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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1891)
A RcversedJfldgDiciit By SOREST (X V. METERS. P1,yrtKht bv Amricn T"r Avltlo T "They I" rOHrt to hm iom lorour next potvrNor," sn nt(i. Although the judge was busy in thought he could not help it that his mind, separate aud apart from the work in hand, dwelt npon the likelihood of his succeeding in the ambition of his life. Friends had written him, his thought had told him that he had but to accept and the nomination would be his. The governorship was not that an honor of which any man might be proud? The light from the argand burner spread a halo aXund his brow. Raws of book cases hemmed him in; the en graved fiices of Chauning, Burke and Daniel Webster looked down upon him from the walls. Apart from the portraiture of such worthies, directly opposite his writing table was a life size crayon of a lady with baml neck, her fine eye seemingly concentrated upon the bended form of the judge as his pen moved over the pa per, several pages of which, covered with his legally bad handwriting, lay scat tered before him. The logs flared iu the fireplace and cast a glow npon the crayon picture till the eyes seemed al most like those of a living person. j It was a long table at which the judge j sat, and one end of it was flanked by a ) Dumber of newspapers. A lady in a low , chair was at this end of the table, her j white jeweled fingers turning the huge i evening sheet she had been scanning be-1 fore clipping a paragraph from it as she ' had clipped similar paragraphs from sev-1 eral other papers there. It was easy to ; see that she was the original of the crayon portrait, her face some years son i you ueYW know what ft boy may turn out to b. The best cars will not always make thi best man; look at clergymen's sons, Though as for that, tu nine cases out of ten, a clergyman pays little attention to his children", rele gating all that to the often incapable wife, who is hampered by church work and trying to escape the scrutiny of the women of the congregation." Again the light laugh rstnii in. "John FJwyn came home from tlie reception with s. Om, Wayne was tWllng me that John's hither will make another half million out of those coal fields of his. Has that English syndicate really made overtures toward buying him out?" The judge laid down his pen; ever since John Elwyn's name had bovn men tioned the pen had not mail stroke. "I don't alkgithr like young FJwyn," he said deliberately. "What is there against him?" asked his wife, as though she had nevor bofore heard the objection: was she not a care ful mother, determined to have her way against a whim of the father? "In the first place," said th judge, "he is an idler: he promenades the streets, goes to hiirse races, and so on." tlie "so on remaining unexplained. "There is no necessity for him to work," pursued the wife; "he would be taking the bread from some poorer man if he were to work." "Every young fellow who is worth his salt will har soim'thiug useful to occu py his time," argued the judge. "I have too much to do with the results of idle ness to admire it." "And you compare the son of a mill ionaire to the criminal classes you have to do with professionally idle pickpock ets, drunkards and the like? Possibly your strictures apply to women as well, seeing that you have to do with the re sults of idleness in women as well as in men." "Every one should have soma employ ment, some avocation." She took him np at that word. CwTtlTW f f TTf UN Wt Li . ... . ... , a ' f f f H 1 a -- J , J M 4 f K 1 k -Ik A V f f f T ? n V f T 1 , . . l ... ,.. i r m'h sore n( rni Itw, II n on run I wi. I mi cvorfll hiiinlri'il ilnllr yft )i'r, I rrf vuoitiLti l I'cur. TH'E ft .... tl.iriillllJ. tft ellktln liinliil- .furtiirufl t. and shoe. ! Hi N.JsB iloel Ids Ml'i'ili""'" 'of the .Mini's widen l- reUles as ful ;i,.; "I . Isken sill' vMei.l ' cramp In (I'M "l"t' " , 1 ,".,," .would have canned iny deslh, had I mil dee it (or Hie I'Minpl ue ol t ham lierluln's t'i'lii flinlera sn.l IMnitlMH-a KmiH'dv, Tin llrsl .1. e did llincli 'ooil thai I ("Hotted It U' J" UiillUles Willi Hie second d""'' I"J '"" (ore tlu. l.H or could net I " l.ere I .. I did I1..I need hl.il. Tl.ls Iveine.lV mIii.II ulwav be one nl the mam slays ol in v (uniily, r'r sale by '. A. lliltdoii Ailmlnltirslnr's Xi'llm. S.alinU Imml'V Ufii llil lh uinlrliifl li... I.o. u (.. -I .niiiiiir." l Hi muis KOTIt K roll IMHI J. at,,,,, l (.nil timns HI His,,, l"S CH,. ( Knlli-s I. Ii.r... Kpn ,. IIXII..I WHIM ll. hm S.ShV.V kl "'' .,iliinki Bnl .Mil.. I hi hi,.,,,- . ""i l,. 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I ; r In ctalitt i.ciii't r.t.i mil I'll-.""! ! , Itient I.' mr.luli inlSt'l Hi i'o "I ; I .11 J. ill lik II IIHHrfU Ml II" 'II. mlltll. 1 .11 mi. nun ii..ui din .uip ftii I" . i'iini.1 1 Noni n mk rti.u'ATiii, l.sn urrn .t OS..!,,, ,., H 1 N.ilee U Iieiol.c (l.i, n, .......,.i ..nl.,, 1... m..i ' ."' Is li. ik Siil fil lu .ii.i,n j J," " Hi. 1 ..lil iii..( III u tii..U ul.n. ,l! ' .ll ll. oil 01 ,.( III. H , - J1 Clll tlieltm nil N111 'M lu.. .... ! J.i'h . liiu'iU, h..ur.lo.. 1.11111, Mil ivill l.,r 11., II.M ..1.1. ..I 11 1 . . . w I He ti.llli.. Ih. I.illunlii, U,, hi. niiilliiu.m. ro.hloiir. ,i,, Ul Mill l.ll'l ! v' ll,i.llrli Wi.r, Allwf) , fni M. ...in.n r .1111. r, 1 ( !.l k.lli. Vviun.y. lr,,t '' l" ! l I I trriiM .,. AMI- tirrn t ,t o... t'lt, .. .. . 1 I..M.-W I nrrvnr 1V.I h. (i, I ii.inp.1 wiui-i n.. n.B. l,nll,-. i.f I iii nun nu. 1 ii. i iu ii.H.fi ,.1 1,,,, I IH'rolif li li. tun. ui.i 1 li.,"".. -1- i.li1..ii...-..M.imi. 1 n 1 Aii.t . . ! li.illllr.l l. HIP . 1.11 111 V 1 HUH I'l . ..ix." ; irf.MI . Iiy. am nil II, lt , ( ..lllilv, Uli-Si.ll, ..Imllilile.li'r iilllm r.ll ! ((,t )mmeK r.tiiim 1 nun. ,ir,.,.. . !.lm. .u.lli.l ..hi on. tp mil n'iil llifiii. M M IU'! Ailnilnliltr' ullr INVESTORS.- We have lots 'tOx'-WO feet, IDOx'.'tHI fct, all Invorulily locatcl. These lots twice the ordinary aize an? hut half the usual price of other lots sim ilarly litontoil. We have one-acre, two-acre, live niut ten acre tracts, suitable for suburban homes, convenient to town, schools, churches, lull prlo.l. mm im.li Wllw.nklo. IH. ! ...it. anliiii .li 11 On l'""i HO. '''' i tl M HI iH II. .lmli.i.il.l"r. i ltl',l. MII.M.1, IH'I. J. IWI. v. 1. ;iihiii.n, ..ii.ittii'r Sulli-o of A'lltlinrsl uf AtilHl.trlrll. N.illin t. hterti'r lrll Ih.l I, ll. lilulor- Unr.l. ll.V. Srrli li) l..l ul Ik ll.'tlMll ! I, .Mill) I .lilt I'l l.'kHl.. ...mill, l'lr..l . .. I itr.1 .1mliil.lr.ltlt ,l Ihr .!! nl i,.hu ; l I lLrti'i. ,li.ri.M,, all .r..'ii hftitlitf 4't.liti. . (.lli.l Mid f .Ul r u..tlSf.l l. r I ipiiI ihrm ,lul) irilSnl In ni tl i r,.l'l'iir in iif It. 1 .iff within L mo ml.. In. in Hi ,!.! Oil. tl.'tl. MlK'lllt A I lllll" limiiklriiiiuiii.i.ili,.. I n.f..l ...1 t... . ! . 1 .1, 1 1 11 e ("i-tl.'li I "l . IM 11 .uillii.li.lll r. -1 - fic, aim in very iiriHiuctive sou. . nire, griiwini' 1 rune t Tt'iinrii, 01 1 11 1; 1 aiii lm i:ui wmi of vocation. For what vocation has : , , Estelle? And as to her avocations, whatjhich wo will sell juirt in small tracts to suit purchaser-, ami on easy! 1 luims. are they but those which you infer lead ,us poorer girls sway from the right? She ! is tonJ or gayety, dress; she likes ad miration; she" But the judge frowned. "1 wisn vou wouia not class onr daughter with the women I see in the ' class dock," he said. "Then why should you clvi John Ewyn with the men you ee in the 1 dock?" demanded his wife. "John j has his horse, his coach, his eteuni , y0ht- j "His London, tailor, his several clubs. his insufferable valet." i "Exactly. But then all this is in ac-1 cord with his life, from his cradle down. I His father worked hard that this sort of i thing might be brought about," j "Did he? His father worked hard, bnt I Call & See Us & Get Prices I.. AT OKH.ON ( I I T OrTlt'K, OK OX KOBEKT L. TAFT, at Porllaml Oilic yo. S9 Nlark I'Olt I 1. 1 l. I scarcely that he might have an idle sou." j "Why do you work?" smilingly asked ; his wife. "Is it all for yourself alone? ' j Do yon not always think of idle Estelle ' I when you have a success? have you not : thought of her when you thought of the ; governorship, and that even higher hun- ; ors to you would lie plcwsunt for her? I : hope to see you in the cabinet yet." j The judge's countenance cleared, and ; he said lightly: I "My dear, who can argne with a worn-1 I an? Don't I know what all this iiikjiis? Some evening this study door will ors-n I and Enti-lle will come in with half : frightened eye-a and throw her anus ' aronud you. You will say 'Is Mr. El ' wyn gone:' and her only answer will be : to kiss you you, mind, for 1 shall not : be thought of just then, or thought of a , little shyly: and will I understand? Yes, I think so, and well! well! I snppose 1 item from the paper. j may be a little hard on young Elwyn ; "They are bound to have you for our ; may tie every tattler questions the life next governor," she said as she snipped J nd proclivities of the young fellows, the paper. "Here is the seventh men-! wno cut after the daughters. But, go-: Hon in today's papers; my scrap book i nS back to first principles, I don't like ,' will soon be full of your 'praises. This ' idleness. The arrogance of idleness is one says you are a shining example of , something appalling. Young Elwyn in justice and logic in other words, that ! tinie will show Estelle how superior he ' you have the honor of never having had i is to her father, because he did not come I one of your decisions reversed by the 1 from the country a poor hoy while her higher court. What will they say by election time?" ' She picked up some other scraps she older, indeed, than the pictured one, scarcely so ideal as that, with more con-1 trol of the under lip. This was the . judge's wife. j She had been out to dinner, and with-! out changing her gown had come into the study and taken her usual place at her end of the long table. Here she sat , evening after evening, calling herself his Nemesis, his Pallas, his Eloise, his Laura, while he wrote at his papers or j read from the calf bound volumes that made the atmosphere pungently musty. ; At one moment while she looked over , the paper she held, a sparkling ornament I that clasped the rich lace at her throat : became unclasped, and she let the paper ' rattle into her lap while she made the gold hasp secure. Then she ran her hand ' np to the soliUires iu her ears with a feminine automatic gesture, and taking j np a pair of scissors began cutting an ! was associated In all honorable merit and .Unerring with the highest office ol the state. Surely he owed his wife much, ano she knew that he so reasoned. But shl had never liked to hear hun speak of hii earlier days, when lie hail wandered, t poor country lad, away from "the sufl of! Jaffa. A westerly gale sprang up, eye music of slow waving boughs" ink d tlie French cruiser tVignelay, caught the cataclysm of warring men, each de teriiiineil to supplant his brother, not like young Whittington having the nc claim of Tx-lls, bnt earnestly In .pi-fiil d making his way, and mi the lady lmiknl into the flare and thought. The fire crackled and flashed up to the picturi il eyes that looked down (hii tin I HI I III I -.-, Ill, I I mm. ' 1 ri iii, j I -.-k.m... A 4)IUut Amli'. ur.i KipUih. j Lord Churle IWciford, oue of ths pupuliir liens'S of the llritmh navy. Is fortunate in his opportunities. A liltli : while ago he was aiiimiiite.l to the om- I mand of the imnrb.1 UndanntiHl, and nt 1 the eud of lu.it imnith ho found hltiiM-lf i , Ci'itiily II f vlrt.li. nl . Iitti-i willliilll 1.11 ...mill itriii-.-.. I l,.,ri,li.l,.,r. I "'I iliMl'l Hir , ' I Ihr i"l.l...l lll.'.'..l aim win unri'it on 10 1. sannnanK, wnern 11,,. i.i.i.y ..1 iu, 1. she was In d,in,-.'r of g niu to pi.M im. Although she drew nearly niiii't"eii fwt of wau-r, slm wis ilriv.-n into slimil water only ten feet ihi-p NoUhIv suppinl that she could lit saved, hut lfc-nnf.irl worked hii own Si.te nl Ot..ii, ) ! 1 mutty ul I l.rk.ni... I In 111 1 i.illttr Curl el III. St. I ul Ofrtfi.ti t tli i imtity el 1 l.-k.i... . lu till Hl.lf el III tf.LI uf I'.lrr Klrcl. I Hi t-.w.l Tu I'lltiL.tl Kli h.r.l rr, fr.fli trl . . 11. sUfii., . Ii.rii. II n.'tlliti.l lil 1 lii.t.M.. . ' J srrllnir III IS tl.lll III 111 Sl.t nf Ofrfult, Yen f '. ' lirrliy r.'tiini.ii.li'.l it. Ih. .m. .(.(.i.! Iwt..r lit II. II .'...IHIV I'luiM ul Ih Ml-it ill lire. lt, III ' .if! I..r tfir 1 ...tut) nl 1 In.'lt.rit... .1 tli I 1. Mil . I 1I.MI.H til tlrrtf.ilt I Uv ..u tllf II lllll tt.) .it.N..i . rintwr, t te alt.'W -.u.. II .ny. talir .it .irtl.r ' .111. ul. I Hot Itc 1111 1r .iftltetUiii I d'.r.etlli. : lh twilt..f el Irtu .1ml utt.J ..l.t. ( Mil ' ; lit ,..! It. 1 1 i.f lltf n. rili hi.. 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Hill leu! ii.iy, Ivst M tM 11 :i. 111. ' 1 HIl. U.tne. .It tulluwtllf wtltMMW In I r..lillliieit. fT.t.lettre U- a , : it"h i4. Mill I. tut tu in I tw , . i-h..l. el Mihii4, I' II . r II. ! I li.llr. Il.ii. nl rl.tl.l)r. MiletClHI. HI tl I II II J. T Afri.i... I wi'iii K rxiH rt m i. im .ibirris .o..... i. Krfrrr ! Sl, judge; from outside came the siihilited ship iw cloudy in ltnre it. he dan-il. gut rattle of a city uight; a lxiy priced hv the house shrilly whistling. The judge wrote. In the strokes of his pen, word by word, letter by letter, he reasoned against a life gone wrong, a mind that out his stivl hawsers and chain cables, set all his tneii to work, mid with thn assistance of the French sailors managed to float her without m-riotis damage. One feature nf the atTiiir was the g.-d-lantry of an Arab tsiaimau named Sulll had d;gged beneath the ordinarv ini man, who not only swain a lomr distance guilt, while an equal effort in an uppo- j through a heavy a to the striusl.il ve site direction might have won the ad-1 d with an oiler of assistance, hut aUi miration of healthful reasoning, but swam luilmrn again, according to the had it been premeditation? Had it not j published accounts, with the captain's Deen a moment or temptation? And win: wire on Ins hk. Why the captain is lieyond temptation, though of divinity ! thought it necessary to risk his wife's had extracted from the leviathans of the printing press. "Listen to this: 'His honor's private life is irreproachable' No, that is sot what I meant. 'Even his most bitter opponent could find little in the actions of his many years of public life to shadow the page whereon is written a laudable ambition.' That sounds rather peculiar; bnt then the writer may be young. Again, 'Here is an example of integrity allied to ambition whose methods are sans peur et sans reproche.' Goodness! how hoi that fire is!" She pushed her father did. His wife did not like this reverting to the first principles of his own life, though she said that a self made man was an American honor. a man lie not tempted beyond what he it ablo to resist' The case was one of peculiar interest to the judge; his decision would be criti cally examined. Just now, with the governorship in the pe.rsictive,. even more than his enemies would grasp at any flaw, the merest technicality, tc. lifu 111 this fashion, or how she came to be tlu re, is not explained. Chicago Tribuuu. Ka.ltliiiialilti r.lnr. In Hon, There is a fashion in the color of car riage horses. Once, many seasons ago, there was a rago for gray; now. arav -I "irt!M"tl l..llu net I llir I In .ill I ...irt i.I .(Aim.. I ...Hill .!!. lJI t. nti. .Ilrr. li.i .11.I .1.-111 ft,-. I .. ri-li ri-r lit , r. iu.h ..ill l-r,. it It II l..h 11 l. Unit II !..! I Itlll. .. I K ..hill... k, s.r.h l.ttifiH-ll .it.1 I rnn k M l!l..ir I iiluflM-ii lu,rl.. ,. 1 ...t,w.l. l. art t . ,,.i.u.;i I. On. .f ll-!r. of K . I .M,.t., li. ilr. r.ir.l aii.i Kits I sl..n .li-'ti-ri'ii0.iit..i -.ittliKlelltic ms III tlt-i li.lln-i.l lltf S'n!f,.l Iiret-.O! ti. ttt.tr .ill. .re. .fill 11 It In Ww elttir lii-r.'lti. fir r .li-..ri l-.l li . I .,...,TI .itn.if.,1 tu 1 i.rl.iitu I .iu nt . siflt,. i.f iiri-.-.itt I Hill 1111 s.tiiril.r isl..l.t. I l.e Sl.t l I -" t His h..iir "I I .. rl.i i, - M .t Mir Ir.ilil il.M.r nl tllf r.iitrl It.xt.r III I irrtf. tt fid or. t,'.. II, .i-il .f (Htl.lU- .tlrti-m, li. Iltp litjlir.t l.l.tl.-r. I,.r r..h in ,.. n, iu1( ,r, i rlli.il f.Jlr.l.Hi .llmlr.l 111 ., !, l u. I1S I.I-HII llrtlliltllitl .1 . t,,,t u ,r r.lrrlj la.iin l.rt el M.lll aln-.'l iu Olrttnll I II) it ..ul ' ty .11.1 .l.li' .1 irllt) tn .. 5 1- ,,,. fciutltprly Ireiti lit tinrtliwrit n.fu.r ol I.H . Ill l.l..'k N.i l-ll 11 11 1 liff llirltri. ...illlirrl) .li.lig Hi r..ti l). Ilii.. ., M.I, 1 .tri-Pl tlilft, rr ; lllflirr .1 1(1.1 atttflr. will! Ml, r,, lr' i..i,.rly HtL.tish ..i. hlia-kTlu Hi M.trrir ' W.iiinlirv ol lu,., k ,N.. iiirtir leirtiieni 1 lnri .i, i.ai,.r)r I.., in-,, .ry el lii k - i j t.t Hi" tinrtlii'.t rnriirr nl ),, j n .,, i.i,-', ' N" r.. . .jirtr.l ,i,. n .ml r.l.till.liml l, A ' I ll.ily aii.i ttlfs .in) tj l,,uu,.i ,, l.y ilre.l lirtwt-i u ar.l, eirtlr. i:il. fwi,t.r.l III l.,.,,k M. ... -.Ml. Ilrn.r.l. .,1 trr.. ,, i'l entity, lliniro wr.icrl, I, t, , ; "I let 2 iii Ini 7 .. r.l.l.!l,l.,l ,, ,,r,.,, llill in ..l: .cr,, tn 1,1. it nl l..-m, 'li'.lri'il ul'l ..Ik r.H hr iti.ilo , 3 1. 1 ... -1 ,, , liwiriK.K n. i) I,, (,.. ,Ulr K . Newton, W W nrnv th fl.llitv ,J hi.r.r I, r I.., " " uikduiii nnu are ar s-i ..AiMini miu wpsiuiutf nartti'if i him. If he were lenient he might be at- A - I .. ..1 1. 1. .. Not in the eyes of young men whose ' u'wMi. " .W,B " """ cms liiu un.inub i,iiiii3 UMKtiv iiinnn .lie fathers ' make fortunes for them," re torted the judge. . The lady was still less pleased. "Judge," she said, "you are evidently ruled by what you have written to-night your decision in the Dnnlap affair" the case of a bookkeeper accused of hypothecating a large sum of his em ployer's money. "That man was not an idler; he is said to have been indefatiga ble in business, and yet he became a thief. Your experience with the crim- I'.tfil at iiii.,,n '"till.'!, sylt ' My ihl. Mi.... Illrr. Oil il.tr nl Sini 1 i.I chair a little farther from the hearth. "Heigho! That dinner was a very stupid inal class makes you doubtful of every affair, and the 'buds' and young men at other class. I call that a perversion of the reception insupportable. Estelle ' mind. The next thing you will be hav was the prettiest girl there, Gen. ! ing grave suspicions of me." Wayne said he was sorry you were too ! The judge made, a smiling rejoinder busy to come so am I and that he ! such as a husband may venture with his hoped you would write to-night and tell ( wife, and turned again to his writing, him that you will accept the nomination ' The blazing logs crackled, the wife not later than to-night He begins, with the politicians to-morrow." The judge smiled, his lips moving as ! though they carried a word in the ex- pression of which on bis paper she had interrupted him; but he did net look up nor did his pen stop. Nat until be had , come to the end of the long page and laid it with its predecessors before him gazed into the flare, her face lighted with an inward as well as an outward radiance. Had she not for several months been desirous of just such a re sult as she hoped would soon come about? She would yet, she -was con vinced, see her onlv child the wife of the heir to millions, a woman at the height m!r?' ordinary man who espoused the cause ot an outraged business community, it might lie argued that a judge should be a principle, never an individual. So he must be careful, exact, having before him nothing but the cold facta of the case; lie an impartial, soulless arbiter of the evidence deduced in the trial. From the room beyond came the acute tones of a piano. A little prelude was played, and lieu a clear, girlish voice broke into song. It was a tender little ballad which the daughter of the house sang to the man who sought to win her. In the study the mother of the daugh ter of the house, her gaze npon the flare of the fire, thought of the success to lie achieved by the daughter, as she had ! ever thoughtof tlie success to be achieved 1 by the father of that daughter. In the study the judge penned his de cision condemnatory of a man not so many years older than the lover of the , daughter, with mean advantages, great I temptations ana an activity to lie aepre- cated, as was the passivity of the other rule catered for by a livery stable. LIl'IiI I - - t'nll,-i ni.i Mr.li.r. hi. chestnuts had then a turn; but they woi ' lu the (..'.run Conn nl tl,. rmini "i.i.i. r found, like certain showy materials, not ill.irli i nlunu.iu to wear well, (me year roam wero in ! W""f '"', ''l,lhlllT. fitrtldon, and they were most satisfactory ! H'"Uh and Kmily Hinlili, lWr.iti,ut, as to wearing qualities and also us to, N"H I" hi.r..i,v ii.i, n, ,y vlMll1 ( . temper. Even now a well matched pair j CThT.!:.:"S "Vl7ZXJZ Of red rnnilH nr lrwtWoil !,,.,,, :... nm , trri.l .i.i.j u . ' '. .' """ "' - A 1 I 1 .... . IM lllltl ll ..... . I I I.. .... . '. curri-i-i, mm vnry nanusorae, nut tlie color points. Dark jouMfmriii ri'iiii.Ti'i i i.v ..1.1 ....... i.. .. -t ' i ; ' in tnr of the aeason is dark bay, with black ! W. J" l.vor ..I ito.K'';,:;:.!: i mi l"',n' ""''' '1.'ffiiui,i., ,,r iii, browns were in favor last sea- !;!, 3 ""V.TTJ ',!! .te.'!'. T '' son, and naturally, since horses cjuinot !".''' ' , .'.' ' "" '"'"""ni.'nt. iirswi,,, change the color of their coals so easily ir', ihs",,,,,',",, tfi'i J'tn T? as men and women, will lw much nwtl ' "'!,Kyk""' Hll"iv "I N'ivo'mi,rr, nm,' i mis year, come gcxxl Has certainly been r ,i ,. ; .,,' "y,; done by the recent agitation against the ' , "',"" m'w lor ..i... .,,,1 wih"! bearing rein, headed by the Duke of rV.ii','' ! 1,1 il '.i'J:.' !"r,r""!'.1". '!'' ' A U. . ... ... . I Oil llll- llMtll i.f lt.u n - .in., uiany coaonmen nave (listS'itseU with it.l tnwtt ,, it h.,. . . . '." "i'l mill of social matters, ao authority aad the did he speak, and then it was while he envy of other women. She could appre reached for another sheet of legal cap. ciato it to the fullest, for she had long, "I hope you had a pleasant dinner," he j long ago, against the sage advice and said, as though he had heard not a word j the warning of friends, married a Strug his wife had spoken. She was used to : gling lawyer in whom she saw what he this and did not resent it. "Is that i bad since with her assistance developed, your decision in the Dunlap case?" she I She gave herself some of the credit of asked, referring to his papers. "Yes," he said. "A peculiarly flagrant case," she com mented. "Your decision ought to tell greatly all the business world will watch you in that. On that decision hinges much of your chances or rather your praise or blame in your new ca pacity as a gubernatorial nominee." Without waiting for a reply she went on, as a light girlish laugh floated into the room: "I uni glad we never had n The song floated into the study, plaint ive and aching, unsatisfied as all music is. Did the judge bear it as he wrote his decision? Did his wife hear it as she dreamed her ambitious dreams? To ho Continued. Thai Lou-! ElMirlo ILallriiajl. her husband's success in life. She had Norto Carolina is to have a forty-ont made him a study from the beginning, ! ,n .wm,, ii,oV mt.nimr tm, gauging his weak poinU as she gauged Asherille to Rntherfurdtwi, for which his strong, tutoring those and guarding the opeMting the eiecttio worki these, till he understood himself and saw j ta to furnUlned by watw, Tbe tohA what she had ever tactfully, kmdly and wben completed, will be the longest appreciatively impressed upon him-lds electrio railroad iine ln the worl(, Portland. We have noticed latolv that 1 Hl1!1' "'i Kmily smith. , i,t,, 7.7 V." ' WA - , nit lh , ,1,. ,.l .i... . "i, tin , jti . . j:...'t ""'""iiii'tiisiii .i .,i,i .in and in the case of lady whins we lmv seldom seen it used. Once we saw ths footman loosen the bearing reins while tne carriage was waiting and so com paratively freed the horses' heads for a while. London Cor. Iloston Trauscriut. duty to himself, her and their child. This duty was to make of himself all that it was possible to make, to scale dizzy heights; and one of these heights was about to be attained when his name the only one built to operate both freight and passenger cars, Though Rnfher fordton Is 112 years old, it never had a railroad of any kind until within ths last two years. Savannah News. Hllo Uuntara at Plymouth. It has been found that relio hunters have committed conshlerable depreda tions at Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, abso lutety Bkiunlng the covering from old heirloom trunks and carrying off piece meal nearly half tke leather covering of the seat, of the John Hancock sofa. Other articles have been attacked, and it has been found necessary to put np warning cards fon,thisdtuw of thisring visitors that If caught at their nefarious business they will get a taste of the law. Cor. New Bedford Standard. A large specimen of the alligator tribe was killed near Sylvan (iroves, Kan. It measured nine feet In longth and weighed 080 pounds. A farmer named Williams discovered the animal while working on bis farm. The hnge monster snapped at hlf leg and bit it oil just above the kne joint. Cor, Salt Lake Times. Until nf lliiMlni.f,.,, .rH, tw, , . ' A tliit kfif Uur) Iii 'l k,m roiiiitv Sl.t. ....i .:...! ifr,uX : ,'!:: notiiitv. li,.,,,,, ..,.1 .,',' "'.'"" nioii.it ! 11"' VMIiiP "f; vr ' Z iZ .Z 'T '"! trrti't nf Un.l l.sltitittliiV f - M ,.?',' ; llii- mini l .ini , .,,, ,,, , , "'""' "ll 10-11. 13 'illt. lft'jl u. I. iiaiiik II. 8. Mr.lil. MITIOK KOlt I'tHII.IOATloN. I.ttiil Oltloe tl l)rr,n cly, 0r, ,. . H'-I'l, 1. .Ui.rhTffr.h .. f..itw.n,. ii , T p.., i v. "i i.w 1 1 . i.i..r. i ;.i:,.: I' S.itl.-e I. ht-rvl.y ,tin th.t to j u.nir.l ,rlli.- b.l Sik1 lin.tr. ul .in n t tti.k Ktiai tifiM.I In .tte.tr. .il k. . II. I Mi l ..t ltl I U1..I tl. tat au.t l.m-lal ul tu I N l.MI.-i .'Ml . It. .' "M. MB Nm II l. I, .l .N.tMict, h.ilnr.lr. t B.I)r Mil Vwl. Ini 1M r an. I ul i', ul m h, I t I II 11. Uia III I, .11. 'Ill, IOir. lit. ei.titiiiiieii. rlilctr U.MUI 4 tv. Ul Ml.l l.ll.l. I II lr. I rr .u I J llti,ii,ii) olfe.. r I iiHi.au ati.l II Hriiaaf. ut tiittf .'I . Writ. lit.. . it . .!triu lu U in i T Armwii I. .Nullt K roll M liMdtll I ive nnu nf li. t,,,, i in l. S. llo 1. I.rirl y tvrn Ih.l fk. t u.uir.l lie ir .1 l.w uf rt i a. 1 . , 'm I... nir-i n.-ti. .. tin intciiii- a "i: .i, I In .ni(.rt nl hi. rl.im in r,.f t IU w tu4.ii Wft.rr lit a k't i-i-IIi el tin. I' tt, I Int ra. c On,. -li, nu ,N..l 1 tj. i, III-..IH It l.jti-f, ellr ol llta hrlr .1 la i.I trl I tl ri.a.r.l I,. lite l-f. 0 , ,N.i, wt.-t .11,1 !. Ill ti-4 nt M-ll !, I I I Ha tt. tnr. Him ., u,, tug wunawi llir r..tilmi.., ri-.i.rlte ill 11 t I' rr.M... iit.tti ntt oiiittrattnti itl.Ml ' I'.ul. I .l..li.ii anl t .tij HI, i U i.lU Ki.ti lukri .it.1 itiKiri I )IMiliw lim.k. all ul . laek.n s. I. ll.iii.ry, mi. met I'l l r.nl.ii ri.ijitr.tr,. t,i,twAI .Sti ml nlijei-tii.tii It tliai ItaialuMtlr' Kit) II li J I Arn.r.1 1 riMiiru 1....M1. a. I ii'Mt . wm-' , Hill IT III It Alti' j I .n Urn. t tissues t iti.U- j Nutli I. hit (licit Hill ll Willi III t.fiivl.lnii. ul tli art l JilliaA, l!., .litlla.t. "n HW lliiiiirf Utltl. lit tit .l.lr. ul i ahl' lt" Sr,,, .ml W ..liliitu.u tafrli.! ' tl Ivwirll. ul haitiiiili. rniltll ill " i.i ul nrr,.,n It., tun .l.i lllria ltf .irn .l.lrllirlll No. Jt.J, Ik cii-i ul i, a.', ul ttti I. m I"" 'i .ui,,, ran No 7 ..!, lnl "l ' tii.lin that Hi. I.n.l kiiuiIi. li rti."i - hit il itiitiivr ur linn titan im i.ioi,,..r.. ami .i r.i.l.ll. li linen l.ti'l l-lnr III llril.tiir ami Kl' intii.i ,t in,, ,,, lay. orr,.u. vl j II"' Jli It day nl iNii'piu irrr, 1JI i Sh tl.lllr. a. Willi. J. llll H I II. l'lor., ul Kj.i I'uiiI.iiiI. til., f"; rimlan.l.Or. ami John M ! nilf v. ' - Aiit aiol all tirr.inn i l.lmiMI ImviKili'lH'rilHni lall'l. i rwc"""" I hi' I ti.llli. Iii till. iiSle nil nt l lay ul l'ri-rtiilir. lavl. J T Af" lu w I J II Tl M II K It I. A N I, A i T J I S K S. t"l K'" ITHI.lt All' l.IKU llrrll K T (ISKUi'll I'lTV. UtJ'i N'iitlrl. Imfntur tHvnri 111.! 10 "Willi llin pmvl.liiin ul Hi '! tititn 'A In. i.i.tlil.,.1 .'An .ft lilf III ' Iii-i I. till, lit Die Statu, ill . .IK" Imva.la, alul Via.liluniiin Turtil"')' Ili'llflittlS M. (I lioulllll. ul 1'iirtlniiil. county u( Mullf"11' "I lin-iciiii, ha. till, ilnjr Slr'l In " lu r .tvntii ijitiiMiiriit Nu. SIM. '' ul lit .. nl .o I, In lii-.ti.nll y pn...rt K.. 7 ..... ....t u.111 i.ltrf ttil'" Hint 11.. Iim.1 ....'.ul.l I. nuilM l.lllf Itur or .inn than lur attrlcull1""' f I..I I., a.l. I.ll.h l.. l.l... Ill UllIU" lh HfKllr ami IliK-olviirul ll"'11' foil I lly Oil-linn, uu 1 li.lraiilny. u"" I'lit'cmlier, lvl, llo liatiti. a wltlmiNfia.' (, K' f' ir Ch.rli'. ( afta. ul Hl 111..0. Oruti.u mill S T. In rk. ul 1'iirtl.ntl. urn Any snil all Mrann elslmlnt 'tT' ttlw.vit .1i..i,.l1...f l.u.i. .r ri'iliu1 Ihi'lr rlalin. In Dili iMr un nr M"" " nay ui iiiii'i'tuuur, IWI. ' " l, UrS.lill ' 'Sot , U'JI, ,,u i ...... . . " nun inrt tn it.u, " v."u,7 bi.(I ii((tt(. oil,,, uv;:; ntm nvut'iver or th ll M i i ,..i. "T,,"irr uty, oreg,,,,,,,,, 'I 1 'J i"'.:"1 ""i is; John W. Hiruclifit ftr.'rirr ''"!,...... '"rS,u, .....rovH "I nlil IhiiiI, vl: '"" O'llllvstlnn n,:;!1!"-;";,,,, ""I -iiirli. AkIiiiii i, , m ' "'"t'l'i'ii N. I'otil -.'"ilyOrr.n""l"""j ,1 ; l"'"i Wit.hl,,,,,,,,, lO-aill-jj, ,A" "". Hi'KlMcr. T1MIIKK LAND AI;T, Jl'N1' fnlli'il Slain Uud onioe, Orf.onClt.' Inly Ml, invl. N..tl.' In hfrtiliy lvn Ihiit In ' Willi I lie iirovl.l.tuii ut tho Jim S, h,s, ruflilr-il "A rl ,'',, p oiurirf inilii. ill tn ni.ir. --7., nm. V....I. .ml U.1.I1 niitnn f" ' Thnma. II. M1SWS1 ol Ctirrlii.vtMfi, conniy nl Mt' "n-KUii, 11,1 una uaj ini" -,,,,r' tnrn nliiliimHitt Nn Wi, lor (W th I, n ii 1, mid n S nl '" Nll -i 1., ;,.. : u i .,,111 1. rmii . mnl will nffiir priBil , III IhikI niunflit 0 ! " " ,t.l lur IM tlmlM.ror.tuii i t'1 Ji.irJ snriHiMs, .ml in sll'l'hJllliS,r' (mnl brlnra the Heprlnlor snl s'JL,, 11MI11 at (ireuoil ( .,lly,.n'S"" " i'tlli iliiyuf KuvHinhsr, lw. H II nmui. wflii"! '", rorllmid, ori'K'iiit lH'm,,iC"" l,iiikiirl,y,iictVliiiylliiyiir.l omsmi, - .Attr cliihii. In till, iiitine ou it u'",rVH ul Novum Imr, Will. tn; ur 011 -ad 00 ihi S-llU-UO rT i t ' i.Jk '