vol vii. THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 10. no. i2j. MURDER AND SUICIDE Younp Man Killed His Sweetheart anil Himself. 'A WAS TOO POOR TO GET MARRIED Attempt to Blow up a Prison With Dynamite Exciting Scene in a Paris Theater. Athsxs, O., M&y 9. William Craw ford shot and killed Jesse Lorey and himself, in Jacksonville, this county, last night. They were lovers and bad left a dance in the village to take a walk. Crawford fired three shots into the body of. the girl and then shot a hole through his own head. They were b6:'i dead when found a few mo ments afterward. The young man had been despondent for several days. He wanted to marry the girl, but was out of employment and feared he wonld never be able to make her his wife. Both belonged to good families. Dynamite In a Prlon. Jackson, Mich,, May 9. An attempt was made last evening to blow ' the prison with dynamite. As the convicts were marching to their cells, Edward Hnntley, John Demant and Arthur Lawrence broke from the ranks. One seized a guard and another sprang up into a window and attempted to light a fuse in connection with a dynamite bomb. Deputy Northcup and Captain Stone arrived in time to quell the dis turbance, and the convicts were soon locked in their cells The warden says there have been majors of dynamite in the prison for over a year, but no trace of it could be found. Scene not on the Bills. Paris, May 9. A young French woman named Cuyot attempted to com mit suicide in the Empire theater last night. , The woman occupied a seat in the grand circle and was in evening dress. At a certain part in the per formance she arose, and a moment later a pistol shot startled the audience. . The woman had ehot herself. She was car ried from the theater and doctors Sum moned. The 4all had lodged in the stomach and the doctors pronounced the wound serious, and probably fatal. In the meantime the people in . the theater were in a state of .partial panic, 'And were with difficulty quieted. Noth ing could be learned of the woman's motive. TWO UEPDI'IKS SHOT. A Fight With the Fag.t 4oud Coxey ites at North Yakima. Tacoma, May 9.A fight took place at North Yakima at 7:30 this evening be tween marshals and industrials. Dep uty Marshals Chidester and Jolly, of Tacoma, were shot, the first named in the leg and the latter through the bowels. He is bleeding , internally. Twelve shots were fired in the melee. Savage, Weaver and McAphee, all Seattle Coxeyites, received flesh wounds from revolvers. "Buck," 'a Seattle Coxeyite, who was the leader of . the crowd, bad two fingers broken with a ciuo.- intense excitement reigns at Yakima. The fight was the result of the determination on the part of the Coxeyites not to leave a train which has been held since 10 o'clock this morning. It seems difficult to determine just who began the shooting at Yakima, bnt from . particulars now at hand.it appears that the marshals shot first to protect their comrade, whom the industrials were clubbing because he had pulled a Coxey ite from the brake.. They shot only to wound and cause, the Coxeyites to de sist, me infuriated industrials who had guns then, apparently, pulled them ana shot Into the force of marshals, hit ting J oily and Chidester. They Stole The Train. fCEBLO, Uolo., May 9. The CriDnle Creek Coxeyites,wbo siezed a train here ana eiariea east last night, got around an obstruction near Olney, caused bv um.uiiig mo nugiue, y laying a new iracK, ana resumed their journey. Sup- iiureuucijii jueruy oraerea tne water - drawn from all the tanks along the road Highest of all in Leavening Power.- ill t. TTv Li 'ABSO'UiTEUlf . FUEB ; and obstructions placed in the way of the train wherever possible by wrecking engines. Not a regular train is moving on the.road in Colorado today. The Coxeyites stolen train encount ered another obstacle near Arlington, 80 miles west of this city, where four en gines were ditched by order of Superin tendent Derby. The industrials are now laying a track aronnd the obstruc tion. Sheriff Mosses has been all morn ing trying to raise a posse to capture Saunders and his army, bnt so far is En able to secure more than 40 men. The Sacramento Gang: Stranded. . Sacramento, Cal., May 9. Members of the Sutter Fort army and the police scoured the city all last night looking for Logan, the treasurer of the army, and Savage, who decamped with a por tion of the army funds. They were not to be found, and it is believed that they have croesed the mountains. NEWS NOTES. The story- of the Breckinridge case will be allowed to pass . through the mails. First Assistant Postmaster-General Jones has notified the postmaster at Chicago that the department has no au thority to exclude the book. Advices have been received from in terior points in California that the prune crop, which last month gave in dications of being a heavy one, will not mature, the prunes on the tress in many places turning yellow and falling. . The divorced wife of Coxey, who is ill at Massillon, instructed her attorney; to begin suit against Coxey and Carl Browne for abducting ber daughter Mamie, who appeared as the "goddess of peace" in the Washington parade of the commonweal. Horatio Nelson Clark, the veteran who discovered the spring of water in Anderson vine prison, and which was named "Providential Spring,?' m killed Monday on the Shore railroad at Aureville, N. Y, He was driving across the track, when he and his horse were run down. Clark was 63 years old and leaves a family. : CAST-IRON BRICKS. An Ingenious Invention In the Building Material. Line M Most of the building materials now in use have been employed with greater or less skill for thousands of years; Since primitive man discovered the adaptability of stone, wood and burned bricks composed of clay and sand for house-building, no equally useful build ing material has been added to the list. According to the American Furniture Gazette, a German mechanic has recent ly patented an invention 'which has cer tainly many advantages over the old- fashioned brick of clay, though use may not prove it to be in all . respects supe rior. Its practical design and ingenuity are characteristic of the modern tendency i of inventions. It is in the form and of about the size of an ordinary brick, but is composed of cast-iron and is hollow. The shell is so thin that the brick weighs less than .one made .of clay. A ' wall is built of such bricks without the use of mortar, and no skilled labor is required in laying- them. The -upper and lower sides of the bricks are pro vided with grooves and projecting ribs,' which lit into each other easily and perfectly and form a wall of great j strength. There are also two . large circular openings in the upper side of each brick, arranged so as to receive projections on the lower Bide of the brick that is to be placed above it. One of these projec tions is' hook-shaped, which insures solid hold. A wall of thebrieks is very quiclily put together. After the-wall i3 built it is covered witli XJaint. This closes all the cracks, renders the wall air-trjht, and prevents the brickr; from rutitingv By the use of good paint the wall can be made highly ornamental. The briels are very dura ble, and a biuidinrr made of them is per haps as nearly lirc-procf as possible. A t;l11 t.v.K -. titrvicted can be taken down or it bruit rcadHy as it can be put up. There is no mortar to be re moved, as there is when clay bricks are used. A house with such wall3 is cool in sr.raTner and warm in winter, for the lai7e air spaces prevent the passage of heat. : ' ..l":a supply of such bricks a man can i.v.t ':; his own house, and be en tirely j-a-l.'pendont of brick-layers, mortar-;.::: -t :i::cl.hod-carrie2-s. If he does art i: ! i;; houso. he can talis- it down and !u i i another with the r;urao mat riul, wliioli, i. ;:'" . . p Latest U. S. Gov't Report. No for LarxJ. That's the happy and healthy condition of thous ands of housekeepers who have been bright enough' to try lotfolene THC . NEW SHORTENING. which is a pure, perfect and popular substitute for lard for all cooking purposes.. . The success; of Cotto lene has called out worth less imitations with similar 'color and similar names. Look out for these. "All that glitters -is not gold," and all that's yellow is not COTTOLENE. There is but one valuable new shortening, and that is Cottolene. It is healthful, delicate and economical as a single trial will prove. At leading Grocers. Watch the name. REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. N. K. FAIRBANKS CO., Bole Manufacturers, ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO. NEW YORK. BOSTON. FIGHTING DUELS IN ITALY. About the Only Kxrrctae in Which. Ka- - lives of the Sonny Land Indulge. Duelmjr is the "leading and almost the only athletic sport in Italy, says the Idler. It is true that there is an Alpine club, so-called because' its mem bers climb the lesser heights ox the Apennines, but there, is no. cricket, and, except among the laboring classes, ball games of even the mildest character are hardly ever played. The young Italian gentleman finds in duel ing an exercise which Is beneficial to bis muscles and sufficiently exciting to interest him, and the middle-aged Italian keeps up his practice with the foils and occasionally challenges and fights a friend just to show that he is not so old as to have lost a genial inter est in the innocent pursuits of 1 youth. Dueling is contrary to. law in Italy, but the duelist is never punished (un less he should accidentally kill a man), except in the army, where the sport is obligatory and strictly prohibited. The same curious anomaly exists in Ger many, where army officers are arrest ed and punished if they fight a duel and either cashiered or forced to resign if they do not. The Italian offi cer, when challenged to fight, is virtu ally told: '"You'll be condemned if you do and condemned if vou don't." This seems to the 'Anglo-Saxon decidedly idiotic, but nothing can well be more idiotic than duelinsr. .Playing' cha rades in a drawing-room rises to philo sophic heights of wisdom in com parison with it. At least ninety-nine out of every hundred Italian duels are of the class technically known as "first blood" duels. That is to say, the combat ceases the moment either of the adversaries loses blood. - In thes duels the sword is always used, and the slightest scratch on the hand or the arm which are the localities usu ally scratched signalizes the end of the game and authorizes the duelists to sheathe their weapons and go some where to dinner together. Instances have happened in which a duelist has been accidentally run through the body and killed, but incidents of this sort are extremely infrequent - com pared with the fatalities of the foot ball Held. Italian dueling is probably the safest of all athletic sports, except prize fighting as practiced by modern pugilists ' by means of letters to the sporting papers. Under the influence of music we are all deluded in some way. We imagine that the performers' must dwell in the regions to which they lift their hear ers. We are reluctant to admit tliot a man may blow the most soul-animating- strains from his trumpet and yet be a coward; or melt an audience to xears witn nis violin, and vet be a heartless profligate. Hillard. , ' v How' ThUl We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any cape of Catarrh that -cannot be enred bv Hall Catarrh Care. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. We the underpinned have known F. J. Cheney for the lust ISyearsyand believe him pcrfectlv honorable in all business transaction aqd financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West&Tbaux, Wholesale Druggists, ToWn, O. Wai.dino, Kinnan & Mabvin, Whole sal Drngtfielfa, Toledo., O. - Hall's Catarrh Cure is tafcpti intern ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous piirfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all drnggiats. Teptiraonialp fn e'. Imperial 'ieycle. lijrhtepf. and- best to date. 8ee J. M. Hnntimrton & Co. Ask voor dealer Stove Polish. for Mexican Silver Gentlemen Manhattan Fine Shirts Roll -.Collar, Open Front, Plaited Bosom, Perfection, Plain White. .. COLORS IN : COAL. TAR. Startling Rmaln Obtained from Working; the Formerly Cseleos 8nstancw. The secret of the production of color is hot yet revealed. The unrivaled hues of the tulip and the rose are formed from the black soil. But how? None can say. Yet one is no less startled by the endless variety of color now produced from coal tar. From that ap parently useless substance perfumes, medicines and sweeteners have been formed which have startled men. But color appeals to the eye. Only thirty-six years ago. says Long man's Magazine, Perkin "gathered up the fragments" in coal tar and pro duced the beautiful mauve dye. ' Now, from the greasy material which ' was considered useless is produced madder, which makes coal tar worth 100 a ton. -This coloring matter alone now 'em ploys an industry of 2,000,000 per an num. One tori of good ' cannel coal, when distilled in gas retorts, leaves twelve gallons of coal tar, from which are produced a . pound of benzine, a pound of toluene, a pound -and a half of phenol, six pounds of napthalene, a small quantity of xylene and half a -pound of anthracene for dyeing pur poses. According to Eoscoe, there are six teen distinct yellow colors, twelve orange,- thirty red, fifteen blue, seven green and nine violet, besides a num ber of browns, and an infinite number of blendings of - all shades. What a marvelous color-producer is coal tar. Dr. S. F. Scott, Blue Ridge, Harrison Co., Mo., says: "For whooping cough Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is excel lent." By using It freely the disease is deprived of all dangerous consequences. There is no danger in giving the Remedy to babies, as it contains nothing injur ious. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. - Eaworth, printer, 116 Court Et. tf Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish HIGH And you will rate of G For Summer Wear. Too much cannot be. said in favor, of Manhattan Shirts, not only for wear but for Style, Fit, Finish. Just received our Summer Stock. Something new and nobby A. M. WILLIAMS & GO. .A. Lon) Pursuit. Balzac or Gaboriau "never wrote a" more thrilling story of long pursuit and successful revenge than comes by the China - steamer in accounts of the assassination in Shanghai of Kim Ok Kim, the Corean refugee. It occurred in a foreign hotel in the European set tlement, and the assassin, Hung, was arrested and' held' for 'trial: Hung camped on Kim's trail for six years in the hope ' of getting: him outside of Japan. While in-the pay of the Corean court he cultivated the acquaintance of Kim, who had lived at Tokio for several years under a Japanese name. Hung induced a Corean exile, who owed Kim a large sum of money, to write: offering to pay the old accoimt with interest if Kim would come to Shanghai. ' The trial- - will, probably show that the Corean court promised the assassin a big reward for removing a dangerous conspirator whom ' the Japanese government had saved froir? their vengeance for ten years. Kim was the ablest Corean who has come to the front since the hermit kingdom was opened to foreigners. He spoke Japa nese, Chinese, French and German flu-' ently. -" . The world's production of olive oil for 1893 has been given at 103.000.000 gallons, of which Italy produced 70, 000.000, worth $120,000,000. Importa tions in the United States in' 1892 were 706,480 gallons, at a cost of SS70,C13. The same year California is put down as having produced 12,000,000 gallons. Bradstreet's. . Stockholders Meeting. - Notice is hereby given that there will be a meeting of the stockholders of the Wasco' Independent Accademy, at the accademy. building, m Dalles City on Thursday, May 10th, 1894, at 2 o'clock p. m. for the purpose of electing eeven directors, . and transacting such other business as may properly come before said, meeting. : ' Bv order of the president. tmlOth H. H. Riddell, Secy. RAT ES of" I IS! T ER EST Usually mean risk of Principal; "but here is an ex- . ception where "both are secuie. Purchase your ii?, Boots apd 51?oes' fjte" effect a saving equal to two years' high ' interest on the money you expend. rail Tor Infants and Children. ' Caatorla promotes Pigemtion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castorla, contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. ' Castorte Is po well adapted to children that I recommrad It aB superior to eny prescription known to me." H. A. Archer. M. I ., . . Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y. ' 14 For several years I have recommencled your 'Castoriaand shall always coutinue to do s. as it has Invariably produced beneficial remits." Edwih F. Pardee, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. "The m of Caatoria' is so universal and its merits o well known that it reems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the in telligent families who do not .keep Castoria within easy reach." Carlos Mbtyk. T. D., New York City. Thx CcrrAim CoMPAMT, T7 Murray Street, N.Y. . 5 Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- i ent business conducted lor Moderate FEE3. ' 4 temn ncetrr ,n ApBasirr II s. PATENT OFFICE 1 I and we can secure patent in less liine than tliuse J J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- J ?t!on We advise, if patentable or not. free of S i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured, i i A pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with i .cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J Stent free. Address, i C. A. S Ft3 O W & C O.J OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON. O. ti. at