VOL. VII THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1894. NO. 250 A: ANOTHER BIG HOLD UP An Express Train Kobbed of Nearly $2,000,000. THIS TIME ON AN EASTERN ROAD Attempt to Kill a San Fiucino Uaw yer--A French Teasel Bnnk Dur Ing a Fog. Washington, Oct. 13. Seven men ' composed the gang that held up the north-bound express train on the Rich mond, Fredericksburg & Potomac rail road at Quinatoc last night. Their de mand for the waybill when the express messenger declared one safe was empty, . and the caution they gave the fireman about disconnecting the air-brake tnbes when he uncoupled the engine on their demand, showed some members of the ' gang were railroad hands. Besides, after the engine was uncoupled, it was boarded by the robbers and run by them to a point near Widewater station, a short distance from the scene of the hold-up, where they abandoned it and sent it ahead running wild. Express Messenger Crutchfield thinks the booty secured was $150,000 or more'. He gave this account of the robbery ; "But one robber entered the car. He was heavy built and dressed like a farmer, although he seemed to thoroughly understand the express business. He had a red hand kerchief over the lower part of his face. When the train was stopped I opened the door of my car. The robber fired at me. I fired back and closed the door. He called, 'Open the door.' I did not do it. 'Open that door or I'll blow the whole car to pieces with dynamite, he yelled. ' Then he threw a stick of dyna mite at the door and shattered it and the casing. The force . knocked me off my feet. I then opened the door. One of the robbers came in and made me open the safe. He took everything. There was one package which he must have thought contained only papers, for he threw it into a box. It contained $6,000. Then he said, 'Open that other safe.' 'That is simply a dead-bead safe,' I said j' 'The hell it is,' he roared ; 'show me your waybills for it.' I started to get the bill and he said, Your hands up ; show , me the paper ; I'll get it.' He looked at the bill and was satisfied the second , safe contained nothing, which was true. The man was very cool all the time. He had seven or eight through express pouches, each contain ing packages of money; bow much I cannot guess. The man cut a small slit in each pouch and took every package." New Yokk, Oct. 13. The train held up last night on the Richmond, Freder icksburg & Potomac railroad reached Pennsylvania depot', Jersey City, at 8 :05 this morning, with a badly shattered express 'car. Adams Express Com pany's messengers reported all the safes had been rifled. -It is supposed the ban dits obtained between $150,000 and $200, 000.. The heavy oak . doors of the car . had been splintered by dynamite, and in addition the marks of revolver bullets were visible. Every pane of glass in the windowB of the car had been shat- . tered by dynamite, and fragments of glass were still scattered over he floor of the car. Officials of. the Adams Ex- " press Company, in charge of the car at the depot, claimed only the pouches and safes had been ransacked. j . ' A Seward Offered. ' Richmond, Va., Oct.- 13 Three po licemen left today ' for the scene of the r4 train robbery near Qaantico ; $20,000 was the amount sent from this city by train, end most of it was in bonds. The gov ernor has offered $1,000 reward and tele graphed the governor of Maryland ask ing co-operation.' ' Work of Drunken Fiends. WrLKESBABBE, Pa., Oct. 13. As a re i suit of a drunken riot at Maltoy, a small Hungarian settlement near this city, one person was instantly killed, two fatally wounded, and two others seriously in jured. Killed and injured : George Si- voski, aged 17, head blown to pieces: Lizzie Fosky. aged 15, shot in the abdo men, cannot recover; John Jenkins. 28, i ' ' ' . i . not in tn aoaomen, cannot live ; Mag' gi Moore, 14, shot in the arm ond both Highest of all in Leavening Power. legs, will recover; Thomas Moore, 23, shot in both legs, will recover. Mitchell Poloski became intoxicated - and John Moore ordered him from, his saloon. He went home and procured a shotgun. . On bis way back to the saloon . be encoun tered Dan Ryan sitting on a porch with Lizzie Fosky and Maggie Moore. ' Rya'n advised Poloski to go hornet Poloski fired, and the two girls fell to the porch, the blood spurting from their wounds. John Moore, attracted by the shooting, picked up his sister, while Ryan took the Fosky girl. Before they could gel inside the door, the drunken fiend em p1 tied the second barrel into the girls, Moore receiving part of the load in the knee. Poloski was joined by two coun trymen, also armed. John Jenkins at tempted to arrest Poloski and was shot. The Slavs then escaped ' to their board ing house, barricaded the door, thrust their heads through the .windows and threatened to kill the first person at tempting to enter. People living on the opposite side of Hhe street had their heads out of the windows. One of the Slavs, seeing the head of George Sivoski, took deliberate aim and fired, tearing half the boy's head and face away. The horror-stricken - neighbors closed the windows and barricaded the doors. The murderers then turned the guns on lighted windows, posts and trees. After all became quiet, several armed men went to the house to arrest the murder ers. The door of the house was open and the men were gone. Two men were arrested at Kingston this morning on suspicion. ' The two guns carried by the murderers were found in a pond. Tried to Murder a lawyer. San Fbancisco, Oct. 13. An old man known, as Captain Emerson attempted to murder H. H. Lowenthal, a wU known attorney of this city, about 10 o'clock this morning. Emerson met Lowenthal on the stairway of a building on California street, and handed him- a letter to read. While engaged in its perusal Emerson pressed a pistol against the attorney's stomach and was about to pull the trigger when Lowenthal knocked the would-be murderer's hand down, the bullet passing through his (Lowenthal's) legs. A fight then followed for posses sion of the weapon, in which Lowenthal waa slightly bruised. By this time a' crowd was attracted to the 6cene and Emerson was taken into custody. He refuses as yet to state any reason for his attempted assassination of the lawyer. The would-be assassin's name is John T. Emerson, and he has a bad record, having been mixed up in several bribery cases. The Bhooting today, it has been ascertained, was the outcome of the cel ebrated "Little Pete" bribery case which was before the courts in 1887. In this case he was caught in an effort to bribe a juror, was convicted, and sent to San Quentin for five years. Emerson' de clares ' that Lowenthal advised him to plead guilty, promising him $1000 to do so, but the attorney subsequently aban doned him. Acta Like a Crazy Man. . San Fbancisco, Oct. 13. Dr. E. M. Griffith, who branded the letter M on a 2-weeke-old child, appeared in Police Judge Conlan's . court this morning, charged with cruelty. The case was continued until next Tuesday, when he will be arraigned. If Griffith be not In sane, he is very nearly so and acts like a maniac This is the result of the long and excessive use of morphine and cocaine. The Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children decided today to have Dr. Griffith arrested for mayhem, should the present charge against him not result in conviction. . When persons are weak and languid, from sickness or overwork, feel" debil itated and 'depressed, it is an indication that the blood is out of order, and they need help to throw off the miserable feeling. The best remedy for this pur pose is Dr. J. H. McLean's Strength' ening Cordial and Blood Purifier. It re stores lost strength, gives vigor to cir culation , promotes good appetite and a flow of cheerful spirits. Price $1.00 per Dome. Dor sale py tne snipes-K-inersly urug jo. . Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to be favored With a liberal .share of the trade. .. Jos. T. Peters & Co. Ovain Backs for sale at the Wasco warehouse. . - ' tf Latest U.S. Gov't Report ft ' V S V w w jLoTTOLKMBl I d ferrrouorajP' X X M UU I OF THE a is 35 1 Fnvc:3 pan Has come not a little knowledge as to cook ery what to do, as well as what not to do. Thus O z z we have learned to use o EiTTItEME, the most pure and per feet and popular cook- o o H c z o a u z z J -J 3 2 3 O O WW z z u ea insrmaterial for all frying and shortemngpurposes. pnosnsssivs . sooions c c z. z H o e is the natural outcome If of the age, and it teaches us not to useXaxA, but rath O er the new shortening, GOTTOLEIIL. a aJ which is far cleaner, and more digestible than any lard can be. 1TB 2 Z it Z Z H H j a 2 2 The success of Cotto- lene has called out worth less imitations under similar names. Lookout for these! Ask your o z x b Grocer for Cottolene, and be sure that you get it. uj a z z J n) o o ec o o Ertj , Hade only by . N. K. FAIRS ANK & CO., z z u ST. LOUIS and ICHICAGO.NEW YORK, BOSTO N u r-laf WADtr DABTA a.a I C) t . I jCoTTOLBNEj q CoTTOLBUBj q (COTTOLHNir . J O rCoTTOUtNgj rC OTTO LB Kg ICOTTOLENS A UNIQUE FACTORY., Wbera Medicine and Food Is Huisfac- - " tared or Uofcs. One of the two factories of this conn- try. for the making of patent food and patent medicine for dogs has been' de scribed in the Isew York News. The founder of this novel establishment was a Scotchman, lie was employed in London kennels, studied the needs of dogs, thought out special treatment for them, and finally took out patents on food and medicines, and in his unique business amassed a fortune. On the second floor the visitor enters the receiving room of the raw mate rials. Thousands of pounds of butchers' scraps are brought here in the course of a month. Oatmeal in wholesale quantities and tons of herbs are used. The old-fashioned dog's bane,,boneset, catnip and beet root, under various scientific names, find a use as food or as medicine. The second floor is occupied by four curious machines with 'great cylinder attachments. After the fat and the meat have been sorted, they are ground separately in. these machines, and then placed in great wooden tubs where various mixtures are added. The next'process seems so much like the ordinary baker's work that one is quite disposed to taste things, and when the round and square cakes of a tempt ing brown have been . taken from the 'brick ovens, one really : envies the aristocratic dog. After cooling, the biscuits are packed in neat pasteboard boxes. . - According to size these boxes are la belled for pet dogs, for greyhounds and for St. Bernards. There are spec ially prepared dishes ' for cats. Suffi cient food to keep pussy for two days may be had for five cents. Bi; it costs a pretty penny to Keep a aog. A large dog must have six or eight cakes beside a quantity of meat. - The meat costs probably about ten cents and the cakes are four cetits apiece. The most interesting department is that of the patent medicines at the top of the building. The mixture of herbs and chemicals are boiled in great ket tles, and the liquid is brought up to? this floor to be put in bottles of various sizes and labelled "cure for mange, "liniment for sprains," and 'to prevent baldness." Sure' cures for seventeen diseases, and pills as well as liquid med icines are maae. This , curious v' establishment also makes dog. collars, dog soaps, crates for carrying or shipping dogs, dog brushes and combs, blankets and mack in tosh waterproofs with hoods, for greyhounds.' ' " A here are in the United States, aa a whole,- 17,330 foreign-born persons to each 100,000 native-born. Op all 'the Chinese in this country. are- in California and 9,540 in Oregon, the rest being scattered. ACCOKDIXO to tli a 1 the whole number of persons from five 10 seventeen years of age was 18,543,201 Bt the eleventh census Maine, Ver mont, North Carolina, Iowa and Ari zona had each one Japanese resident. For the' many accidents that occnr about the farm or . housebould, such as burns scalds, ; bruises, cuts, ragged wounds, bites of animals, mosquitoes or other insects, galls or chafed spots, frost bites, aches or pains in any part of the body, or the ailments resulting from ex posure, as neuralgia, rheumatism, etc. Dr J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Lini ment has proved itself a sovereign rem edy. Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. For eale bv the Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. '." , Just of the Hamilton-Brown Shbe Co. ' ' ' ' ' '.'"' .. ..'-.. ' " 1 ;','..--'' - . v Reliable in every respect. ' '. .''- ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' '. ' . .'..'.:.''"- r . . , Particularly wish to call your attention to T cl? t v p- . our Kango Calf Spring-Heel Shoes at .... 4 1 .OU cLIlQ vp 1 . 2, $ . . .TRY THEM AND FIND SATISFACTION. Get a Premium with Every Pair.. For Xnanta and Children. Caatoria, promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, .Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Caatorla contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. " Castoria Is m well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Ahcher. H. D., 111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ft Fn. Mvor.1 VMM T liar. MvimnMifiinl voof Castoria,1 and shall always continue to do so, Edwik F. Pardbk, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Aye., New York City. "The use of 'Castoria' is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. ' Few are the in telligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach." CiBTioa Mabttn, P.P.. - New York City. Trnt CDTiiB OoKPAirr, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GKNERALBANKXNU BOBXME88 , , y ; Letters of Credit issued available in the - Eastern States. Sight Exchange and . Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections mnrie at all points on fav orable terms. ErlLiAGEVIHfiT of STOgE. 'Owing to increase of business and putting in a stock of Dry Goods, f v the store has been lengthened by thirty-fi,ve feet. . ; FROM ' Agency: of the - , Brownsville Clothing, Underwear" Blankets, Etc., Etc. Received School A. M. WILLIAMS & GO. E. JACOBSEN . THE LEADER IN Pianos and Organs, Books, NOTIONSSTATIONERY. - Call and get his prices. Sells PIANOS on easy monthly payments, and is prepared to meet any COMPETITION. . 162 SeCDM St., . THE DALLES, OR. J. H. BCHBHCK, - President. . J. M. PA.TTKB80N, Cashier. First Rational Bank. THE DALLES. - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight . Draft or Check. ' Collections made and proceeds promptly , remitted on day -of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, Ban Francisco and Port- land. dirbotoks. D. P. Thompson. . Juo. 3. Schbnok. Ed. M. WrLLiAHS, Gko. A. Lixbb. H. M. Bball. House Moving! 1 Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at reasonable figures. Has the largest house moring outfit in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181.The Dalles ENGLAND DIRECT M. 1- orioes DOORS,: -WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and .; v CEiyEENT, Window-Glass v and Picture Moulding". Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. DKALEB8 IK Pure Drags . ClBiicals, FINE LINE OF IJ8P0HTED and D0J5ESTIC CIGRBS At Our Old Place of Business. LADIES' H0NYW1LL Importer.