Dayton herald. (Dayton, Or.) 1885-1909, July 26, 1901, Image 2

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    DAYTON
« ■ to my safe to»». Bamodassa I wuh
you ware tore, f t * K » I saaa naie Uvia<
l l M , t o t I suppose yea're totter off
EVENTS OP THE DAY
wtora yoe are D a Jen Maow aaythia«
of that f W Sarah? H er cress «rained
aacis has tover » r it t t a ma a word sines
to U ft Ea«iaad. I f I , lire three gears
longer I shall corns ta Aawrfc a. and un­
til that time, adieu. Toar father.
“ H E N R Y T E M P L E ."
“ H ow abort aad cold!" was Mary's tre t
awaiting
BY MARY J. HOLMES
t t o t lor aeveral days |
sailing a fearful aarf 1
beach a t . Nome, wh
both life and property
A tragedy uTeportt
A stage line to a keen seta
aeram the mountains'from F r
to Feator.
Jarnoa H a ll, a California pio
IM I, died recently a t Fairviev
co county.
Several rich clean ape am r
from tt o placer mines of M ule
G rant county.
W filim a n h toa bean exonerated of
tt o charges brought against him .
The ministers at Pekin have agreed
upon tt o question of indem nity pay­ land then chosen constitutes t t o proa-
Oregon college presidents are dia-
ments.
ent Coeur d ’Alene In d ia n reserve, cussing a more thorough regulation
Baa Franeiaoo teamsters have q u it H e retired from bw position in 1AS8, of intercollegiate athletics.
work and the w hofem l s trade fe s to u t
- . r ~
T M n k H i i , i M t i v , p lM ,.
la U
T S
b . N
a l i M
-
« .'« ■ -
nUB sM bow
Borne of the Folk oounty prune
a defunct bank. The palde were sup­ name be m eat add tt o word "pris-
posât? fe have been deMroyed 80 years Bn«.” H e refused tt o request of his ««"»era are already engaging hands
Friends to write to the insurgent for .t k * harvest, as a labor famine is
T t o Havana drydock u a rfe e towed Beneral M alvar, M ill a t large in » « « d p a fe * on aooount of t t o aim of
Booths*» Luson, advising h im to the crop and t t o outaide demand for
to Bubig toy, Luson.
mrrender.
H e consented to sign a “ horera.
Aguinaldo is irritated by hia con­
ropy of hia oath of allegiance w ith
Good coal prospects are reported on
tinued imprisonment.
Ito understanding th a t I t to forward- t t o old H . C. Owen place, eight mifea
The steel truM w ill attem pt to epea sd to M alvar fog tt o purpose of iu fiu - from Eugene. Capital has been in-
mcing his sunqnder, bat under hfe torestod and development work w ill
tignature to tt o oath to wrote, ” Fria- { soon to begun. T to vein was known
>ner in Malacanan Prison.”
years ago, but an obstinate owner
General Davis toa relieved General
here today.
General M acA rthur,
who left here on the Meade Ju ly 4,
n , wife of ex-Freaident w ill e m t o r io n th e Sheridan, at Na­
small coveys
th e Transvaal republic. gasaki, for Ban Francisco.
county.
International Epworth League con­
vention a t Ban Franeiaoo has ad­
journed.
Ik fe almost certain th a t the sta­
tionary firemen's strike w ill soon to
at an end.
.
. -
F o rt BUI, O. T ., Ju ly 88 — Disor­
der and dfetreaa, w ill, i t fe feared, fol­
M ajor O ’N e ill, the th ird mayor of
the c ity of Portland, fe dead a t big low the actual opening of the Kiowa-
Comanche reservation, August 8. I t
hom e in Bpokane.
fe ttvtr aotimated th a t fu lly 180,000
( I t fe feared t t o t disorder and dim j
people w ill have registered for a
trem w ill fo llo w opening .of govern­
ehaoce to secure one of the 18,000
ment lands in Oklshfidia.
-•«
elaims fe to awarded by lottery,
The next official map of the United when the registration booths close on
States w ill show tt o Lewis and C lark J u ly 88.
Thousands of persons now
route and in c id e n ta l!/ advertise the
1808 fair.
N o move has been made to settle
the steel strike.
|
if they fail to win a claim . Campers,
General Daniel Butterfiela died a t
h i. heme a t Creigaide, N . T .
! who came ia prairie schooners by the
thousands, generally brought w ith
E arl Bnaaell w ill enter the plea of them provisions sufficient te feat
g uilty to the charge of bigamy.
from five to. 10 days.
Continued
One man was killed aad 80 wound­ drought has caused the water to he
restricted, and for days a hot wind
ed ia religious riots at * r —gm—
has prevailed on the prairies, and the
L . B. J H u n t has abandoned pro­ temperature has averaged over the
ject to establish a newspaper a t Be­ 100 mark.
W ith those conditions
a ttie.
J
before them, many are already be­
International convention of E p ­ ginning to grumble, and when this fe
disappointment over
worth Leogue boa opened in Ban- followed by
failure to draw a lucky number, the
hope th a t bore many up w ill doubt-
leas give way to more serious condi-
Ita ly fe investigating
e a U n im ak
towAwd there
island. Three men w
feat fe ll by the steam
Bayard. The Bayard
lor them thia season,
arrived a party wee w
found a collapsed te nt, t t o strong
ropes of whieh had evidently been
out with a kn ife or aw ne other sharp
instrum ent. Inside a teres couple of
hich waa dia­
lo bay, afte»
ira, started for
ing condition,
■term in Behr-
tit,
A Fittaburg woman started the lira returned to tt o West, locating a t annual eloan up on hia Forest creek
w ith kerosene and, w ith her throe Chewelah, Stevens county, W ash., I mine.
children, waa burned to death.
where to waa sub-Indian agent, to v -
Tim ber Area aro raging in tt o
T to mayor of Banta Paula, C al., ing charge of the Coeur d ’Alenes. In mountains in Lake and K lam ath
waa shot and probably fatally wouDd- 1887 to waa elected auditor of S te v counties, and the valleys a n getting
ed by a tough character of t t o t plaoa. ens county. H e served two terms, blue w ith amoke.
H e waa then elected to t t o state sen-
_____ ____ . » .
Corbin and Chaffee have decided on ate to represent Stevens and Spokane
wiH
radical changes in the arm y in t t o counties. In 1898 he was appointed
if*
Philipp ines. The m ilita ry force w ill deputy clerk of the U nited States
T
to reduoed to 80,000 or 80,000.
district and circuit courts of tt o east- t
* ° w“,te ,or ,>ck of drying
- A movement has been started by era division of Washington, which he
The-number of children i B Lane
t t o labor unions of Ban Franeiaoo to to ld a t tto tim e of hia death.
„
•
county lw t wocn
of 4L ^**4 SO
shut out Japanese, placing them on
WEARY O F P R ISO N .
V <m m ii|ng to the reports of the aeveral
the same footing w ith the Chinese.
"
_ _ ____ _
school clerks, is 7,549. Last year tt o
Agnlnaldo Is Chaflas lladsr His Lseg Caa- number of children waa 7,888.
tmuta Rastmtat.
I Th<’ Ore8on rattlesnake aeeaas lack-
| ing in teal venom.
Several men
M anila, July S3.— Aguinaldo ia were bitten recently in various hay-
I t ia w tim a te tk lto l 88,000,000 ia oouaiderably irritated a t bis contin- delda in w Eastern Oregon, but no
or •erteu* results aro re-
bank notes is in circulation whieh' ued surveillnace by the American au-
Whenever he signa hia corded
have been printed from the piatee of thorities.
H o t weather oontinuee in t t o B rit-
feh JafcBr t o t relief is predicted. .
'v Another heat wave toe visited tt o
corn belt of Kaaeae and Nebraska.
Fheeante of t t o Volga; ftuaefe, aro-
vinces are on t t o verge of- atarvutlom.
g fe ftN ftN W M t
M arinette, W fe., Ju ly 8.— D uring a
severe electrical storm today a boat
supposed to to a large schooner or
steam barge was struck by lightning
and destroyed by Ire , and her crew is
believed to have been lost. The light-
keeper a t Menominee sew t t o boat
burning iuat south of Green island.
H e called np the local fire tug and
the latter started out to render any
assistance ixm iihfe.
W hen about
three niilee out a ll signs of the boat
or fire suddenly disappeared, and an
exam ination afterward ahowed no
wreckage. The nearest land is Green
island and the crew, if they had
escaped w ith their lives, would have
gone there. There waa a heavy sea
running, and ft would have been im ­
possible for A small boat to live in it.
The boat waa on her way here from
the Sturgeon to y canal, and was un­
doubtedly one of the Chicago or M il­
waukee lum ber carriers.
Com muni­
cation w ith Sturgeon to y faila to
establish the identity of the lostcraft.
W ilkeatorro, Fa„ July 84 — The
strike of the stationary firemen was
o in tly called eft at a jo in t meeting
of the strikers and the executive
board of U nited Mineworkers tonight.
A resolution was offered requesting
ail strikers te report for work tomor­
row, and if tto y are refused by any of
the companies, then the United
Mineworkers will take up th e ir casée.
The resolution waa adopted by an
a lm o st unanimous vote.
More mines, with the aid of tt o
United Mineworkers, resumed opera­
tions in the W yoming valley today.
Committees from the striking sta­
tionary firemen waited upon t t o su­
perintendents of the coal companies
and asked to be reinstated. A t some
of the mines tto committees Were
told th at the places of the strikers
were filled.
A t others the names of
the old firemen were taken and the
committees were told tty d if their
servioea were needed they would to
sent for.
In accordance w ith the agreement
entered into at the conference last
night by Abe executive officers of the
U uited Mineworkers and the chief
officers of the stationary firemen,
some of the firemen belonging to the
L'afted Mineworkers gave notice to-
d a f th a t they wiH give up th eir poei-
tlons. This w ill make room for the
did firemen.
Cheese— Full cream, twins, ll(g
..................~ --------
l l f e e ; Young America, 1 8 *1 8 Mo par
Amhmhsd by Bears,
pound.
London. July 8 1 — The casualty
Poultry— Chickens, mixed, 83.86ft ÜM» received tonight a t the war
4.00; hens, 8 4 .0 0 fti.0 0 ; dressed. 1 0 * office indicate th at a party of South
11c per pound; springs, 88.5 0 ftA 50 African constabulary waa ambushed
per dosen ; docks, 83 for old ; 88.60 near Petruaburg Ju ly 18 and th a t two
« 8 .5 0 for young; geese, 84 per niembers of tto party were killed,
doaen ; turkeys, live, 8ftlQ e; draased, one dangerously wounded and 17 are
lO ftlS fe e par pound.
: missing and are believed to have '
Mlittrh«« _ l-mmlwB fe 1/n
------ '
talron — —?
T>___
repreaenta-
tiona made regarding alleged ly n c h ia g
of two Italians in Mississippi.
Tien Tain, Ju ly 88. — Europeans
here consider that the prevention of
a speedy recurrence of trouble de­
pends entirely upon the firmness 4ja-
p lnysd by th e powers.
I t te thought
th a t thia faet should he recognized in
Europe and the U nited States. The
gftiaral feeling in Tien Tain ia th a t
China is in no wise overawed or re­
pentant. L i H ung Chang fe reported
to have adopted aa off hand tone to­
ward a member of the provisional
govern m eal, and to have talked of
oorting the provisional government.
The British and French navies w ill'
unite in a series of maneuvers in
wraenea, ana there is danger th a t
w ith in tt o next few daya t t o Mfeeouri
w ill to transferred completely to tt o
bed of the Platte.
A n island five
mifea long and in some plaeea nearly
T to relief from drought in Kansas two mifea wide has been formed. I f
w aaonlv temporary.
T to weather the Missouri adopts this new channel
has again turned warm and aJl crops thia new land w ill be transferred from
Missouri te Kansas.
The tinworkera’ union has refused
te handle non union piatee, thus com­
ing to the support of tt o striking tin ­
plate makers.
W illia m C. W h itn ey, of New York,
paid 830,000 for tt o two-year-old colt
Naatnrtinm .
J ? í••2.P ort« ,
• company at 8L
Cloud, Ffe,, toa auoeeeded in m aking
eroelfeot paper from t t o leaves of
t lie p alm etto.
Andrew A tlan, tt o only surviving
founder of tt o A lla n L in e Oman
Bt ea m a h ip Co. and president of tt o
lino, died a t Montreal, Can., a t tt o
age a t 8 * yearn.
T to Pennsylvania supreme court
toa declared t t o t t t o governor too
tt o rig h t te ro ta ia whole or in part
any item of appropriation th a t tt o
legislature may makft' j
John W . W oolley, who was th e pro-
h ibitien candidate for tt o presidency,
Denver July 83.— Considerable de­
struction by foraet and prairie Area fe
reported from different points ia tt o
state, directly attributable to tt o
condition of gram aad tim ber from
t t o long dry spell. Tim ber fires have
bean burning several
days
near
M ount Evans, Long’s Peak and on
t t o Kenosha range.
From Been and
Prowers oouatiea, the center of tt o
stock reiaing district, come reports
of deatnw tiro prairie Area.
Pasteboard arm or fe lik e ly to eame
into m ilita ry faehion.
f t fe, if th ick
London, Ju ly M .— T to party of
enough, alnioet impenetrable to ear-
B
ritish
missionaries who aeoompafed
bine bullets, whieh can piarae five-
inch wooden planks. Recent experi­ M ajor Periera to T a i Yuen Fu, in
Bhan Bi, to investigate the condition
ments prove this.
of the mission property, and of the
T to record wee broken recently in native Christians, traveled unarmed,
tt o sale of unoccupied lands ia Ne­ says a dispatch to the Timee from
braska, W yoming and Kansas.
Over Pekin, relying upon a promise of
60,000 acres were disposed of, tt o protection, whieh was fa ith fu lly ful­
largest amount in any ana weak in filled
Everywhere they were well re-
t t o history of tt o land deportment.
Barlin has on t t o average only 18
daya a year when no clouds at a ll are
aeon in tt o aky.
A t tt o ofena of 1800 ttoro w a n 81
plants in tt o U nited States m aking
open hearth eteal, aa eoasnared w ith
O liro r Laro, a
tra it, while w ritin g
unable to fill an t <
C H A P T E R X IX .
The morning train bound fa r Albany
Stood la the depot, waiting the signal to
•te rt, and just before the Anal “ail
aboard'* waa aouiifl<*d a h iitls o m « euuii>-
ago drove slowly op, and from it alight­
ed M r. Lincoln, bearing in his anas his
danghtar, whose heed rested wearily op-
on hla shoulder.
Accompanying him
ware his wife, Jenny and a gray-graired
n t « , the fam ily physician.
Together
they entered the rear car. aad iastaatly
there was a haaty turning of hoods, a
shaking of curie and low whispers, as
each noticed aad commented upon the un­
earthly toasty of Bom. who In t o r fath­
er’s arms lay as i f wholly exhausted with
the effort she had made.
The sight of her, so young, so fa ir and
apparently so low. hushed all selfish feel­
ings, and a gay bridal party who had
taken possession of the ladies’ saloon im­
mediately came forward, offering it to
M r. Lincoln, who readily accepted it, anJ
laying Rose upon the long settee, he made
her as comfortable as possible with the
numerous pillows and cushions he had
brought with him. As the creaking en­
gine moved slowly oet of Boston Rose
'fifeed that the window might he raised,
aka, leaning upon to r elbow, she looked
ent upon her native city, which she waa
lehving forever.
Toward nightfall o f the next day they
reached Glenwood, aad Rose, more fa-
tigued than she was willing to acknowl-
edge, now that she waa ao determined to
get well, waa lifted from the carriage
and carried into the house. Mrs. How­
land hastened forward to receive her.
and fo r once Roe» forgot to notice wheth-
er the cat of her cap was of thia year’s
nock, aad kissing her lipa, marmared.
“M y c h ild -M a ry . Oh. tod -I haowa this
sooner, yoa should eot have toes eo cru­
elly deserted, aad little Allis should aev-
i er have died in the alinahoasr. Bet you’ll
never leave me now. for all that 1 have
la years—yours aad Ella's.'*
The th o u g h t o f E lla touched a new
chord, aad Mrs. Campbell's tears were
rendered leas bitter by tto knowledge
that she had cared for. aad been a mother
io. one of to r sigtar's orphan children.
“ 1 know now, why. from the tret, 1
M t ao drawn toward Etta, and why her
clear, large eyes are ao much like my own
lost darling’s, and even you, M ary----- ”
Here Mrs. Campbell paused, for proud
as she now was of M ary, there bad been
a time when tto haughty lady turned
away from tto sober, homely little child,
who begged so piteously "to go with
K ila” where there was room and to spare.
AU this came ap in aad review before
Mrs. Campbell, and aa she recalled the
Incidents of her sister’s death, and
thought o f tto noble little Frank, who
o ftc u w en t hu ng ry and cold th a t
hn
mother and sisters might he warm and -
fed, she felt that her heart wopld burst
with Its weight of sorrow.
“Oh." said she, "to die ao aesr me—
i
i
I
1
I
starvation.”
— '
W iping the hot tears from tier own
eyes, M ary strove to comfort her aunt
by telling how affectionately her mother
to d always remembered her. "And even
on the night of her death,” said she, "she
epoke of yen, aad hade Me, U I ever
found yon, love yoa for her soke."
t-fW iM yoa. do yea love msT" asked Mrs.
I
i
“ I am weary.” she said.
“ Lay me
where I can rest.” And with the grand­
mother leading the way, the father car­
ried his child to the chamber prepared
for her with so much care.
" It's worse than I thought ’tw a a " said
Mrs. Howland, returning to the parlor
below, where her daughter hod thrown
herself with a sigh upon the chints-cover-
ed lounge. " It's a deal worse thaa I
thought 'twaa. Hasn't she cstched cold,
or been exposed some way?"
' “ Not in the least,” returned Mrst Lin­
coln, tw irling the golden stopper of her
smelling hottie. "The foundation of her
sickness was laid at Mount Holyoke, and
the whole faculty ought te be indicted for
the loving clasp of her arms around her
snot's naefc . woo a snScieot answer.
“ Do you know aught of my Aunt
SsrahT" M ary asked at last; and Mrs.
Campbell replied:
"Nothing definite. From father we first
heard that she was in New Top*, and
then Aunt Morris wrote to her act*. mak­
in g Inquiries concerning her. I think the
Fletchers were rather peculiar ia their
dlspoeitiona, aad wove probably jealous
o f ou r fa m ily , fo r th e le tte r was long uu-
answered, and when at last Sarah's ancle
wrote' he said, that ’independent of old
Temple's aid she bad received a good
odneation;’ addfeg further tkdt she had
married aad gape 'Wept', and that be was
intending aeon to follow her. H e neither
gave tto aaase of her baabeotTwor the
alive; t o t often when I think how alone
I am, without a reistivs in tbs world, t
have prayed and wept that she might
coma bock: for though I never saw her
“W eli, w hat of th a t? It*s nething to*
her. and Ij didn’t mean she should know
It. to t Jtoay, like a little tattler, most
needs teH to r, and so aha has mad m o a
two houro* sermoo on the subject. Hhe
acted so queer, too. I didn’t know what
to thing of her. and when ehe and Henry
are together they look eo fnnay that I al­
most belleva she wants hiss herself, to t
ehe can’t hare blot—wo, ehe caa't hare
him,” aad seen™ In the belief that she
was the first and only object of H enry’s
affection, Ella danced se t o f tto room to
attend to the seamstress who Waa doing
her plain sewing.
A fte r she was gone Mrs. Campbell fell
asleep, and for the Jlyet time in many a
long year dreamed of to r old home ia
England. She did not remember it her­
self. but she had so often heard It de­
scribed by the aunt who adopted to r that
now it came vividly before her mind, with
its dark stone walla; its epacions grounds,
terraced gardens, running rio ts and
creeping roses. Something abont It, too.
of her mother's early home, and when
she awoke she wondered dint she tod
never questioned the child mors concern­
ing to r parents. 8 to waa jnst lying back
agate upon her pillow when there was a
gentle rap at tto door, aad M ary How ­
ard’s soft voice asked permission to corns
'
HOW A SA iL O ft** FAY G O E S
Jack T ar G eaally * « a <a 'ere U iaW agM ,
W hat da tto Jack tare ia the navy do
w ith all their money? has ofteu Iwen
asked; although moat people have an­
swered the question to their own sntia-
faetlon taforohaad by deciding tt o t
they spent It the first chaarv they got
Many of the younger or newer on»-» do
get rid of their rash a t the Ire t «iqwr-
tunlty, but then tto y spend It ihein-
aelves aad gel their money's worth, or
w hat tto y thfek « «re made to believe
k their mouey'a worth. Tboee who are
reaily warm la their following eel loin
take all their wages from the payauta-
ter. T to y let him keep It during tto
cruise aad drew 4 per cent Intrrvwr on
It uatU the cruise 1a over. Then, of
courue, some apeud It an before they
go bock to the ship. They hare n good
time an ia a lump and are aatlsflej to
wait for extravagaat daya again uuili
another cruise is over. These are the
men w to have ao one except themselves
to care for. W hile on the maa-cf-war
they need not gp abort of anything and
yet not use their money. Moreover,
tto y w ill probably attend te their du­
ties better and have a much finer limo
when the cruise te at an end.
Those who have wlveo or familles or
relatives to care for usually eetnl their
mousy home regularly and faith fully.
Often, however, their confldvueo la
meanly abased. Married men make
np this class. They send their wives
comfortable Incomes and that is all
these wlveo care for them for. ifemo
are the wires who married simply for
what there wfio ia amrrtage ia a money
way. w ith thoaftdHkmal «dvaataxe or *
convenience of to t toying a h.mtond
around much. Unluckily foi woou-ii of
thia class, pot all Jack tare c w t. M a i n ­
tain wives. Only chief petty officer« or
first-rate petty officers can afford th e
luxury of marriage, and even they
have to watch out pretty keenly not to
impair the due to their better halves.
Many of these better halves are ad-
veatureeeee pore aad simple, who
make It a business to get acquainted