The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 23, 1894, Image 1

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VOL. VII
THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1894.
NO. 257--
OREGON GITY SUICIDE
Eoss L. Spencer Blows His
Brains Out.
TRAINROBBERS MISS A BIG HAUL
Suicide of a Barkeeper While on
Drunken Spree Wholesale Poison
- lng In a Hospital.
Oregon City, Oct. 22. Ross L. Spen
cer, constable of this precinct, ehot and
killed himself here this morning. He
went to the sheriff's office about 9 o'clock
and borrowed a revolver from the sheriff.
He then went down to Justice Dixon's
court and finished up some work he had
to do. About 10 o'clock he was found
with a bullet hole clear through his head
and the revolver by his side. He was
still alive, but unconscious. A physician
called, who, upon examination, pro
nounced the wound fatal. He lingered
until noon, when be died without having
regained his consciousness. Mr. Spen
cer was about 60 years of age, and leayes
a widow and six children. He was
elected constable on the populist ticket
last June, and haB made a very efficient
officer. He has been quite despondent
lately, saying the office did not pay
enough to support his family. He
owned a house and lot at Canemab,
where he resided.
A Fatal Fire.
Nyack, N. Y., Oct. 22. Four grand
children of Rev. William Taylor, Meth
- od'st missionary bishop of Africa, per
ished in the bnrnincr of the elecant hones
of their father, Ross Taylor, at South
Nyack, early today. In addition one
man war no had! v hnrnfid hftnan fiCArmlv
. j . j
. recover, and two' others were seriously
y injured.
It was a little after 4 o'clock when
; -'She aroused her husband, Rev. Boss
Taylor. He found the halls tilled' with
smoke, the fire having obtained great
headway, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor groped
their way through the suffocating smoke
to the outer air, without having been
able to extend a helping hand to their
. six children or others of-the household.
As Mr. and Mrs. Taylor emerged, the
-nre department arnvea. lue energies
t 1 1 J- .1 . . .
ui an were uirecusa luwaru me rescue oi
those who remained in the doomed
afrnn.tnra. Thn twn AlHpnf. Tp T7lrT chil
dren, Stewart and William, were aroused
and, jumping from the window, were
caught without being seriously injured.
Harriet, aged 11 ; Ada, 8 ; Arthur, 7, and
Schultz, 5, perished. Their bodies were
recovered two hours later. Michael
Mulady, laborer, and Edward Link and
William Ruth, house decorators, sleep
ing in the third story, jumped for their
... lives. Mulady was fatally hurt; Ruth
and Link sustained serious injuries, but
will probably recover. The house had
. been recently built, and the interior dec
orations wprn still inonmnlAtp
. K
The funeral of the four children was
held at 11 a. m. today. The four charred
bodies were placed in one casket. -Rev.
J. B. Taylor officiated, and Rev. Ross
Taylor, the bereaved father, made a few
remarks, telling . several,' pathetic in
cidents. t ' ; ' :- '.'
Wholesale Poisoning-.
Colusa, Oct. 22. Twenty-two in
mates of the county hospital were
poisoned yesterday" by strychnine in
:. their coffee. One man died. No further
deathB have resulted from the poisoning
of the inmates of the county hospital.
Mrs. Ingram, wife of the superinten
dent, is still very sick, but will recover.
The accepted theory is a discharged
. Chinese cook, who had trouble with the
steward, entered the hospital during the
bight and put the strychnine in a can of
r ground coffee. ' No arrests.
Suicide of a Drunkard.
Cincinnati; Oct. 22. Jacob Vogeli, a
ville last night, and 'going home began
to abuse his family, and a policeman
wascalled. Nogeli; when sober, is the
.' best of husbands and fathers. He had
been arrested once or' twice before.
When the police came they walked him
to the station. They were followed by
Vogeli'8 12-year-old daughter, Emma,
who went to Policeman ' Calvin and
Highest of all in Leavening
Mm
told him her father had threatened sui
cide, and just before he was arrested she
had seen him take something white.
The policeman laughed at the child. In
her agony of fear the little girl got down
on her knees and begged him to send
her father to the hospital, but (she was
again refused. Afterwards the police
man went back. Vogeli wasin the cell
half clad and suffering. The policeman
went to call a patrol. Ten minutes later
it came and in the cell dead on the floor
lay the man whose life his little girl had
pleaded for in vain. .
The Crop of Backers This Year Seems
to Be Very Large.
Pittsbuhg, Oct. 22. The news of the
closing up by the police of the "public
stock and produce exchange" and the
"discretionary pool" concern on Satur
day brought great crowds of 'investors
from the country into town,, showing
how wide spread have been the opera
tions of these concern. The Delarneys,
who operated the "public stock and pro
duce exchange," secured a release on
bail for a hearing this evening. At the
office this morning they announced to
their clients that, as their books were in
the bands of the police, they would be
unable to pay out money or do business
except to recieve notices of the with
drawal of deposits. All the discretion
ary pools have a clause in their agree
ments by which they can insist upon 30
days' notice of withdrawal. The Con
solidated Stock & Produce Company,
another discretionary pool, did not open
its doors today. Hundreds of investors,
who went to the office to withdraw their
deposits, were confronted with a notice
that the firm had temporarily suspended.
Washington Force, the manager, was not
there, and no one appeared to know of
his whereabouts. Warrants have been
issued for him. Other pools are ex
pected to suspend at any moment, and
excitement among investors is running
high. By the books of the Delaneys it
is shown that over half of the investors
were women, most of them domestics
and washerwomen, who fancied they
had found an easy road to wealth.
Sixty Were Killed.
Baltimore, Oct. 22. Captain Hud
gins, of the coffee bark Dom Pedro II.,
now in port, gives a graphic description
of a dynamite explosion that occurred in
Rio a few days previous to September 6,
when tiia vessel sailed for Baltimore.
Sixty persons were killed. A Brazillian
soldier discovered, near the English
cemetery, a subterranean magazine, in
which the insurgents of the recent re
bellion had concealed a large quantity of
gunpowder cartridges and dynamite
shells which they evidently intended
using against the government. The
soldier reported his find to the general
commanding, and a rough cart drawn
by two mules was sent to the scene to re
move the contents of the hidden maga
zine to a place of safety. A detachment
of soldiers accompanied the cart, and a
curious crowd of citizens followed it to
the little; hill which had been dug out to
hold the explosives. .A quantity of
shells had been placed in the cart and a
pile of others' had been passed out close
behind it when one of the soldiers,
while in the act of "handling a shell,
dropped it among the others'.- The same
second an explosion shook the earth, a
sheet of flame shot upward and a cloud
of whitiBh smoke hid everything from
view The vessels In the harbor rocked
at their moorings and the entire city was
thrown . into wild excitement. More
thon a 'ton of dynamite has exploded
from .the. dropping of. the shell. The
soldiers and mules .were -blown in frag
ments and only the iron tires of the cart
wheels were found.
A. Bloodthirsty Tenth.
San Francisco, Oct. 22. Eugene
Menesini, 19 years of age, who was re
cently discharged from . Granucci's
butcher shop on Stockton street, went
to the shop this morning and demanded
to be reinstated. His demand was re
fused, whereupon the youth whipped out
a revolver and fired two shots at Gran
ucci and an employe named Harant.
After their flight, neither being hit,
Menesini ehot himself in the head, dy
ing instantly. -
Between disease and the many cheap
preparations which are palmed off un
der the name of blood purifiers, take
your chances with .disease, until you can
procure Ayer's - Sarsaparilla the only
reliable blood purifier. "Sold by all
druggists and dealers in medicine.
Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report
t
AAAAAAAAAA
Ht is
.
me mma urai
j makes the man."
7 3 rwT . . . . . a . 1
fi kuu w ans, dui moaern euiics
M otin fliia a v. rl niii.i llin iniiilif
"7 UUU feUMWkMI.
to the tailor. It i3 question
able,, however, if either are
right. .
Food
n
has some claims
;
-i ii this respect.thereforc those
parents who would build up
Uie physique of their children
pay strict attention to their
diet. Children are all fond cf
pastry; for this to be health
fully prepared,
31
jflOTTBLEHE
must be used as a shortening.
It is
Recommended
by the test Cooks.
' Consult your physician np
on its hcalthfulness.
Send three cents in stamps toN.K.
Fairbank A Co., Chicago, for hand
some Oottolene Cook Book, contain
ing six hundred recipes, prepared by
nine eminent authorities on cooking
. Cottolene Is sold by all grocers.
Befuee all substitutes.
5iB-
31
3
- . Made only by
N.K. FAIRBANK & CO
ST. LOUIS and
HICAGQ, WCW YORK, BOSTON
BP
The Flood Jury Disagree.
San Frakcisl-o, Oct. 22. The jurors
in the Flood, embezzlement case were
discharged this morning, standing nine
for conviction' ahd one for acquittal,
after being out since 4 o'clock Friday
afternoon. Flood was arraigned in
the police court on charges of making
false entries in the books, but the case
was continued for several weeks. V
Attempt' to Kill Italians V
Nkw Rochkllk, 'il'.i:Y., . Oct. 22.- As
the result of feeling engendered by fre
quent conflicts between Irish and Italian
laborers employed on the sewers here,
Patrick Reilly last night put nine dyna
mite cartridges upon a shanty in which
100 Italians were sleeping, and was in
the act of attaching a galvanic battery
to the cartridges when discovered.
Reilly is held for the grand jury.
- ' A. Noted Bandit Killed.
Guadalajara, Mexico, ' Oct. 22.
Mounted police report that they over
took Antonio Sanchez, the noted bandit
chief, in the mountains and ehot him to
death. Several' of his desperate, band
were wounded and captured..
There is no medicine so often needed
in every home and so admirably adapted
to the purposes for which it is intended,
as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a
week passes but some member of the
family has need of it. A toothache or
headache may be cured by it. A touch
of rheumatism or neuralgia quieted.
The severe pain of a burn . or scald
promptly relieved and the sore healed in
much less time than when medicine has
to be sent for.' A sprain may be
promptly treated before inflamation sets
in, which insures a cure in about one
third of the . time otherwise required.
Cuts and bruises should receive im
mediate treatment before the parts be
come swollen, which can only be done
when Pain Balm la kept at hand. A
sore throat may be cured before it be
comes serious. A troublesome corn may
be removed by applying it twice a day
for a week or two. A lame back may be
cured and. several days of valuable time
saved or a pain in the side or chest re
lieved without paying a doctor bill. Pro
cure a 50 cent bottle .at once and you
will never regret it. For sale by Blakeley
& Houghton Druggists.
; Paderewski isn't coming over here
this year, but the college football young
man with Padereweski hair is already
beginning to be very ranch in evidence.
r-Boston Globe. .
Every mother should know that croup
can be prevented. The first symptom of
true croup is hoarseness. This is fol
lowed by a peculiar rough cough. If
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is given
freely as soon as the child becomes
hoarse or even after the cough has de
veloped it will prevent the attack. 50
cent bottles for Bale by Blakeley &
Houghton, druggists.
Don't commit suicide on account of
your "incurable" blood disease. The
sensible thing for yon to do is to take
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. . If that fails, why,
then keep on trying, and it will not
fail. The trouble is, people get dis
couraged too soon. "Try, try,- try
again." )
Just
of the
; Particularly wish to call your attention to - x - A ' r r r-
our Kango Calf Spring-Heel Shoes at .... vp I .OO dllQ ; .1 . 2$
' ' :'. .. V ;.';:". -. :-j -: ;.' :. v.
y TRY THEM AND FIND SATISFACTION.
Get a Premium with
0 Solr
For Infants and Children.
Castorfa promote! Digestion, and
overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour
Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness.
Thus the child is rendered healthy and its
sleep natural. . Oastorla contains no
Morphine or other narcotic property.
" Castoria is bo well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me." H. A. Abcher, M. D.,
1U South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.T.
For several years I bare reoommeri3ed your
' Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so.
as it has invariably produced beneficial resulta."
Edth F. Pardkk, M. D.,
135th Street and 7th Ave., Kew 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."
Camlm MLihtto. D. D.,
.. vi . New York City.
Ths Cnun Oompaut, 77 Murray Street, N. Y,
FRENCH & CO.,
BANKERS.
TKANHAC1 A 6 KNERAL BANKING BDBINEB8
Letters of Credit issued available in the
' Rastern States. ...
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St.
Lotus, Ban Francisco, Portland Oregon,
Seattle Wash., and various points in Or
egon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms.
ENLARGEMENT of STORE
Owing to increase of - business and putting in a stock of Dry Goods, ' . . '
l- the store has been lengthened by thirty-five feet.
FROM
if
; Agency of the -Brownsville
Clothing; "
Underwear, Blankets,
Etc., .Etc.
Trine
Received
School
Hamilton - Brown Shoe Co.
Reliable in every respect. .
A. M. WILLIAMS & GO.
E. JACOBS EN
THE LEADER IN
Pianos and Orpnsr Books,
NOTIONS, STATIONERY.
Call and get his prices. Sells PIANOS on
easy monthly payments, and is prepared to meet
any COMPETITION. .
162 Second St.,; THE DALLES, OR.
J. S. CICHSHGK, .
President.
J. M. Pattkbsok,
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, San Francisco and Port
land. .
D1HKOTOKS
D. P. Thompson. Jno. 8. Schnck.
Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Likbb.
H. M. Beall.
House
Moving!
Andrew Velarde
IS prepared to do any and all
kinds of work in his line at
. reasonable figures. Has the '
" largest honse moving outfit
in Eastern Oregon. ,
.'. -V
Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles
ENGLAND DIRECT -
Minel Hals, Feairs, Flaws.
, ETC.
M.
orioes
,J..Y
DOORS,
WINDOWS,
FIRE BRICK,
FIRE CLAY,
T.TTVFr7l flti ri
CEMENT,
Window-Glass
and
ri -Rflr i j i
L UiC JXLU UlUlllg.
Snines-Kinerslv DruR Co.
1. . w .
DBALIBS IK
Pare Druns CDGicais.
FINE LINE OF
IMPORTED and D0J5ESTIC CIGfiRS
At Our Old Place of Business.
LADIES'
H0NYWILL,
Importer. .