The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, April 03, 1893, Image 1

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VOL. V.
THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1893.
NO. 92.
Do You Wear Shoes?
We can fit your foot.
We can give you any style. ,
We can show you every width.
We can sell you every size.
WE CAN and WE WILL, save YOTJ
money on every pair of SHOES pur
chased from ITS.
See oar Shoe Display, Center Goantey.
ptesh Paint!
W. C. Gilbert hereby sends
His compliments to every friend
And enemy if he has any
Be they few or be they many.
The time for painting now has come,
And every one desires a home
That looks fresh and clean and new.
As none but a good painter can do.
Painting, papering and glazing, too.
Will make your old house look quite new.
He will take your work either way.
By the job or by the day.
If you hare work give him a call,
He'll take your orders, large or small.
; Respectfully,
W. C. GILBERT,
P. O. Box No. 3,
THL DALLES, OR.
The Dalles
Gigot : Feietopy
FIBST . S'-L'-fci-HJIET-
FACTORY NO. 105.
mr A T CJ of the Best Brands
V-VT xi-llkj manufactured, ' and
orders from all parts of the country filled
on the shortest notice.
The reputation of THE DALLES CI-.
GAS has become firmly established, and
the demand for the home manufactured
article is increasing every day.
A. ULRICH & SON.
COLUMBIA
CANDY FACTORY
Campbell Bros. Proprs
csnccessors to W. I. Cram.)
Manufacturers of tbe finest French and
Home Made - -
o .a. jt die s,
East of Portland.
DEALERS IN
Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco.
Can farnlah any of these goods at Wholesala
or Retail
p?ESH OYSTHfS4
In Every Style.
Ics Cream and Soda Water.
104 Becond Street. The Dalles, Or.
THEN WE CAN
A. M. Williams A G9
"The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland ani Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
FreiQtit ana Fsssenger Line
Through daily service (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. . Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade
Locks with steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leaves . Portland
(Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con
necting with steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
' PASSENGER BATES.
Oneway ..$2.00
Round trip -. . . . 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
Shipments received at wharf any time,
day or night, and delivered at Portland
on arrival. Live stock shipments
solicited. Call on or address.
W. C ALLAWAY.
General Agent.
t. F. LAUGHLIN,
General Manager.
THE DALLES.
OREGON
JOHN PASHEK,
Merchant Tailor,
76 Couvt StPeet,
Next door to Wasco San Office.
Has jnat received a fine line of Samples
for spring and enmmer Suitings.
Come ani See tie New FasMons.
Cleaning and fepaiping
to order. Satisfaction guaranteed.
INTEREST YOU !
YOUR flTTEflTIOIl
Is called to the faot that
Hugh Glenn,
Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds. '
Carrie tbe Finest Line of .
Picture Mouldings
To be found In the City.
72 (Xiashington Street.
W.H.YOUNG,
BiacKsmitn & Wagon Stiop
General Blacksmithing and Work done
promptly, ana an wort
Guaranteed.
Horse : Shoeing a Speciality
TM Street ocp. LibIib's old Stana:
The St. Charles Hotel,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
This old, popular and reliable house
has been entirelv refurnished, and everv
room has been re papered and repainted
and newly carpeted throughout. The
house contains 170 rooms and is supplied
with every modern convenience. Kates
reasonable. A good restaurant attached
to the house. Frer bus to and from all
trams. ,
C. W. KNOWLES, Prop.
T
H
E
A DTTP CANDY
Jt 1-1U FACTORY
SODA "WATEE AND IDE 0EEAM,
Candies and Nuts
at wholesale
quotations.
Specialties
TOBACCO,
CIGARS AND
SWKKT DRINKS
Finest Peanut Boaster In The Dalles
& a & I mi pn x
2?
Street J. TU LOU
IVED IN THE DALLES
Terrible Crime in CMcap. of a' Former
Resident of TMs City. '
SHOT HIS LADY LOVE AND HIMSELF
The Young Girl Died Instantly and the
Doctors Say. His Condition is
Critical.
Chicago, April 1. Miss Effie Clark,
of Spokane, Wash., a member of the
freshman class of the Northwestern uni
versity, was tonight shot and instantly
killed by E. Ross Smith, aged 26. Un
til recently Smith was also a resident of
Spokane. Smith, after shooting' Miss
Clark, shot himself in the head, inflict
ing a fatal wound. The' cause of
the murder was the refusal of the
young lady to entertain Smith's pro
posal of marriage. Smith had been an
ardent suitor for the hand of Miss Clark,
but his attentions was repulsed by her
parents and herself. He was eo persist
ent that, in a final effort to escape his at
tentions. Miss Clarkr who was 19 years
old, was sent to the Northwestern' uni
versity. Shortly after her arrival in
Evanston, Smith put in an appear
ance, and had been tireless in
his attempt to win the young
woman for his wife. This evening he
called upon Miss Clark and persuaded
her to take a walk with him. She was
accompanied by her roommate,. Miss
Abernathy, who. was the only witness to
the tragedy. Smith urged his suit again,
but without success, and tried to get the
young lady away from her companion.
She refused to go till Smith said he had
something to tell her in confidence.
They stepped off a short distance, and
Smith at once drew a revolver and fired
five shots at her. . One bulletenteredher
left ear and another passed through her
left side. Smith then turned the weapon
againBt himself and sent a bullet through
his head. Miss Clark was removed to a
neighboring house, but expired in a few
minutes.- Smith was taken to the police
station, where, before lapsing into un
consciousness, he said :
"I shot her. She wouldn't marry me,
so I shot her."
The doctors pronounced the - young
murderer's condition as hopeless, though
he may live a few hours.
Spokane, April 1. A dispatch from
Illinois, received tonight, reports the
murder of Miss Effie Clark by a rejected
suitor. Miss Clark, who was attending
school at the university at Evanston, is
a daughter of the Rev. Nelson E. Clark,
a wealthy and retired minister of this
city. A Review reporter who called at
the home of Rev. Mr. Clark found the
family in possession of the news of the
tragedy. They were so grief-stricken
that it was difficult to obtain information
from them. It was learned that the
young man who killed Miss Clark was
E. Ross Smith, formerly of Portland and
the son of Shipbuilder Smith, of tbe
firm of Smith & Paquet. He is study
ing medicine in Unicago. lbe couple
had been engaged until six weeks ago,
when Miss Clark broke the engagement.
surra's father ixtebkiewed.
The father of the young man referred
o in the above dispatch is Benjamin
F. Smith, a resident of Sellwood and a
member of the ship-building firm of
Pacquet & Smith, of this city. He was
on his way home about 11 o'clock, when
his son, C. S. Smith, a conductor on the
Sellwood motor line, handed him a dis
patch, which read: "Your son, E. Ross
Smith, dangerously shot. Can possibly
live three or four hours." It was signed
by the chief of police of Chicago.
"I went home and told my wife and
then came down town with my son
Charlie," said the almost heart-broken
father, when seen a little later : at . the
St. Charles hotel. "I at once tele
graphed to Chicago for particulars," he
continued after a slight pause, "and am
now waiting for an answer."
He was at once acquainted with the
lull particulars of the affair. When he
learned that his son had shot Miss Clark,
be leaned against the wall for support
and murmured:
"My God ! My God ! and he shot the
girl ! How can I ever tell his mother?"
After the shock of tbe awful news had
left him a little calmer he gave the fol
lowing facts in regard to his son :
"He was barn at Milwaukie and had
just entered his 26th year. He has al
ways been a model toy and the pride of
the family. He would never touch
liquor or tobacco, and had not a single
bad habit. For the greater part of the
past fourteen years he has teen attend
ing school. He was our oldest and not
very strong", so we let him do juet what
pleased him. He was greatly troubled
with the asthma, and thought that the
climate of Spokane would give him re
lief. He has resided there during the
past few years and graduated from a
college there. He always came home
for his vacations. ' After he finished
schooling I set him up in the plumbing
business at Spokane with a man named
Foot. He did well, but tired of it last
August, and, selling out, came home.
"While he was home he made up his
mind that he wanted to study medicine.
He went to Chicago and entered upon a
three' years' course in the Chicago medi
cal college. ' I paid all of his expenses
and furnished him with all the money
he needed. And now that it should
come to this! My God! I can't under
stand it! The boy's mother told me
that he was engaged to this Miss Clark,
and he mentioned in his letters for he
wrote frequently that he had called up
on her there."
Mr. Smith telegraphed to Chicago
that should his son die to have tbe body
embalmed and sent home. C. S. Smith
almost heart-broken over his
brother's awful crime. He gave the
facts in regard to his brother substan
tially ihe same as his father has done..
Tbe family is one of the best known in
the Willamette valley.
THE YOUNG LADY'S FAMILY.
Nelson E. Clark, 'the father of the
dead girl, is one of the best-known
Methodist divines in the Northwest. He
was an early settler, and has held charg
es in almost every town of importance
in the Willamette valley. Seven years
ago he lived in Eugene. - About that
time be retired from tne ministry and
removed to Spokane, where he has since
resided. He has been very fortunate in
in his worldly affairs, and was reputed
to be quite wealthy. Miss Clark was
young when she left Oregon, but even
at that time gave promise of developing
into a more than ordinarily beautiful
woman, being a decided brunette.
LATEB.
Chicago, April 2. E. Ross Smith, the
murderer of Effie Clark, died- today in
the ' police station at Evanston. He
never recovered consciousness alter he
had shot the girl because she would not
become his wife. The parents of the un
fortunate pair have requested that the
bodies be Bhipped to them ' at Spokane
and Portland, respectively. They will
be sent tomorrow after tbe inquest..
Memorial services for Miss Clark will be
held tomorrow ' at the Northwestern
university.
Klectrlc Klashes.
Bismarck celebrated his 78th birthday
Saturday,
Six persons were burned to death by
the destruction of the Higgins hotel,
Bradford, Pa. t. - '
The beautiful residence of Joseph Jef
ferson' at ' Buzzards bay has been de
stroyed by fire.
There are stirring times in Brazil.
Both the revolutionists and the govern
ment are increasing their forces.
A miner's lamp caused an explosion
in the Nielson shaft, operated by Lang
don & Co., Shamokin, Pa., Saturday
morning. Forty were suffocated, the
bodies of ten of whom were recovered.
It develops that the Russian extradi
tion treaty, about which there has been
so much talk, and to which so much op
position has been manifested,' was or
iginally negotiated by Secretary Bayard
and tbe Russian minister at Washing
ton, and sent to the senate by President
Cleveland himself, nearly seven years
ago.
Word has reached here of a frightful
accident on the Canadian Pacific, which
occurred Thursday a few miles east of
"Harrison, Manitoba. It resulted in the
loss of four lives. - The particulars are
meager, but reports says the engine
iumped the track while" on a dizzv
height overlooking the Fraser river and
went down a steep embankment. The
engineer and nreman jumped into a
deep gorge, but nothing further was seen
of them.
Shiloh's -cure, the Great Cough and
Croup Cure, is for sale by Snipes & Kin
ersly. Pocket size contains twenty-five
doses, only 25c. Children love it. cold
by Snipes & Kinersly. ' -j " ' "' '
Icq cream, cream' soda, soda water,
etc., at Columbia Candy factory.
Shade and ornamental trees, flower
ing shrubs and vines, hedge plants, etc.,
cheap at Mission Gardens. ,
: Highest of all in Leavening
' j. .' '.a.. . .' . .
A
BSSlSLFiTEJ-Y PIs
NEWSPAPER NEWS.
Thk circulation of the Tocsin, a Lon
don anarchist newspaper, has been pro
hibited in France.
The Lexington (Mo.) News runs a di
vorce department tinder the head of
"Vital Statistics."
' The Sioux Indians have a newspaper
published at Madison, S. D., called the
Anpokin. Its motto is from Luke L,
78: "Wankantanhan Anpoakin Hiyoun
hipi." -
A Pabis newspaper offers prizes for
the best designs for ' a new issue of
French postage stamps. ' The present
stamps, issued in 1875, have always
been subjected to much harsh criticism.
The Halls (Ga.) Weekly announces
the following as its subscription rates:
"One year, two - bushels 'taters;' six
months, two gallons sorghum; three
months, one quart sweet mash invar
iably in advance."
A newspaper for the blind, the Week
ly Summary, printed in Brailie type,
and published in London, has just
passed its thirty-fourth number. It has
a considerable circulation, its success
being evidenced by a recent - enlarge
ment of the paper.
INATTENTIVE HODSE MEMBERS-
A New York Congressman Thinks Their
Writing Desfcs Should Ea Taken Away.
"There is but one way in which this
can be made a decent legislative body,"
said a member irom ixew xorictoa
Washington Post reporter as he sur- .
veyed the house and heard one man
speaking while one hundred and sixty
six others chewed gum or rustled pa
pers, "and that way is to take from the
members their desks. They should be
given no opportunity to write while
legislative business is on tap. If placed
upon straight, hard benches with noth
ing to do save talk or listen they would
know more of what is going on. Long-,
long ago the English realized this fact.
In the house of commons there is never
disturbance of any kind unless an ex
tremely heated and factional debate is
on. Everybody in the chamber hears
what the man who has the right of way
is saying.. If the members wish to
write or read the newspapers or swap
yarns that used to be funny many aeons
ago they go into a room provided for
that purpose. I am not much of an
Anglomaniac myself. In fact, I think
that cockney immigration ought to be
permanently barred. But there are
things other than trousers that we
might copy from England and be noth
ing the worse for it."
A JJrlclit Lad.
There is one Belfast (Me.) youth who
will make a' general some day, if he
properly develops his natural traits as
they appear at present. He is hut three
years and eight months old, but showed
engineering skill in getting out of a
scrape last week that few big boys
would have equaled. While at play in
a camp with some other boys he was ac
cidentally locked in, and his comrades
all went off to school. Finding himself a
prisoner, instead of sitting down and cry
ing our youngster first built up the arti
cles in the room until he could reach:
a window, which he promptly smashed.
Next he threw out the various articles,
which he could lift until the pile out
side was within safe dropping distance
from the window, when he climbed out
and dropped to the pile. He was near
ly two hours doing the work, but says
he wasn't going to take any chances of
breaking his neck by jumping from that
high window.' ' '
' Bnckleo't Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for cuts.
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin
ersly. WOOD, WOOD, WOOD.
Best grades of oak, fir, and slab cord
wood, at lowest market rates at Jos. T.
Peters & Co. (Office Second and Jeffer
son streets.)
Taken Up.
At the premises of subscriber, about
Jan. 1st, one four-year-old spotted steer,
branded "20" on left hip. The owner
may have the same by proving property
and paying advertising and feed charges-
The Dalles Lumbering Co.
FOR SALE.
One lot, with a good dwelling and out
buildings situated westof the Academy
grounds, and fronting Liberty street on
the east, is for sale at a bargain. Terms
easy. Apply at this office for informa
tion. Title perfect.
' For Kent.
A nicely furnished room in good loca
tion with or without board. Apply at
this office. ti.
Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
Tvnm?t7