| "Owensboro Messenger," January 29, 1911, via Newspapers.com |
Early in 1910, American newspapers breathlessly carried the story of what appeared to be a particularly shocking double homicide. This account comes from the "Republican News Item" for January 6:
The mystery of the death of Miss Grace Elosser, of Cumberland, Md., and Charles E. Twigg, of Keyser, W. Va. her fiance, appears as deep as it did shortly after the bodies of the couple were found on the settee in the parlor of the Elosser residence on Saturday, when the mother of the dead girl went in to speak to her.
Twigg and Miss Elosser were to have been married Sunday night. It is suspected that a jealous woman rival was the poisoner, carrying out her plot in a most crafty way.
The mystery begun with the discovery on Saturday afternoon of the pretty girl and her fiance sitting together, hand in hand, on a sofa in the parlor of their home—both dead.
So swift, so instantaneous had been the action of the poison upon them that they sat as if in life.
The girl's mother went into the room, wondering only at the very long silence that she had noted between the couple. She saw her daughter and the young man sitting in apparently the most natural fashion. They were holding hands and looking into each other's eyes.
Then the mother suddenly gasped and stepped back. There was something uncanny, she saw, in the intentness of the gaze the young man and woman had fixed upon each other. There was that which gave a silent, vague alarm in the fixedness of their pose. She spoke to them. They did not answer. She went over to them. She spoke again and received no reply. Then she put a hand on her daughter's head and spoke again.
"Grace —Grace," she said. And there was still no reply, so she gently shook her daughter by the shoulder. The mother screamed then and ran from the room. The girl's head had lolled to a side and the other woman had seen that the girl's jaw was dropped and her eyes fixed in the piteous gaping of death.
Then when others came it was found that the man, too, was dead; that both had been suddenly and absolutely stricken. The deadliest of poisons had been the medium.
This was established by the autopsy of the coroner's physician, Dr. Thomas W. Koon. They had both taken cyanide of potassium. The man had more of the poison in his system than the girl. In the holiday season there had been several boxes of candy in the house. But the medical examination showed conclusively that neither Miss Elosser or her fiance had eaten candy. He had, however, in his mouth a stick of chewing gum. He had taken scarcely more than two or three bites on it. It had not been masticated into a pulp. In Miss Elosser's mouth was no chewing gum.
The strange likelihood is being considered by the authorities that the stick of chewing gum contained the deadly cyanide. Also that the young man, with the gum in his mouth, had leaned forward to kiss his sweetheart and that the kiss communicated the poison to her lips--a kiss offered in love that was deadly—the kiss of whose tragic character the ardent bestower was in all ignorance.
This is the only evidence that the authorities have so far secured to aid them in the way of solving the amazing mystery. It has been by no means proven that the chewing gum contained the deadly poison. But it seems to be the only possible source from which the young man and his sweetheart could have taken into their systems the deadly chemical. The candy that was in the Elosser home had been partaken of by all the members of the family without ill effect. Moreover, chemical analysis showed all this confectionery to be harmless.
The tips of the tongues of both Twigg and the girl who was to have been his bride were red and inflamed, quite as if they had been burned or bitten. Cyanide, of course, takes immediate action. The mere touching of a grain of it to the tip of the tongue will cause death instantly.
The newspapers did a great deal of speculating about the tragedy. Twigg had initially courted the dead woman's sister May before transferring his affections to Grace. A third sister admitted that May had been "terribly broken up" about losing Charles--so much so that she stopped speaking to Grace. Could the "scorned woman" have taken this rejection so hard that she poisoned, not just her ex-flame, but her own sister? The first doctor at the scene of the deaths testified that he also found May Elosser unconscious with "decided symptoms of cyanide poisoning." It took him fifteen minutes of work to revive her. Was this evidence that she had planned the deaths of all three members of this love triangle?
Or could Charles Twigg, for some as-yet-unknown reason, have poisoned himself and the woman he was about to marry? Or was it a double suicide?
The police finally decided that there was not enough evidence to arrest anyone. At the inquest, May admitted that she had been jealous of her sister, but vehemently denied that she could even consider murdering her. There was no evidence of her buying poison. The coroner's jury returned a verdict that the couple had died from cyanide poisoning, but they could not say how it had been administered. This ambiguous verdict meant that May Elosser--the only known person with any conceivable motive to kill the pair--was left with a grim cloud of suspicion over her head. It was looking like she would have to live with it for the rest of her life.
It was a local physician, a Dr. Littlefield, who finally provided a resolution to the case. He had closely examined the parlor where Twigg and Elosser died. He noted that there was a small crack in the glass of a gas stove in the room. He also saw that when all the doors and windows were closed--as they had been when couple died—the parlor had very little air circulation. He theorized that the couple had died of carbon monoxide poisoning, and he decided to try an experiment. He placed a cat in the parlor, made sure all the doors and windows were shut, and left the animal there overnight.
By the time he returned the next morning, the cat was dead. An autopsy found that an accumulation of leaking gas had killed it. A second cat was left in the room overnight. This cat also died. Littlefield pointed out that certain foods create hydrocyanic acid in the stomach, meaning that the traces of "poison" found in Twigg and Elosser's system could have come from natural causes. The couple's bodies were exhumed, and the subsequent autopsy established that they had indeed died from carbon monoxide, the result of the flue of the parlor stove being choked with an over-accumulation of soot. He felt that he had proved their deaths were simply a catastrophic accident.
Many townspeople, still stubbornly convinced of May Elosser's guilt, refused to accept that the tragedy could have such a prosaic explanation. However, in 1913, two women living in the Elosser home were found unconscious from carbon monoxide poisoning in that same parlor. Fortunately, they were found in time to revive them. Examination showed that they too had allowed the flue to become choked with soot.
It looked like Littlefield had been vindicated--no one had been murdered, after all.
Except those poor cats, of course.
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