C 1 ) VOL. VII THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, '1894. NO. 276 A DELIBERATE SUICIDE Set Her Clothing on Fire and Burned to Heath. GAVE NO CAUSE FOR THE RASH ACT Train llobbera Sighted Vrleat'a Mur derer ConfessesDead Robber Ball Flayera Robbed. vBeebk, Ark.. 2fov. 12. The wife of T. K. Breckinridge got np yesterday morn ing, took a bunch of newspapers, set them on fire, and walking out into the back yard, deliberately set her clothing on fire and burned herself to death. She gave no cause for her rash act. The family had recently come to Arkansas from Travis county, Texas. Severe Floods In England. London, Nov 13. Much damage has been done in the flooded district and some lives have been lost. Passengers . who crossed the channel during the storm described the voyage as ah awful experience. In Dorsetshire and Somer setshire the heaviest floods in years have been experienced, and at Bath, Somer set, the water was breast high in many of the streets. In other places the peo ple were so alarmed by the rising waters that they sought refuge in the attics or upon high ground. People had to be rescued by boats from the windows of the upper stories of houses.' '.Others were fed by boats the same way. Re cent gales . are reported all along the coasts and throughout France. Mrs. Barnes Still Confessing;. San Bernardino, Cal., Nov. 13. Mrs. Mary Barnes, accused with ' Thomas Salter of attempting to poison her hus band, is still supplementing her confes sions. Unable to sleep Friday night, - she arose at midnight and in the quiet of her cell she wrote till morning, giving a fall history of the case, admitting that larnes was being poisoned by arsenic, she also says that Salter wanted to shoot him, but she refused to allow it. This confession is now in the possession of the district attorney. Salter refuses to say anything in regard to his connection with the crime or the confessions of Mrs. Barnes. ' A. Severe Snow Storm Rasing;. St. Peteksbukg, Nov. 13, The body of the late czar arrived at 10 o'clock this .. morning. Preceding the ceremony of removing the body from Nicholas sta tion to the fortress, three guns were fired. The procession, owing to a heavy snow storm, had to move through deep slush. ' In a proclamation to the people of Fin land, the Russian emperor says he will . maintain the religion' and fundamental law of the country, and the rights and privileges of every class. The czar has appointed the Prince of Wales honorary colonel of the Kieff reg iment of dragoons. Bobberl Did Not Get Much. St. Louis, Nov. 13. -According to re ports to Superintendent Simpson, of Wells Fargo Express Company, the sum total so the booty obtained by the rob bers' who held up the St. Louis & San Francisco train, near Monett,'Mo.', was $215. '. Messenger A. MV Chapman is a brother of the messenger killed in de fenseof his car a year or two ago". He was himself also held up at Red Fork, I. T., last June, but saved all the money he bad. , The, Dead Bank Robber. '- Sauna, JKan., Nov. 13. The - bank robber shot here yesterday by his pals, after he had been grieviously wounded by the cashier of the bank robbed, was found to have on his person $1,500 booty A letter was also found upon him ad 4 dressed to Stephen McKee, 902 Hickory street, St. Joseph, Mo.' The gang is sup posed to have been the ' same which robbed the Fort Scott bank in Septem ber. Their haunts are in (he Blue hills of O9borne county. Two Boj Murderers. Lakned, Kan., Nov. 13. Harvey and Arnold, aged 17. and 19, murderers of Mayor Marsh, of Kinsleypleaded guilty today of murder in the first degree. The sentence imposed by. Judge Vandivert was imprisonment in the penitentiary Highest of all in Leavening Power. 1 V . aT r until the governor shall decide they will be, hanged. The boys were taken on the '9 o'clock tram for Leavenworth by Sheriff Heath, but not until a mob had gathered and threatened lynching. i Football Flayers Robbed. Amherst, Mass.,' Nov. 13. While Dartmouth and Amherst were playing football on Pratt field, Saturday, sneak thieves were at work in the dressing rooms where the players had left their clothing. Thomas, substitute end on the Amherst team, was robbed of a diamond ring valued at $125 and $180 in money. Tyler, . right tackle, also an Amherst man, lost a ring. Several rob beries occurred about' town during the afternoon. ' ; : The Chinese Loues. v Hiroshima, Nov. 13. Field Marshal Yamagata's , report, dated Kiu-Lien-Chang, November 10th,'eays there are no Chinese troops in that vicinity. He adds the losses of the Chinese in that neighborhood are not fully known, but the bodies of over 500 Chinese soldiers have been buried by the Japanese. A great number of bodies of Chinese were found in the Aika river. A. Japanese Woman Strangled. Denvee, Nov. 13. Kiku Oyama, a Japanese girl of ill-repute, was strangled to death early this morning in a house on Market street, in the same manner as Lena Tapper and Marie Contassolt were recently murdered in the same neighbor hood. She apparently had been robbed. There is no clue to the strangler, and ex citement among the women of that class is very greats Firm of Brokers Assign. New Yobk, Nov. 13. Charles B. Caldwell and William R. Bunker, com prising the firm of Caldwell & Banker, brokers, assigned today to Stephen W. Knevals, without preference. Kneyals says the liabilities will not reach ' $50,000. The failure was caused by the stringency in the money market. All the creditors, he says, will be paid in full. The" Trans-MlsslssIppl Congress. Sacramento, Nov. 13. The governor has appointed the following delegates to the trans-Mississippi commercial con gress : W. W. Davis, Santa Rosa ; Gen eral A. Pippy, San Francisco; David Lubin, Sacramento; E. S. Heller, San Francisco; A. 'P. Roach, Watsonville; William Johnston, Courtland, and Miles, Los Angeles. A Warship for Japan. Valpabaiso, Chili, Nov. 13. The war ship Esmeralda, which has been pur chased by Japan from Chili, is in the drydock here being cleaned. She will have her trial trip next Thursday, and will sail for Yokohama next week, call ing at one port in Eucador on her way. The captain of ' the Esmeralda is Senor EmilfoGalin. Fire at Tallejo, Cal. Nallejo, Cal., Nov. 13. Fire started this morning at the Good Templars' Home in a hay barn containing about 90 tons of hay. The fire is still burning, and there is no way to put it out on account of a scarcity of water. No dam age is apprehended to the other buildings unless the wind .changes to the north. ' - " : . Earthquake In Bolivia. Lapaz, . Nov. 13. There have been violent .shocks of earthquake along the coast of Chili and this country. One hundred people have' been killed by the Beismitic disturbances within a radius of 40 miles from this city. The cathedral here has. been rendered .unsafe and .one tower was thrown down. He Murdered a Frlest. Toulon, Nov. 13. A Frenchman named Eugene has been arrested, charged with having murdered and robbed a priest in a London lodging- house. He was impersonating the priest when arrested. The body of the priest was ' found ' banging to the bedpost. Eugene has confessed. Adjourned Till Wednesday. : .Liverpool, Nov. 13. The argument upon the order of winding up the affairs of the Beaver Line Steamship Company, Canada, was adjourned till Wednesday in order for the liquidator appointed in Canada to be represented. The Storthing elections. Chkistiana, Norway, Nov. 13.; Re turns from the ' storthing elections are complete, except in the case of two seats. The rights and moderates have elected 53 members, the lefts 59. Latest U. S. Gov't Report mm iv ief I v"" SWIMS FAST UNDER WATER. The Clumsy Penguin Blake, as Good Time an a Bird In the Air. Naval architects are credited with saying1 that highest speed in navigation could be obtained by submarine boats. The principle is illustrated in the diving- birds, which are capable of shooting- througb. the water with amazing velocity. While these birds live by catching- fish, in deep water far be low the surface they present many differences in outer appearance. In the collection at the London zoological gardens are black-footed penguins, guillemotes, "darters," a puffin and a cormorant. . The penguin cannot fly in the air, cannot walk, but hops as if its leet were tied together, and cannot swim, and can only with any grace fly under water. When the keeper of their quarters appears to feed the birds j they each behave in their characteris tic way. The fish thrown into the water, the penguins instantly 'plung'e beneath, when an astonishing change takes place, thus described by a writer in the Spectator: The slow, ungainly bird is trans formed into a swift and beautiful creature, beaded with globules of quicksilver where the air clings to the close feathers, and flying through the clear and waveless depths with arrowy speed and powers of turning- far greater than in any known form of aerial flight. The rapid and steady strokes of the wings are exactly sim ilar to those of the air birds, while the feet float straight out level with its body, unused for propulsion or even as rudders, and as little needed in its progress as those of a wild duck when on the wing. The twists and turns necessary to follow the active little fish are made wholly by the strokes of one wing and the cessation of move ment in the other; and the fish are chased, caught and swallowed without the slightest relaxation of speed in a submarine flight which is quite as rapid as that of most birds which take their prey in midair. The head and shoulders may be brought above the surface for a second , and then dis appear; but any attempt to remain on the surface leads to ludicrous splash ing and confusion, for the submarine bird cannot float. The movements of the cormorant are quite different. It does not plunge headlong, but launches itself on the surface and then "ducks" like a grebe. Its wings are not used as propellers, but trail unresistingly level with its body, and the speed at which it courses through the water is wholly due to the swimming powers of its large and ugly webbed feet. These are set quite at the end of the body and work inces santly like a treadle or the floats of a stern wheel steamer. .Yet the condi tions of submarine motion are so favor able that the speed of the bird below the surface is three or four times greater than that gained by equally rapid movements of the feet when it has risen and is swimming on the top. The "darters" divers of the African and American lakes compared to the survival of some ancient lizard dive and swim much like the cormorant, except that the bird keeps its neck drawn back in the form of a flattened "s" when in pursuit of the fish. Once within striking distance the sharp bill is shot out -as if from a catapult and the fish is spiked through and carried to the surface. This ascent is made after each single capture. Sometimes tho'bird has great difficulty in disen tangling' the pierced fish from the spearlike' beak,' and its companion adroitly relieves it of the struggling victim and swallows the prize. . ANECDOTES OF THE QUEEN. he Approved of n Trouncing That Was ' :'Ji ' Administered to. Wales. : i Apropos of the queen's recent sojourn t Balmoral a north of Scotland news aper has been gleaning from among he Dooside peasantry some new stories .bout her majesty's early visits to her lighland residence. One of these re ates to - the boyhood of the prince of fl'ales, says the. Scottish American. The prince on one occasion, when he lad temporarily escaped from the sur veillance of the parental eye, played a rick on a ybung country lad whom he saw approaching with, a basket of eggs 3n his arm, the result of the trick being x break all or most of the eggs. The -iad was a tough Aberdonian and could not brook this injury; so he turned to, and, doubling his fists, gave the prince a thrashing, in Spite of the lattcr's pro test that he was the prince of Wales. ; "Prince an' a' though ye be," said the boy, "ye'd nae business tae break my eggs." Just then the queen ap peared, having seen part of the fray. She quietly said: "You are quite right, my lad; he had no right to break your eggs, and he richly deserves what you have g-iven him." Her majesty after ward made inquiries about the boy and sent him to school at her own expense. Another story relates to her majesty's visit to the cottagers in the neighbor hood. On one occasion, when she- had been making calls, among the cottage women, she dropped in, on. her way back to the castle, at the house of an old woman who did not know her visitor. The old lady was both talk ative and querulous, and, referring to a fete at which the queen had been present that day,- complained about peoples, including her own household, 'Turning- liko mad to see a common clay vromtm." Her grievance was that she had to wait till . her folks returned in order to get her tea, for she was too feeble to make it herself. I III llllllllllll I ' III i jaSk Mi l nr . For Infants and Children. Caatoria promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and Its sleep natural. Castoriav contains ne Morphine or other narcotic property.' " Castorla is so well adapted to children that I reoommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. rcher, M. D., Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. For several years I have recommenaed your Castorla, and shall always continue to do so, as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Edwih F. Pibdie, M. D., 1351b. Street and 7th Ave., New York City. . "The use of 'Castorla' 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." Cab&os Kakttk, D. D., New York City. Tub Cxstadb Cohfakt, 77 Hurray Street, N. Y. FRENCH 8c CO., BANKERS TKAN8AC1 A MKNEKAl.BANKlNd Bl'SISKito Letters of Credit issued available in the tjastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic T-n "N. 7 rv, : ct AtWWlOiaOULUUU llOH L VIA, UiilHU) Ob Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Waah."," and various points in Or egon ana wastungton. - Collections made at all . pointe on nv orable terms. Too busily engaged . in marking to write an advertisement. BOOTS DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, ETC., Every Article Marked in Plain Figures. V V SHIRTS The Best Fitting and Most . Stylish White Shirts, in Plain and Fancy Bosoms A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. E. JACOBSEN THE LEADER IN Pianos and Organs, Books, NOTIONS, STATIONERY. Call and get his prices. Sells PIANOS on easy monthly payments, and is prepared to meet any COMPETITION. 162 SecOEa St., THE DALLES, OR J. H. BCHaKCBL, President. J. M. Patterson, Cashier. first Rational Bank. THE DALLES, - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, suDject to feign t Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptJy ? I.. -i j ii . Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port " land. DIRBOTOKS D. P. Thompson. r Jno. S. Schenck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Likbe. . H. M. JSkall. 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. Address P.O.Box 181.The Dalles MND At the lowest possible prices. M. h-Ji ... S---'----- DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and CEMENT, Window-Glass and Picture Moulding'. IEEE. O-XjIEILSrilsr Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. DEALK Bfl IK Pure Drags Gfiegoals, TIKE OF '- IJIPOHTED and D0J5ESTIG CIGRBS At Our Old Place of Business. off NEW GOODS - " H0NYWILL, Importer.