el)c DallcG $Sst Chronicle, VOL. X THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 22. ISO'S NO 88 WITH. FURY UNABATED Filing Along the Frontier , Continues at, 3any Places. TURKS PUSH STEADILY ONWARD JlRlllO1 1 OlCI't OTtCiMl Turkll VIIlaKi-'--Klnf; tie.irge Itltter ARHinst the Towers. j Sew 'i or.K, April 21. A Journal dis patch from Athens says: ( The ivaron the frontier continues with unabated fury, and all along the line from the Gulf of Salonica on the east to the GnH of Arta on the west, a desper-' nte Etrncgle is going on inr the mastery. The advance of the Turkish forces on Tvrnavos has not been seriously checked, though from Groeek sources come many , claims of victories. These, however, are of small importance, compared to the in formation that the Turks are investing , Tyrnavos. J Tvrnavosis about three leagues north- west of Larissa and was depended upon by the Greeks to seriously hamper any' attempt that would be mado by the Turks to approach Larissa. ' Immediately after their disastrous de-, feat at Milouna pass the Greeks fell back to Tyrnavos, but the Turks closely fol-j lowed and began a vigorous cannonading i of the position. Tyrnavos' fall will make , if nest to impossible for the Moslem ad vance on the Greek miitary base at La-1 rissa to be stopped. Larissa is poorly fortified, and it may become necessary for the Greeks to precipitate a pitched battle with the Turks on the plains that lie between Larissa and the Macedonian frontier. If such an event occurs it will be the greatest military struggle in the history ot the world. A Greek force after a terrific battle, has managed to get through to the plaine of Dainasi, in Macedonia, meantime bombarding and destroying the email j village of Vigila, half a dozen Turkish batteries, and killing over 200 Turks. The Greek loss was light. About 300 j Turks were taken prisoners at Viglia. i Thepasb at Reveni, a few miles north-) west of Tvrnavos. where there are as ! many as 40,000 Turks under the perosnal Ecene of the fiercest fighting of the war. This horde of Moslems, singing and chanting war songs reaches from Reveni toBoughese and for the past three days has unremittingly endeavored to obtain a free road to the Thessalian plains. Twenty thousand Greeks.under direction of Prince Conetantine have steadily fought and struggled to keep back the Mohammedan Etream and have thus far succeeded. On the Gulf of Arta the Greeks are having things pretty much their own way. The Turke at Arta attempted to cross the river, despite the fire of the Greek artillery. This was magnificently handled, however, and the Moslems were mowed down by the score, the river being litterallv filled with the sultan's soldiers. Staggering under their awful defeat, the Turks retreated. Colonel Mauos, in hie invasion of this part of Epirus baa been very successful. He has occupied Eeveral villages with but Eltgut resistance, and has hastily fortified them. There Is hardly any serious obstacle to his advance north- ard into Albania and toward Janina, wtierea great battle may be fought Aftpr,,. . , .. . ! tne tenience oi currant, to me jiuprjouu Alter retreatine the Turks attemnted to . . i bomV,a,i . , ,VT . " iment. unose wonung jor iue cunucuiu- armw , 8 UB"lg 10. P,efCf,8 f ! ed murderer of Blanche Lament are tak artillery in the operation, but it failed,! laeir marksmanship being bad and the fange too great. The squadron of ironclads which left the Piraeus under sealed ordere, ie likely jo strike some bold blow, though it ie believed it is bound for Salonica, which "will bombard, and where it is hoped cut off the base of supplies of the a"ny under Edhetn Pasha. Tne Bjcond squadron, composed of frigate, two corvettes, three armed trans ports and one torpedo-boat, has left the Golden Horn. Other Turkish vessels are still under the guns of the Darda "ellbb forts. 'i'fltKKY BUT A TOOL. C George Huyn the Towers Cauted the War. Pakis, April 21. The corresponcent of pom illl POWDER Absolutely Pure. Celebrated for Its. Ktcnt leaveninc strencth av.d bealthfulncss. Assures the food upains-t alum and nil forms of ndult ration common to the cheap brands. Rovai. Baking rowDnr. Co. New Yop.k. La Journal at Athens had an interview with King George, of Greece, at the pal ace yesterday. His majesty is quoted as saying he lelieved to the last moment peace would be maintained, and did his utmost to bring about a pacific settle ment of the matters in dispute. The king denied that Greece commenced hostilities against Turkey, and argued that Turkey was not compelled to go to war because of the incursion of a insurgents whom nobodv could have restrained. Continuing, Kiug George said : "The truth is we were attacked be cause Turkey was ordered to attack us. There never would have been war but . m"BUB8 Mr later, ah me powers are more or less against us. If they wanted war thev have got it. Such is the result of the European concert. 'Europe must understand that after forcing us to war there can be no ques tion of limiting it. Our fleet is des tined to take an important part, as will eoon be learned. Greece understands that she must either be victorious or disappear. The war may be prolonged and bloody, but it is now too late to stop. A great crime has been committed against right and humanity in the Cre tan question, and the chastisement has now commenced." MVINJ3 liETKIUUTION. S,rB"se Death ","n"esed s,urderer Hollistek, Cal., April 21. ''May God strike me dead if I am the mur derer of Bernardino Aseeuro," cried Joseph Ciscado in the courtroom here yesterday. The last word had scarcely left his lips when, with a shriek, he toppled forward and fell to the floor. The terrorized officers and the host of spectators stood aghast for some mo ments at what appeared to be a startling manifestation of divine retribution. Then Eeveral rushed over to the pros trate man and sought to assist him from the floor. There were no responses to their orders or their efforts. Joseph Ciecado was dead. The man was a Portuguese, and had been arrested on a charge of haying murdered Aseuro, a Mexican rancher, whose dead body was found last Satur day morning in bis cabin in the Cleve land district. TO HAVE DlMUiANT'S KECK- Effort Slaking to Have the Murderer's Sentence Commuted. San Fkancisco, April 21. Much local interest has been excited by a report that an effort is being made to commute Money back if you don't like Schilling s Best. Tea and money at your grocers. A Schilling & Co San Francisco 33 ing hope from the announcement that three of the state board of prison direc tors are about to petition Governor Budd to commute the sentence. The directors favoring such action arc said to be Hay es, Fitzgerald and Depue. N hue some believe Iiurrant did not have a fair trial, it is believed com unit a tion of his sentence would be followed by an outburst of public indignation Ex-Judge Murphy, who presided at the trial of Durrani, denies that ho would under any circumstauces sign a petition for the commutation of the sentence He believes Durrant guilty, and says he had as fair and impartial a trial as was ever given an accused murderer. THE FLOOD SITUATION. IlliuoU itottom Land Farmers Arc Driven From Their Homes. Quixcy, 111., April 21. The Missis sippi here is steadilv rhing. The steamer Harry Hock rescued six families, whose homes in the bottoms, north of the city, were turrounded by water. At Warsaw, 111., the Mississippi has passed the IS foot mark, and peode are leaving portions of the districts protected by the levees. ' s At S. Keithburg the river is now at its highest point for several years, and the condition of the bottom land farm ers is pitiable. A lireuk Near Green vll;c. Jacksox, Miss., April 21. A dispatch to the Associated press from Greenville Eays the levee on the Promised Land plantation, at Sbipland. Issaquena county, broke at 3:30 this morning. It was eighteen feet high, and backwater is already against it. When a person is losing flesh and wasting away there is cause for alarm. Nothing so worries a physician. Con sumptives would never die if they could regain their usual weight. In fact there would be no consumption if there was no wasting of the system. The cause of this loss of flesh is a failure to properly digest the food eaten. Jsine-tentbs of all of our diseases date back to some de rangement of the stomach. The Shaker Digestive Cordial will stop this wasting of the body. It acts by causing the food we eat to be digest ed so as to do good, for undigested food does more harm than good. The Cor dial contains food already digested and is a digester ot foods as well. Laxol is the best medicine for chil dren. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil. 100 ltenanl SIOO. The readers of this paper will he pleased to leatn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a consti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cjre is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood ttnd mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have no much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fa!ls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. No. 2-8. No Application Filed. Sacuame.nto, April 21. Governor Budd is absent from Sacramento today, but his executive secretary eaya no ap plication for Durrant's commutation of sentence has yet been filed in the execu tive office. The governor's' attaches do not believe that he will interfere with the carrying out of the death sentence in the Durrant case. Two years ago R. J. Warren, a drug gist at Pleasant Brook, N. Y., bought a small supply of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He turns up the result as fol lows : "At that time the goods were un known in this section ; to-day Chamber lain's Cough Kemedy is a household word." It is the same in hundreds of communities. Where ever tho good qualities of Chamberlain's Cough Kem edy become known the people will have nothing else. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton. This is an "Ago of Soap." Why use any but the very best. Best soap means HooCdke. Sold by Pease & Mays. a2-3m The merchant who tells you he has something else as good as Hoe Cake soap Is a good man to keep a way from. a2 3ni Z OUR PICTURE GALLERY OF PRETTY . j gppiMr. CAPES AND JACKETS. 2 S Reception Day every day in tho week. You arc cordially invited. Z Il;riy Fire Worxliliu-r. Aecordinjr to the story told by two Danish officers, Messrs. Oloufscu nnd Philipsen, who have just returned from the Pamir countrr :n Asiu.brjr.f'hur sev eral hundred photographs of j v pie nnd scenery not before visited lv Kuro- peaiiH, there c-xNt in that elewtr l mitt of the world tribes of erv Kirt!'l nen, who v orshii) fire r.nd are ent'relv un- chilizjd, :ind wluyc dcinc tie mimals are at lenft es ieinarkublo:"t,ie iH Oide themsel'.C'i for tlie'r i mnll :dz; T'.eev- plorer.'i report, for instiinee. t lut the cows t !)-; saw wer? not Iar"-er thnn ord:ne.-y foal-, that the dr'r.ey . were of the :-t.itnre of I -live rVjpr.s, nrd that the vi ! r"' -rii'bk' rnflil noodles in size. Vo'it Communion. , D. .SCHENK, freslJunt. H. M. 1!K.U,L, Ciihliler, First national Bank. THE DALLES - - - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to bight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day ot collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on fcew York, ban JranciBco and Port land. DIRBOTOK3, D. P. Thomphon. Jno. 8. Scjiunck. En. M. Williams, Gko. A. Libbk. H. M. Bbaix. THE NEW YORK WORLD THRlCE-fl-WEEJ( EDITION. 1H I'agea a Week. JOU 1'ujiern u Year It stands first among "weekly" papers n size, frequency of publication and freshness, variety and reliability of con tents. It is practically a daily at the low price o a weekly; and Ita vast list of subscribers, extending to every statu and territory of the Union and foreign coun tries, will vouch for the accuracy and fairness of itfl news columns. It is splendidly illustrated, and among its special features are a fine humor page, exhaustive market reports, all the atest fachioiid for women and a long series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, Coiiuii Itoyiu, ijnrouid K. .Jeroiii, Htanlej' V'! limn, Slury K. WJIklij Anthony lltiiv, JJrct llurte, Ilraudur Alattliew, Klc. We offer this unequaled newspaper and Tho Dalles Twice-a Week Chronicle to. gether one year for $'-'.00, Tho regular price of the two papers is $3,00. Wasco Warehouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain of an lands. Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, Kui'D Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- tOTl "FMoiTP This Flour is manufactured expreesly for family LUXX use; every sack is guaranteed to glvo satisfaction. Wo sell our ionds lower than any house in the trade, and if you don't think so call and net our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. HON. W. J. BRYAN'S BOOK. THE FIRST BATTLE STYLES AND PRICES: Richly and durably bound in English Cloth, plain edges; portrait of the au thor forming tho design on cover; autograph preface; magnificent pre sentation plate In silver, gold and blue; containing 000 pages and 32 full-page Illustrations $1 75 In half-Morocco, marble edge , 2 25 In full-Morocco, gilt edge 'J 75 M. J. WOODCOCK. Agont, Wamlc, Or. BLAKELEY 175 Second Street, Country and Mail Orders will rccuivo prompt attention. WE THK KIHSr JIATTI.K In mi liiturcMliiKKtory of t ho KruHt xlitlcul htniKKlu of IMXi. lit moitt lmioitaiit uVL'iitH ami the iimny I sunt' luvolvnl; u lok'iciil iri'iitltiu on ill-iiiutiillfiim us uttered by umliiL'iit oxixmcntx, Including tho urt taken by Hon. W, J. ltryun In tliu Mlvur imitation orlor to tlio Dciiioerutlo NutloiiuJ Couvviillou. uml ilur tut; tliu cumiiulu'iii tliu hct exuiiii'lt-' if liU won derful oratory, tliu must noteworthy liivliluriU of liU fiimouK tour, a uiiroful ruvlmv ol tliu polltlciil tlluiitloii, u i1Ik:ukIoii of tliu uliMitlon return unit tliu MkuMIchiicu thereof, ami tliu future l.onslhllltk'H of Ill-mutaUUm it a iolUlc'4l Untie. & HOUGHTON The Dalles, Oregon Do all kinds of JOB PRINT- I. , . V ING at this office.