, and could recognize his handiwork even under such awful circumstances. In a short wbi'e it was established, that the re mains were those of the. unfortunate duchess, and very quickly a pine coffin was ecrewed down and taken away. A. woman approached the door sup ported by two friends and preceded by a venerable priest.- She bad come to iden tify her daughter, but while tbe work of identification of the remains of the Duchess d'Aiencon was going'on she fell in hysterics and her cries were so terri ble that a cab had to be called. She was taken away apparently mad between two policemen. For obvious reasons disinfectants were freely used inside the building, and tbej odor of carbolic ecid was'so strong that holding one's handkerchief to the face and a plentiful use of strong periume was insufficient to remove tbe penetra ting fumes. ; , The Best Remedy for Rheumatism. . From the Fairhaven (N. Y.) Register. Mr. James Rowland of this village, state that for twenty-five years bis wife has been a sufferer from rheumatism. A few nights ago she was in such pain that she was nearly , crazy. She sent -Mr. Rowland for tbe doctor, but be bad read of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and instead of eoing for tbe doctor be went to the store and secured a bottle ot it. His. wife did. not approve of Mr. Row land's purchase at first, but neverthe less applied the Balm thoroughly and in an hour's time was able to go to sleep. She now applies it whenever she feels an ache or a pain and finds that it always gives relief. He says that no medicine which she had used ever did her as much good.. The 25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by Blakeley & Houghton. Do vou want your windows cleaned, carpets taken up,.bea(en and re laid, or anicor work of any kind done by a first-class man? If so, telephone Henry Johnson at Parkiu3' barber shop. 'Phone 119. alO-tf