niK C1TIZ1SN, WEDNESDAY, AI'IUIj 17, 1012. page: s OF IE 3 o o o o o IN HISTORY OF The Disaster Had Its Heroes, Thrilling Incidents and Narrow Escapes. ooooooooo- THIltTY persons drowned, 30,000 homeless, 2,000 square miles lnunduted, $10,000,000 flnanclnl loss and railroad tralllc para lyzed were the striking features of the great flood In the Mississippi valley. The disaster had Its heroes, thrilling incidents and nnrrow escapes. Dozens of cities In five states up and down the river were put under water or menaced, and levees Rave way he fore the pressure of the vast wastes of water like cardboard. From Illinois to Mississippi mill Arkansas a grim and determined fight against the ravaging sweep of the great Father of Waters was waged. Millions of bags of sand and dirt were used to strengthen levees that had become weakened. Every where In the entire water swept valley men worked with but one Idea or pur posethat of staving off impending breaks that would sweep away homes and perhaps lives. In the wnke of the flood is the grim spectacle of pestilence, which may re sult from the overflow as the waters recede. Attempts to "cover" the story along the stretch of levees Involved many personal risks on the part of newspa per correspondents. One of the most daring exploits was accomplished by a young correspond ent who floated on a log on the crest of the tide when the levee broke at Hickman, Ky. Ho made his way to Tiptonville, Tenn., and then telephoned his story of the flight from the lteel foot country to Memphis. Another news writer, a pretty young woman of Hickman, half swam, half waded, in imminent peril, to get from her homo to the long distance tele phone in order that the first definite story of the rescue of n thousand per sons at Dorena, Mo., might reach the outside world. , A farmer who had been watching for a break in the levee mouuted his horse when the tide broke through the em bankment As he started to ride awuy his wife grasped the bridle of his horse. "Where are you going?" she called, struggling with the horse. "To warn my neighbors," replied the planter. "You must get to the boats." The planter's wife managed to get her children away in safety, while her husband raced with the flood, warning farmers out of the tide's path. The warning probably saved scores of lives. Family of Seven Saved. Thousands of spectators witnessed the thrilling rescue of a family of sev en from a sinking houseboat In the Mississippi river at St. Louis. The houseboat, in which a man, his wife and five children live, was torn from Its moorings by the heavy driftwood that was carried from flood points above. Soon after being swept Into the current the frail craft dragged over sunken snags, sprang a leak and began to sink. Two motorboats, after fight ing off the heavy drift reached the Bide of the boat just as the water was sweeping over the deck. It sank with in Ave minutes after the last occupant had stepped to safety. Tickle Sanders, a Memphis pugilist, found opportunity to make himself a hero. Sanders was rowing about tho flooded district in north Memphis when a skiff containing a man and a woman making their way to their submerged home to rescue a few of their belong ings overturned. Sanders pulled the two from the water just in time to save them from being drowned. A peddler who travels In the country surrounding Memphis lived In a small frame house. Water entered his dwell ing. He moved to the attic. He made his rounds in a boat that he moored to a tree at night. Tho last night he slept in his attic ho awoke to find tho water nround his bed. Tho only Implement available was a can opener. With this ho cut nu opening In the roof and, find ing his boat and stores safe, escaped. Tho can onener probably saved his life. Mother Carried Dead Baby. The steamer Kate Adams, which was near Modoc when tho crevasse occurred near there, saved hundreds of lives by taking refugees from rafts and housetops. In tho midst of tho rescue work tho steamer put out u skiff to a woman who sat on tho roof of her floating house. She sent word buck to the captain that she would not leave unless ho would consent to take her dead baby aboard the steam er, Accordingly n soap bor wan sent to the floating house. The woman brought out the babe's corpse, placed It In the box and was rowed to tho Btcamcr. Tho llttlo body was brought to Memphis and burled. One of tho I.eo lino steamers from the Arkansas country that reached Memphis told of a desperate fight with a negro who refueed to leave a raft on which he floated unless he was al lowed to bring his mule. As a last re sort the captain of tho boat tied the raft bearing the mule behind the steamer and towed raft, mule, negro and all Into Memphis. Death Missed Governor Brewer. Governor Earl Brewer of Mississippi had u narrow escape from drowning ftroanvllln wlilln rtlreftlntr tho flsrht ,o o TRIES s o o o o o o o o o o o o o WORST FLOOD TIE IBISS1SSIPP 30 Dead, 30,000 Homeless, 2,000 Square Miles Inundat ed, $10,000,000 Loss. 0 on the floods when n skiff In which he was riding capsized. Only the close proximity of a flouting telegraph pole and assistance by Dr. J. T. Atterbury, member of the levee board, who help ed him climb It, saved him. The governor and ills party started out to luakenu inspection of tho levees. At one spot Governor llrewer asked the rowers to sheer In nearer tho shore as the crest of the levee at tho Indi cated point seemed less firm than elsewhere. As tho boat was turned It suddenly struck an eddy nnd In stantly cap'I::ed. Thoe In tho craft shouted n brief warning nnd plunged out. Hcsldc the skiff, however, was the telegraph pole, and nil grasped It. For a few moments the situation was serious, but another skiff hurried to tho place and pulled the party aboard, tho governor being the last to leave. Stirring stories are reported of the rescue of the refugee in the flood swept territory of upper Arkansas. Ono thousand or more persons ma rooned In WynnnUe. Ark., were brought to .Memphis, rescued through the in itiative of a citizens' committee. Find Safety In Church. The first of th" Wyanoke refugees to be rescued was an assembly of about 100 persons. They were in a church, where they had taken refuge when the Photos by American Press Association. SCENES IN FLOOD STRICKEN levee broke. Their supply of provi sions was scant. When It was seen that tho water would Invade the church a scaffolding was built of pews, and on this platform more than twoscoro perched throughout Sunday. Attempts to get food were made by the stronger of the men, who construct ed rafts and explored tho Immediate part of the township. Scarcely any thing was obtained. The plight of these people and of others near by on roofs of houses, on rafts and on small hills, now become Islands, was reported to the Memphis authorities. Many of the more aged were serious ly 111 from exposure and lack of nutri ment. Some had half waded and in many instances had been forced to swim to places of safety. Ono of the phases of the flood was the tying up of virtually all traffic not only ou the .Mississippi, but on tho Ohio and the other navigablo tributaries. Usually n "big river" Is the signal for an unuuul amount of traffic. Especial ly Is this true of coal fleets from Pitts burgh which go down tho Ohio on a rise. Hundreds of barges and coal boats were fast, waiting until tho Mis sissippi should be open for towboats again. High water, too, ou most of the streams kept tho larger steamboats tied tip because they couldn't get under tho bridges. No New City Hall For Cairo. During the flood a local option elec tion was held at Now Madrid, Mo., and tho "wets" und "drys" were out with launches iuviting the voters In. Some of the boats were sent eight miles Into the country after voters. Doats of every description crowded tho main street around the stairway to the polls. Excitement was bleb, nnd while tho water was four feet deep It wai not enough to dampen the zeal of tho par tisans. A trip through the drainage district north of Cairo, III., in n skiff presented many remarkable sights. Very few buildings were left stand ing on their original foundations, nnd many were carried two miles by the water. Captain Samuel Orr. former health officer of Cnlro, who ran a gro cery In the center of the drainage dis trict, did not get out before the flood caught him. Ho was rescued after rid ing nround the flooded district In the second story of his grocery for twenty four hours. With the first rush of tho wntor Orr's building was carried off Its foundation. It remained upright, and the captain kept dry In his second story. Soon after Orr was taken out by a steam launch the building toppled over. As one Important result of the high water Cairo will have no new city hall. The ?7r,000 voted for it a mouth ago will be used to Improve tho levees. The city now has no municipal home, city ofliclals being housed In an old residence. A moving picture man arrived In time to make films of tho levee work ers. Ho set up his machine In the levee In front of the Hnlllday house and was well under way before Mayor Parsons discovered him. At the may or's orders the films were confiscated and destroyed, the camera smashed and the man commanded to leave town or go to work tilling sand bags. He left." Cairo Surrounded by "Water. Cairo became an islond. The city was surrounded on every side by wa ter and transportation cut off on every railioad entering the city. A walk around tho levees gave a bet ter Idea of t lm vast area that is inun dated than could bo drawn from a ver bal or printed description. With the Ohio on the east, the eonllux of the Ohio and Mississippi on the south, the Mississippi on the west and cut off ou MISSISSIPPI RIVER CITIES. the north as a result of tho break in tho Big Four nnd Mobile and Ohio em bankments, together with the overflow of the Cache. Cairo was the hub of deep water navigation. From tho subway north the scene was one of great destruction and ex treme destitution. Lumber piles were wrecked, buildings submerged and in many cases turned completely over and rested upon their sides or roof down ward in the water. Factories were submerged to their roofs, and tho water In many places completely covered the telegraph wires und the arms on the poles. All along the high embankment that forms the bridge approach refugees from Future City gathered together what few personal effects they man aged to save before the flood drove them from their homes and made the most of their misfortune, thankful that they escaped with their lives. Most of these wero negroes, and the extent of their effects consisted of a little bedding, a few chickens and a few pictures, hurriedly snatched from the walls. Thousands Fighting Water. Thousands of men wero nt work bat tling tho flood at many points along tho river. Life was risked that prop erty might bo saved. Great suffering was prevalent in a widespread terri tory. itefugees sought towns and cities nearest their deserted homes. Many underwent great privations beforo ar riving nt some place where proper care could be given them. Some traveled miles afoot, hungry, often thirsty. Township, county, municipal, state and federal authorities afforded aid where it was possible. CAREER OF THE LATE GEN. GRANT Had First Military Experience With Father at Vicksburg. WAS ONLY 13 AT THE TIME. Eldest Son of Pretident Ulyisss S. Grant and Was Noted For the Rev erence In Which He Held His Fa ther's Memory. Major General Frederick Dent Grant, who died recently, was the eldest son of President Ulysses S. Grant. He was born at St. Louis, Slay 30, 1850. Frederick D. Grant was with his fa ther In the latter part of the civil war, serving ns voluntary nld and dispatch bearer to General Grant. He never was formally mustered Into the serv ice, although ho held from his father a commission ns flrst lieutenant. This boyhood record was "corrected" by congress in 1010 so that he became eligible to tho Grand Army of the lie public. As soon ns ho was old enough ho was appointed to tho Military academy at West Point from New York and was graduated and commissioned a second lieutenant Juuo 12, 1S71, being detailed to tho Fourth United States cavalry. With this command he spent two years Indian fighting on the frontier. He be came flrst lieutenant on June 28, 1870. Meanwhile, In 1873, he had been ap pointed aid-de-camp to Lieutenant General Philip II. Sheridan with the rank of lieutenant colonel. In his early western days ho was employed also as engineer In the construction of tho Union Taclflc and Colorado Central railways. On June 1, 1SS1, Lieutenant Colonel Grant resigned from the serv ice after spending the greater part of his time on tho frontier. After leaving the army Colonel Grant spent much of his time at the home of his mother in Xew York. He was constantly at his father's side dur lug the illness which took General Grant's life nnd after his father's death took charge of the family affairs. Minister to Austria. In ISSo President Harrison nppolnted him minister to Austria, and from 1S04 to 1S0S ho was one of the police com missioners of New York city. When the Spanish war began General Grant wns appointed colonel of the Fourteenth New York Infantry. That was on May 2, 1808. On May 27 he became brigadier general of volunteers. He served in the Porto Itlcan campaign and after tho war commanded the mill tary district of Porto Itico. On April 10, 1S09, he was honorably discharged and on the same day was reappointed, with the same rank, and served to the following January as a brigade com mander in tho Philippines. From Jan uary, 1000, to October, 1001, he com manded the northern district of Luzon nnd then until tho following April was In command of tho southern district of Luzon, when he was brought back to take command of tho department of Texas. In 1904 ho was for several months In command of the department of the lakes, where he had been ald-do-camp to General Sheridan years before, and then was for four years commander of tho department of tho east, returning again to his latest post as successor of General Leonard Wood. General Grant was married while serving in tho department of the lakes on Oct. 20, 1S74, to Ida M. Honore, daughter of Henry Hamilton Honore of Chicago. They have two children. Was a Republican. A Itopublican in politics, General Grant's prohibition principles on one occasion subjected him to considerable criticism. In 1900 he headed a prohi bition parade in Chicago in his full uniform. Secretary of War Dickinson said that tho genernl had participated In tho parade as an Individual only, and the matter was dropped. At tho time there was some talk among Pro hibitionist of trying to get General Grant to run for president on that tick et this year. General Grant was known for the reverence In which he held the mem ory of his father. Several weeks ago Genernl Grant made a tour of inspection of tho coast artillery posts In his department. This tour took in tho posts from Port land, Me., to Galveston. His last com mand Included both the department of tho east nnd tho department of the gulf as division commander. The com mand is regarded as inferior iu impor tance only to the chief of staff in Washington and tho division com mander in tho Philippines. It bus been said that for some time past General Grant felt that he suf fered from the same malady ns his fa ther, and his friends say that tho wor ry over this possibility played a con siderable part In breaking him down. Heavy Punishment For Wino Grower. A wlno grower In France, convicted, of diluting his vintage with water, was fined $100, sentenced to n mouth's imprisonment nnd compelled to pay a heavy forfeit, while as n flual punish ment his wlno was confiscated. Twenty-sixth British Dreadnought. Tho British battleship Ajax, launch ed recently at Greenock, Scotland, Is a sister ship of tho King Georgo V. and is the twenty-sixth Dreadnought In tho rtrltlsh nnvv To Patrons Along the Scranton Branch ot the Erie Railroad. The afternoon train leaving Scra ton as per schedulo following, runs daily directly to Honosdalo, giving people tlmo to transact their business nt tho county scat and roturn homo tho samo evening. ARRIVE. LEAVE. 8:20 Scranton 1:30 8:13 Dunmore 1:37 8:02 Nay Aug 1:4G 7:G4 Elmhurst 1:55 7:43 Wlmmors 2:07 7:40 Saco 2:10 7:34 Maplowood 2:1C 7:20 Lake Ariel 2:34 7:09 Gravity 2:41 C:G9 Clomo 2:51 C:53 Hoadleys 2:56 C:37 West Hawley.. ..3:27 C:12 White Mills 3:38 6:03 East Honosdalo .3:47 6:00 Honosdalo 3:50 LEAVE. ARRIVE. Published by tho Greater Honesdalo Board of Trade, Honesdalo, Pa. Send us tho news of your com munity. Wo have btoh 'phonos. Wo aro always glad to got it. VIGK'S FLOWER SEEDS All oi the crops of 1911 experimentally tested and hand picked from the yield of the justly celebrated gardens of Vick. FOR SALE at the drug store of C a- Honesdale, Pa. HONESDALE S ONLY BANK '..gigfC; j." SUPERVISED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT IS Cor. Eighth IS in !b.xpenerace. In Appreciative DIRECTORS: HENRY Z. RUSSELL, Capitalist. EDWIN F. TORREY, HORACE T. MENNER, LOUIS J. DORFLINGER, ANDREW THOMPSON, HOMER GREENE, JAMES C. BIRDSALL, E. B. HARDENBERGH, PHILIP R. MURRAY, Business Connection to be of Mutual Advantage and Satisfaction. SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ACCEPTED, AND THREE PER CENT. INTEREST PAID THERE ON, WHETHER LARGE OR SMALL. ORGANIZED 1836. Open Saturday Evenings from 7:30 to 8:30. JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Maeonlc Build lng, over G. 0. Jadwin's drug store, Honsdale. OLD DR.THEEL & DR.W. LTHEEL 17 IV Spring Uarden nt., l'biui., i'it.,iir nrrlr &lft N. uh HL1 Onl? Urmia Hntelallat la Amtrlfa UaaranlrcitoCluroBUobrllill. wltkhU ' CntwrpsttH UerMtM Treatment, Pri? t I1mm. i,tfiti, Atntii ntuBHuri, epecuic itioou ' l'oton (thtr onlj use Art nlf lamp, Injection 3trt try h oUm, Supri". Ioltlilj hritr arrt. ralaa A Kilt thonqftniUt tkfr Ihtap Drug ant went than lb Dltrate.) 5mqvi Dtblllt;. Lost 9!anbftd, hnpttrt, 111m, II jdrotfl. Vftrlrotelf Mrlf lr(n ratline i t Bdcfelenaititt it Hhranitn Org in, II I adder A RIdnr IItftt, LoMtt Drain, Caret Abvtln A Married Mft,rrlorTI(r A Ylea ( nj Htm aaJa. FrrthCattt Cirtd la 410 dirt others tan'l. 10 jn. prarUcal A O jn, lloapltal Eiprinr InOrMiaj Snd lor Hook ttllt a.11, Elpoalnc Sttvnn Otf Atoantrr AdttrtWIait triads, llrt.i U-l, 0-0 Baa.. win and Main Sts. VIGK'S VIGK'S GARDEN FIELD SEEDS SEEDS J act Methods of Patronage. Capitalist. General Stores. C. Dorflinger & Sons. Capitalist. Lawyer & Author. Woolen Manufacturer. Capitalist. Ironmonger. With us Cannot Fail