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About The Corvallis times. (Corvallis, Or.) 1888-1909 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1903)
Vol. XVI. No. 3G. . CORVALLIS, OREGON. NOVEMBER 14, 1903. Editor and Proprietor. c . No Previous Season Has ever found our Store, in all its Departments, so well equipped. The Stodk Includes ail the L&tesl Novelties. LADIES' Spf'eciai a'tte'iiiion -is -called to our -Like of Dress' ' Goods, Jack ets, JWate'fproof Wraps, Skirts, Snoes and Children's - Clothing. Call ahd see. . !8 lUc Do not due to as high a standard as our O) us. hut f?- that von est standard of Grocer ies that is the place to 7. i ' BUY L Fresh Fruits, fresh everything to be had el run our delivery wagon and our , aim is ) (0 to keen whab vou please. Call 6. Boriiittg ?77 7'' 777.7 F YOU ARE ' LOOKING FOR SOME REAL good bargains in stock, Ranches, write for my special list, or come and r see me. 71 shall take" pleasure in' giving' you' all . the reliable information you" wish, also showing , you over the country. . - ' - HENRY AMBLER, Real Estate, Loan, and Insurance, s. ,. . . . , H. S. PERNOT, Physician :& Surgeon Office over postoffice. Residence Cor. Fifth and Jefferson streets.. Hours 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. -Orders may be left at Graham & Wortham's drug store. DR. C. H. NEWTH, Physician & Surgeon Philomath, Oregon. , . ti. ii. VV1JLSON, v ATTORNEY AT LAW. 1 J NOTARY PUBLIC. Olpce In Zierolf Building, Corvallis. Or. - m desire would promote, makft no mistalr in Frcsb Uegefables, in the market. We want and'to OJ and "see grain, fruit and poultry Philomath, Oregon. S . f; E. Holgate ATTORNEY AT AW JUSTICE OF THE PEACE ., Stenography and typewriting done. ' Office in Burnett brick? Corvallis, Oreg B. A. CATHEYM. D., .Physician and Surgeon Office, Koom 14, First National Bank Bnilding, Corvallis, Or. Office Hours, o to ia a. m., 2 to 4 p. m. For Sale. 1 ( . Grub oak wood. For particulars in quire of E. B. Horning. - A WILD RIDE. SIX HURT IN LOGGINGTBfAIN . WRECK. . The Runaway Train Jumps the Track Near Stella, Wash, : . Two men Probably Fatal ly Hurt Cars and Engine Piled in a , Heap. . Portland, Nov. 10. The Ttle gram eays: A wild ride down a steep grade on a runaway railroad train, from which both engineer and firemen had sought safety by jumping, ended in a severe masbup Dear Stella, Waeh., as a result of which George Weiss is minus a leg and Max Welderman is suffering from severe internal injuries. Butb men are at the Good Samaritan hos pital id this city. A logging train on which the two men were, got be yond control when on a heavy grade, . Welderman's home in Stark street. Weiss is part owner in the logging camp from whiob material was being bauiaa wnetvtne accident occurred. , Bth are tkell known They may recover.- Six trien, the traia 4 crew7 were aboard the train- when it got beyond the contr jLof 4 be engineer yester; day ai.d rao, away.. ,After running two miles it jumped the - track arid toppled over..'; , . j The t ain consisted of an engine and fi ve cais, ' which were - beavil loaded. The " track "was slippery from the steady rain 'and had a very perceptible do wn'grade. Soon ' af ter starting with its burden it bef came evident that the'engine cjoold not hold back the cars, which kept pushing1 it forward at'a' Wrrlbla fitior mentum. In a7 sftbtfjtfifld the' ru'n away was making a mile a minutet The track: waa 1 crooked, a winding around' tbO curves of the' creek 'bed, 'tfnd evfy 'miotics' the 1 ere w 'expeetf ed the train would jump ' from the rails and, hurl' them to destruction1. VTrees' and rocks that' were" passed in the mad flight looked like nittirg shadows. .- 3 7 ' . . : i i The engine - and roars flew the track' and' landed wrong eide ; tlpt Thb9e who eaw the wreck ' are sur prised' that any one' escaped wfth his life. , Some 6f the members of thi crew were' tbrb'wn'a'dist&ta'ce'of VtikTL ty" feef, and pit a1 tirne "the'y weire so stunned by the fall that some time elapsed before they -could realize what had "happened. It' was a lone ly epbt'arid'no 'boe'hkd ' wTtjia'gSed the accidehi. Aa'sopn as they had pulled themfselves : together those wbo iwete eMg'htly ixijured beganr to lopt arbund 1 for as'gistance.' ,,!Two of their nu'mbtr we're ' suppbiedj to be j dying v; and ' every v tffort was made by their less injured' compan ions to relieve their' sufferings. ' v ) 'S'ime' rarjehmerf were finallv : lo cated who gave tbem their services! A 1 few minutes later a gasoline lauheh'was ' a ghted coming; dp the slough of .Cole - CreKk. This "was signaled and she 10 k the injured to Stella, about four miles distant, with all possible haTte. ' Fortunately- the steamer Sarah Dixon . bad just landed at Stella on ber "way man' were pu t aboard , and Captain Del Shaver decided to make a re cord run to this city with his in jured passengers..' ' ". - . He'gave orders tp cut out all way landings and the engineer was told to open the throttle wide, and run the steamer to ber full capacity? ' It was-11:48 lastinight when the Dixon' steamed Trbm Stella.T 'At Rainier it was considered advisable to stop and get a physician aboard; which was done. The run was then resumed and continued until St. Helens was reached. .There anoth er stop. was made to get another physician, Dr. McLarren boarding the steamer this time. Again ; the Dixon proceeded up the river, mak ing better time than 'she ever did before. ; When she pulled up along side the Washington street dock it was just exactly 6:15 o'clock this morning, which' is considered a swift passage for a' freight boat that rhakes no pretensions of being fleet. Captain Shaver ia being ; praised all along the waiter front for i his hu mane action. 5 By taking the course' he did he lost business all along the river, between here and Stella in the way of freight and 7 passenger traffic. While passing one point down the river some one hailed the boat, wanting to take; passage, but no attention was paid him. ( Members of the boat crew stated that it was the general belief down at Stella that the log cars had been loaded too heaviry,"which"'waa the direct cause of the accident. , Had the wreck occurred a few hundred feet down the track, it is said that the men would have been precipi tated into the slough - and they Would ' undoubtedly have - been drowned. Joseph Black is the en gineer who escaped with slight in juries. Francis Weist, a cousin of George Weist, the man seriously injured, and a part owner -of the ... logging camp of Weiet & Mowrey. said: - "Tiieaccident was 'unavoidable. The logging road is six miles - long, with a 4 per cent" grade." ; - . The engineer, Charles Black, bad only bet n employed two daysl We ist and Weideman, the two men se riously injured, were putting in their, first day as brakemen on the road. ' Previous to the accident the brdidary" ldad of logs was three cars, but on this occasion they start ed with five cars. Spokarie. Wash , Nov. '10. Northern Pacific train No. 2, from tfee 1 'East, which reached Spokane early, this moroing, was held up at Joco, Mont., by three armed high waymen,, who fifed stx shots at tbe members of the train crew. ; The high wavmem -were discovered orf tbef train by ihe-head brakeman, J 'E, Rddenhaver; of Spokane. His attempt to put the men Off the tram precipitated ihe ihc otibg itid foiled the plans of the robbers. 7 . ..The train pulled westward imme diate! v following the shooting, leav ing the highwaymen behind. , 'The man who had followed RodenhaVer seized hfm' by the throat- arid shov ed a big" revolver into' his face,' siy- ing: :.7 ';, -:X. '-, ! , "Y6u eo back aha tell your Dart- ner and the' conductor hot to come ahead.; -..We Will look after this end of the train.!1 . ; v- s . . Apparently the'- three bighay- meri "decided that everybody 6rf the train had ben' filarmed and ' that robbery would be impossible, for they disappeared and the train moved forward at once. Salt Lake, Nov. 10. A warrant wasaworn out today charging 'He ber J Grant, one ' of ; the leading apostles of the Mormon church, with unlawful . cohabitation ' with Augusta Wioters Grant and Emily Wells Grant, - at tbe same time The apQslle was convicted : in 1888 of the same onenFe and hned $5UU. Prosecution of Mr.' Grant is : due in part to" bis public ad miesipn ' be fore the students 01 the Utah uni yer8ity on November 4 that he has two' wives' and thaVhe ' donated tp the alumni. scholarship fund $50 for himself and $50 each for his two wives. -: ' . -: :. i Tbe apostle was to have been aC coinpanied tp Europe, where he has been assigned to do missionary work for the .Mormon , cburcb, ' by bia polygamus wife, Emily Wells Grant. , Paris, Noy 10. The French'gov; eroment lias recognized the de fac to government of the republic of Panama. , The : instructions forwarded by Foreign' Minister Dslcasse to ' the French donsul'at Panama , autbofr izea-'him-'to have relations with the new government. The instructions are substantially the same as those sent from Washington to ' the unit ed States consul "at Panamas and will have the, effect, of giving the same recognition of the new regime as the United States has : already given. . -ii.''.s :!'"7-: . According to the" strict require ments of the protocol governing' the recognition of a new ; sovereignty, a formal letter must be addressed by the new government to France and the other powers - notifying 1 them that it-is completely established. The cfficial response to this letter will constitute' a formal recognition of the" latter. The formalities Tnay be carried on by mail later, but the instructions to the consul are con sidered as establishing - the position of the French government as being similar to that of the United States. For a' Bad Cold. v If you have a bad cold" you need a good reliable medicine like Cham ber Iain's Cough remedy to loosen and relieve it, and to aBay the irri tation an inflammation of the throat and lungs- For. Bale by Graham & Wortham. ' , A BOY MURDERER. BOY OF SEVENTEEN' SHOOTS ' HIS FATHER THROUGH THE HEART. Antonio Bruno, in a Fit of Anger, Threatened to Kill His Family 1 Placerville, Cal., Nov. 10. An tonio BrOrio, 59 years old,' a mer chant of Pleasant Valley,.' a small town east of this city, was killed by Louis Bruno, his son, after a busi ness quarrel, about noon today. The tragedy occurred in front of a gen eral merchandise etore, "of which Antonio Bruno was proprietor. The Eio who is but 17 years old, was a clerk in tbe Btore. ; Word was sent to this city, arid Deputy Sheriff Dillas Bosquit,: Dis trict Attorney C.. E, Peters, arid Coroner C. P. Winchell drove at once to the scene of the deed. A jury was empaneled and a,n' inquest wa held this evening. The testi mony at the inquest ' showed 'tbat the elayiog wag done in tbe road in front of tbe Bruno store. The fath er ahd son had an altercation, a.dd it' is said that.the father bad threat ened to kill the entire family some days preViohsty. . The father drove his eldest son from the store with a kbife. Hib threats' to kill ' the en lire family alarmed the young man to, whom they were made. 'He got a pistol, and, returning, opened fire on his father.; The fifst shot pierced the heart," And the old man fell. The eon continued ' firing,: but none of the" succeeding four shots took effect." ' : -. j There were but tlifee' eyewitt esses to the affair. A brother of the ac cused man was one,' arid Nick Fer- retta,' and a man' named Sla'vin were the other two. The jury, after 'dei liberating. Tendered a verdict 6f deaih by gunshot wonnds" Inflicted by Louis Bruno with homicidal' in tent. The latter was' place'd under arrest and was brought to this city by Deputy Sheriff Bosquit and lodged in' jail. - The dead merchant was an old resident of this1 county and was possessed of large timber and merchandise interests. Salem, Or. Nov., 10. Sunday night last; a burglnr 7 entered ; the home of Jobri Stout, in thiB 1 city, frightened Mrs. Stout into a swoon, ransacked the house, and made his escape before Mr. Stout returned. Mrs. Stout was .a home .alone with the children, all of whom were in bed, when, about 9 o'clock, she beard some one open the frontdoor and walk into the ( parlor. jThink iog it was her ' oldest daughter re turning from a1 visit -to' 'the-5 heigb bors, she, pai'd ho1 particular atten tion to the incident. The light in the' parlor "was i extinguished, .and footsteps were beard coming toward the sitting room door, which ij was ooeh: when Mrs. Stout looked Up, instead of beings greeted ,;by her daughter, she was confronted by a burglar whbiP face was bidden be? hind I a 'mask.' -r " 'r ' - - ; "Not a loud word or I will choke you.'":was the, command given.,by tbe robber, which eo trightened Mrs. Stout that she' fainted and fell from her chair to the floor. When she regained consciousness tbe mis creant wa8 Stiir in ' the house, ; and the helpless woman again iell into a faint, in which condition her hus band found her several minutes la ter. ,; ; -":. - - -. ' The house had been ransacked, but the h burglar' secured ho articles of much value. 7 Porfand, Nov. ai. The Orego nian says: The severe storm that have held sway over this section of the Coast since Sunday is now mov ing toward the Rocky Mountains, bat from all indications" another' ee vere one is close in its wake and Or egon ;' may ' ha ve " a " con tinu ation oi the weather of the past few days. The wind that ' accompanied the first storm was the" most severe that has' been experienced in some' time. At the mouth of the Columbia it reached a maximum velocity of 9a miles per hour from the southeast. At Seattle it was 36 miles per hour, and at Tacoma 3o miles per - hour. Yesterday afternoon ; the barometer at the" local weather ' office began to fall rapidly and reports from out lying districts v indicated that a storm of considerable proportions is moving in this direction. From the indications it is thought quite likely- tbat there will be cmsiderable 'wind. in connection with tbe storm. ' Euzene Or-.Nov 11. A . B. T,vnn and William Lively ' were ; arrestad at trie jsiacs utts mines near Cot tace Grove., hv TTnifcari Sutw Darw uty. Marshal Roberts - yesterday cnargea witn perjury in swearing falsely t) the bomastead lnd entry of Johannes J Brauti. -The men were brought to Ed gene this morn ing and will be examined before United States Commissioner Wes ton tomorrow. The accusation states' that on or about September 19, this year, Lyon and Lively violate 1 section 5392 of the revised -et-uu.t u king an oath as follow. ; . . "That they er v 1 acquainted with the homesied.-l ef.ny, ex. 67, made by Brauti and Krew, and tbe present-condition of the same; that said Brauti has never, established his residence on the said tract nor cultivated or improved the same; that he has baen absent -therefrom for a . period of more than six months, past without obtaining a leave of absence. , CONQUERED BY ELECTRICTY.I T. L. Dagger, the well-known Ex Editor of the Scio Press, Writes . of His Wife's Experience . With Dr. Darrin's t Treatmetn. ' (Albany Democrat.) ' This gentleman of high standing in literary and social circles attests the merits of Dr. Darrin's new dis coveries in tbe treatment of the ear, by electricity and medicine. His open letter to Dr. Datrin, lo cated at the Revere House,' follows, and should decide -all procrastioat-r ing .people - to visit .the doctor, while; the opportunity, is offered. The doctor remains in .Albany un til Nov.' 15i and will be rh Corval- rlis November 16th toDjcember l3t MB. DTJGGEB'S LETTER. ; DrV Dafrin: Dear Sirr-My wife has been troubled with discharge and gradual deafness in her leit ear for tbe past 17 years. . Since com mencing treatment with you two months' ago,: I am ' happy : to state the - discharge has"venUrely ceased and her hearing is 1 gradually re turning. I feel confident that she soon will.be entirely relieved from alt trouble' arising from lb M source. I make this statement' freely, trust ing that others who may be; affect ed similarly may be , encouraged to take treatment from you. . "ResppctfullV, T. L. Duggeb. Get your riba fixed at Hospital. .; . . " . , . 4 . the Bicycle CrouSe & Braodegee on the label of a coat' stands for all that is good in clothes making. Nolan & Callahan. See them At Phildmath. ; ' Eggs arid butter 30 cents at J.' E. Henkle's. . ; New dress goods just received at - No lan & Callahan's. Notice. . O. J. Blackledge having sold his inter- est in the firm of J. . Mann & Co to j, D. Mann and D ; M. Smith, all persons knowing themselves to he" indebted to the firm are requestfl to i-tll nnl settle. Corvallis, Nov 6. 1908 THE OLD RELIABLE Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE , .1 7Cw ,