THE SU20Ay 0EEGT02nAK, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 20, 190 Florence Maybrick Contradicts Her Mother Released Woman Repudiates Statements Made by the Baroness von Roane. , ARONESS VONT ROQUES, mother o Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, In a number of letters written to your -London correspondent, outlines at some length the relations existing; between the Maybrick children and their mother, which from remarks made evidently arc not of the bst Indeed, the. Baroness says, regarding tho Maybrick boy, "who is now of age, that unless his attitude toward his mother changes, he will never get a cent of her money. The Baron ess is not rich now, for she has ruined herself -working lor the release of her daughter. But she expects to control considerable money before long. And she is outspoken as to what she -will do with iti The Baroness indicates that the May brick children know where their mother is, and that the boy has failed to hold any 'communication with her. She does not allude to the second child. " That Mrs. Maybrick 13 anxious for a reunion -with her children of course is a foregone conclusion. The Maybrick children are now living under a changed name, that of Fuller, la the Isle of "Wight, where Michael May brick, the one-time concert hall singer. Is now a Justice of the Peace, and where In 1900 be was Mayor of Ryde. Fortune has favored the author of "The Holy City" since his sister-in-law saw the in side of an English prison. Florence Maybrick, surrounded by ev ery comfort in the palatial mountain home of her lifelong friend. Dr. Dens more, at Cragsmoor, N. T., is busily en gaged in writing details of her prison life In England, relating her experiences in "Wormwood Scrubbs, "Woking and Ayles bury jails, and giving her impressions and rehearsing particulars regarding the famous Maybrick case, which are now familiar to those who have followed this woman's strange life tragedy. .Mrs. Maybrick is guarded with the clos est secrecy. "Wicked reporters are barred from the Densmore home, and awful pho tographers are kept at a respectful dis tance. In several letters to the -writer, -however, Mrs. Maybrick has emerged from her shell of mystery to some extent; emerged, strange as it may appear, to correct false impressions of Michael May brick, the brother of her late husband, the man who devoted his greatest ener gies to placing behind prison bars the young American wife charged with the poisoning of her husband.. The man -whom Mrs. Maybrick might be excused for detesting", she arises phoenix-like to defend. And not only this she locks horns with her mother in making the- defense. Assertions regard ing Michael Maybrick made by the Bar oness Ton Roques from her poverty- stricken home in Rouen, France, are flatly denied by Mrs. Maybrick from her luxurious home in America; the convic tions of the Baroness are repudiated by the woman who is now free. The ideas of mother and daughter seemingly ar6 as widely separated as the women them selves divided by the broad Atlantic. k A Mother's Great Sacrifice. The -world has some slight idea of the gigantic sacrifices made by the Baroness von Rogues in pursuing her tremendous battle for the freedom of her daughter. But tho inside tragedy of the mother's suffering, her want, her self-denial, her physical and mental torture, never will be known in full. The recital would be too awfuL too ghastly in its details, too pit! ful in the recounting. That she devoted her Ufa. to, .the cause of her daughter's freedom Is a matter of open history; that she ruined, herself financially is more or less generally known; but that she suf- fered the pangs of hunger and of dis comfort, that she stripped the walls of Cost of Good With an Old Road for By James TV. Abbott, special agent. HocJcy Mountain and Pacific Coaat division, office of Public Road Inquiries, "United States De partment of Agriculture. . fHENEVER. the subject of road- building is discussed anywhere with a view of constructing an object lesson road and advice is gven as to the kind of road best adapted to the existing local conditions, the first question which is invariably asked is, "What will such a road cost?" My re ply to this question, so far, has always been, "We are not yet in a position sat isfactorily to exemplify costs.". In building a short piece of road, as we do in co-operation with other inter ests, we can only demonstrate meth ods and call attention to the principles which determine costs. Economics must, in every locality, to a greater or less extent, be worked out by the in telligence" and ingenuity of local offi cials. In the states of Oregon and "Wash ington, so far as our present knowl edge of roadbuildlng goes, the best im proved highways will be made with stone coverings. The stone will be either mechanically crushed or it will be taken from gravel pits in which the material has been prepared by nature from what was originally solid rock. Gravel is to ail intents and purposes partially prepared stone. In making crude estimates of the cost of stone-covered roads it is a con venient rule to keep in mind that there will be required approximately 2000 cubic yards of broken stone for each mile of roadway 15 feet wide. There will be some variation from this gen eral amount in most cases, but it Is a convenient figure to use for a rough estimate. For improved roads there will generally-be selected highways already In use and partially constructed. If there can be determined in advance the co3t per yard of placing the broken stone upon the roadbed, it Is nearly always safe to figure that the entire additional cost per mile of completed road will not ex ceed $1000, and may come far within that figure It Is to the problem of mln lmiring cost of placing this broken stone upon the road that the chief study must always be given. The cost of building our experimental road at Belllngham was far in excess of what it should be in future when the question of macadamizing roads and streets in that vicinity shall bo taken up by the authorities as a defi nite policy. "When we began that ob ject lesson, there had been practically no experience to guide the people there as to what could bo accomplished with local material. Two Kinds of Rock. As stated In my last paper, we used two kinds of rock. "Within the city lim its and reached by the local stroet rail way was a large gravel bank from which, in past years, there had been hauled for city purposes thousands of yards of graveL When this gravel had been loaded into the carts at the pits, it had been the custom to throw out to one side and leave on the ground, piles of boulders, which were regarded as too large to be put into a graveled road. These boulders ran from the size of one s fist to sizes so large that we made no use of them. It was a pile of -very decidedly heterogeneous rock. The granitic varieties rather predominated, 3ut there were volcanic rocks ot many her little home, that she parted bit by bit with almost the whole of her worldly possessions, leaving herself without even J-the commonest necessities of life, are facts not widely advertised in connection with her great life's sacrifice. The aged mother's reward lies In see ing her daughter free. Beyond that, it is questionable if her great work has wrought her any further reward ln'this world. Called Her Meddlesome. One of Mrs. Maybrick's friends, com missioned by her to see the writer re garding certain seemingly' unfriendly statements regarding Michael Maybrick, made by the Baroness, remarked quite recently: "You see, we all know the Baroness is rather a meddlesome old person, and quite erratic" And again: "Mrs. Maybrick has had much to put up with at the hands of her mother. She knows this as well as we know It. The old lady has recently been the cause of much trouble from time to time. Borne people think she helped her daughter, and some of us are convinced that her activity had quite the reverse effect in many Instances." From these and similar remarks, it soon became evident that since the release of Mrs. Maybrick the Baroness has appeared but littlf in the arena. Letters from Mrs. Maybrick herself seem to indicate that the Baroness has been kept In the dark even as to the terms of the release of her daughter. As an example, the Baroness, discussing the alleged interview with Mrs. Maybrick and printed In a London news paper shortly after her release, .said: "If Mrs. Maybrick has granted any Interview she has dmo it in defiance of the terms of her release." Denies Mother's Statements. The Baroness explained that the British Home Office had issued Mrs. Maybrick's ticket of leave on the understanding that she would not grant any interview, write any book, or in any other way thrust her relf before the public In a letter to the winter Mrs. Mavbrlck sava these state ments are made without the least author ity. "You assume," she wrote, "full knowl edge, as coming from my mother, of the text of my ticket of leave My answer to this is the conditions of my ticket f leave are known to myself and the Home Office authorities only, and have not been communicated either by them or myself to any one else, it being a private and per sonal matter. And I may add tnat my mother is no better informed from myself than others." But it is taking up cudgels in behalf of Michael Maybrick as against the state ments of her mother that seems most pe culiar. "Whether there Is any difference between mother and daughter cannot def initely be stated, but the flat contradiction of the statements of the Baroness, togeth er with the fact that he Baroness did not accompany her daughter to America, may be indicative of some slightly strained relations. Still Another Denial. The Baroness has been interviewed by your London correspondent many times during the years of her daughter's Incar ceration, and while she has insisted that her remarks be not published until after the release of Mrs. Maybrick, fearing 'this might Interfere with the chances of Mrs. Maybrick's freedom, she has made many startling statements concerning the case. JJot many months ago she said that Michael Maybrick was holding the May. brick children, and managing the May brick estate, under what she considered a very doubtful will. Indeed, she- indi cated that when the proper time arrived some sort of litigation might be opened to set matters to rights. Mrs. Maybrick's reply to her mother in this connection is this: "The legal action to give tho custody Roads West a Basis, $1000 a Mile Will Pay for a varieties, and all, of course, of vary ing degrees of hardness. Some of the rock, especially the gran itic varieties, had disintegrated under the action of the elements, and we at tempted rigidly to exclude from our use all such. These gravel boulders had evidently been left where found by glacial action, and the very fact that they had survived the attrition of'flu viatlle and glacial processes, and the disintegrating effect of the various ele ments through unmeasured time proved their stability of structure. That such material will make good stone-covered roads is certain. The objections to it are: First that the variation in character must result m some corresponding variation in wear of the road surface; Second that its rounded eurfaces tend to produce instability in the constructed road, and more care and labor Is re quired in such construction; and. Third that very considerable less quan tity can be satisfactorily crushed in a given time, and consequently the crush ing cost is increased. Such boulders are also much harder on the dies of a" crush er and cause much more uneven and rapid wear, and in that way also tend to Increase crusher costs, because the newer and more nearly perfect the die the more rap- Id and the more satisfactory is always the crushing and the products, from the crushing. For tho accumulated piles of these boulders at the Belllngham pit, through the courtesy of the Street Railway Company and the Belllngham Bay & Brit ish Columbia Railroad Company, wo were enabled to make the following arrange ment, which, under the circumstances, I still believe to have been most practical for the purposes of our demonstration. The B. B. & B. C. R. R. Co. furnished us the flatcars. The street railway placed these, as we required them, on a spur running into the gravel pit, and hauled them when loaded onto the sidetrack be side our crusher. A gang of men 'with wheelbarrows loaded the boulders into the cars at the pit. How to Work Gravel. For future operations in a region where 6uch a gravel, pit is located, I would sug gest the following arraneement: Con struct a platform, say 15 feet wide by 20 feet long, at such elevation that from each end of the platform a steel apron rotat ing on a swivel can be lowered over the side of a distributing wagon used to haul material. At tho center of such platform a grizsly three feet wide and six feet long should be erected, sloping backward in a direction parallel with the long way of the platform, and at an angle of 45 degrees. This grizzly should bo made of steel bars two and one-half Inches apart. The bars should be one inch by two Inches in cross section, with the narrow edge up. The under side of each bar should be swedged to a width of perhaps one-half inch. A second platform should be erected at such an elevation that ma terial dumped upon it would fall through, with an opening onto the grizzly. The entire contents of the gravel bank should then be brought by steel scrapers onto the upper platform, and dumped, passing through the opening in the platform and falling onto the grizzly. All the fine stuff and sand and the rocks less than two and one-half Inches In diameter would fall towards the under side of the grizzly. The larger rocks would run down the bars and drop upon the platform outside the grizzly. The crusher could be placed just outside the end of this lower platform In position most convenient for feeding into it the boulders. From the crusher the of mytchildren to Mr. Michael Maybrick was supported by the Homo Secretary and the Lord' Chancellor. At no" time, there fore, could a favorable judgment have been given in any suit brought by my mother for their custody. lnwthe. Court , of Chancery. None was contemplated, "and my children are now of age. "Mr. Maybrick made his -will' 16 days before his death, at a lawyer's office, in the presence of two witnesses. At no tlmo during his illness was he left alone with of Cascades First-CIass Highway. elevator would carry the crushed rock to the bins, from which It would be hauled directly onto the road. The material falling through the grizzly could be raked and scraped Into wagons -and hauled onto the subgrade for a first course. In this way every particle of tho gravel would be utilized to good advan tage. Tho reason for making the under edge of the bars narrower than the top edge is that by this construction ma terial is much less likely to stick be tween ' the bars. Through a hole punched for the purpose in the center of each bar should be passed a steel rod, firmly held in place by locked nuts at its ends. In each interval between the bars and firmly held in place by the same rod should be wooden blocks 2 Inches thick, which will - thus stiffen the grizzly and maintain, the uniform distances between the bars. By taking advantage of natural inequalities of ground, such platform could bo set in such position as to obviate, the neces sity for constructing any long plank incline up which the wheel crusher would be pulled. Quarried Rock Commended. One portion of the Belllngham road was made of quarried rocky Since writ ing my last paper I have received copy of the report upon this rock from the road material laboratory. I am ad vised that the report was sent to me a long time ago, and that my failure to receive it was due to some unex plained vagaries in the mail service. This report is very interesting, -and, I have no doubt, is substantially correct. The rock is classified as "altered diabase." Its adaptability for road pur noses is characterized a3 "rather low in toughness, with fair hardness, re sistance to wear and cementing value. Should give satisfactory results under all classes of rural traffic. The deposits from which this rock was obtained aad never previously neen uu lized for any Duroose. and it was neces sary to exnend some money in opening the quarry. The broken rock thus ob tained was hauled on long sleds made for .hauling shingle bolts, and over a kind ot runway always maae ror use witn sucn sleds. It was loaded into flat .cars on a short spur of the B. B. & B. C R. R., which had capacity for only two cars. "With the available facilities for loading we succeeded in securing only two very small cars each day, and the. result was an unavoidable waste of time. As this work was undertaken, purely as a demonstration, it was regarded by all interested as very desirable to give this rock a fair test and the extra expense in volved was a minor matter, as compared with the Information sought. We suc ceeded in getting an abundance of the fine slzefrom this rock, and some of that we were very glad to secure to reinforce the fine from the boulders, which was de ficient In amount. In future, if rock from this quarry is to be used for road construction, there will be no motive for demonstrating proc esses where they can be readily observed. arid It will be desirable to install the crusher at the quarry, delivering the crushed rock Into bins of ample storage capacity, from which it will' he economi cally loaded into much larger cars than we used, and delivered In them to wagons near where the rock is to be .applied to the proposed road. As apropos of this discussion, the ac compllshment and plans, of Judge, Scott in Marion County, Oregon, are a most val his brothers. I was always In hearing, and am perfectly aware of what took place. Mr. Maybrick's estate was left in trust, under two trustees, until my chil dren came of age. The will was pro bated, and in a subsequent action brought "by mo 'a gainst an insurancecompanyr was accepted by the Judge of the Court of Appeals as valid, and (L am Informed it cannot be reopened, even if I were dis posed, which I' am not." The Baroness went to some pains to uable contribution to the cause .of road betterment in the Northwest. At our convention in Portland; two years ago, when the Oregon State Good Roads Association was formed, with Judge Scott for Its president, the subject of ob ject lesson roads and co-operation in road building seemed to make a deep impres sion upon the Judge's mind. 'He immedi ately began to study how, with the little means available in his court, he could be gin a system of road-building which should lead to better things for Marlon County, and later for the entire State of Oregon. With a crusher installed at a quarry ot igneous rock near Salem, he began In a tentative way to study the problem of get ting the most for the least outlay of funds from the -public treasury. He .first used a simple screen ot local manufac ture, made with Iron rods and designed to separate the fine material from the rest of the rock. The property-owners along the route, and those whom it served, con tributed most of the hauling. Getting the crushed rock from the quarry when most convenient, they hauled it out and placed It on the road and covered tho single lay er thus formed with the fine stuff. The Judge had no roller then, and the rock had to be consolidated very slowly by the travel. It was for a time a sore vexation for those who were compelled to use it, but the Judge persisted, and by watching the road from month to month, and re surfacing it in spots where Inequalities developed, he finally succeeded in getting very good results. Later on he pur purchased a good roller of the same kind which we used at Belllngham, and now has the same kind of crasher. He has recently concluded an arrangement with the Citizens' Light & Traction Company, of Salem, which has agreed to extend Its line VA miles to a quarry of igneous "rock 2 miles from the Courthouse at Salem. The same company has also arranged to furnish the Judge a 20-horsepower motor with current to run It for $3.50 a day. This will operate the crusher and the elevator, and probably some automatic device to assist in getting, the broken rock from the quarry' into the crusher. The Judge will erect commodious bins, and will use revolving screens similar to those we used at Belllngham. The crushed product classified into fine, medium-size and coarse, will be hauled in the cars, furnished by the railroad company, and delivered at any point upon their system for a transportation charge of 25 cents a yard. There is no doubt that property-owners in the county, will read ily contribute the .transportation to haul a very large amount of this crushed rock gratis to roads which will be improved. Already the Judge, by the methods previ ously described, has built nearly 20 miles of macadam road 12 feet wide, which has been in use, some of it one Winter and some of it for two. and has taught the people ot the Willamette Valley the great boon which a good road brings to community during Oregon's wet season. These , roads have been absolutely hard and firm during the wettest periods, and have sustained, wagons so heavily loaded that when they reached the city limits, where the roads have not been improved. it was necessary to add extra power to get them Into town. In my next article I shall deal with the width of roads. JAMES-W. ABBOTT. (In Mr. Abbott's article published last Sun day two. typographical errors occurred. One lino -was. dropped out of this sentence: "The combination roller is a useful machine for county purposes where such a combination Is mora desirable than a. roller destrned solely for- road rolling, but ' Is not adapted lor economy, efficiency ana most flushed re ults.' In HeetloBlg' tke sereas it wv said they hol Be pcae4 with soles . aad laches la eUBMter. 3tr. Abbott wrote "K 'aa& l& lnelwa In .AlMnMer"; the 'Scare- X WM MIUU4.) T explain for publication incidents rounding .the deathbed scene of James Maybrick and went to the point of add ing: ."Florie would not -like this pub- llshed.'' . Tfcls point being brought to tho attention of Mrs. Maybrick. elicited from her the remark that it "Js pure inven tion." Another statement made by the Baron ess -was that Michael Maybrick pretended to hold certain documents in connection with bis retention of the children, to One Fortnight of China Oregon's Short Season When Everyone Can Get a Taste 01 the Gamebir d. THB invasion of Oregon by the Chi nese pheasant is an instance of rapid conquest and dispossession ot the previous inhabitant that is hard to equ.al. It is about 23 or 24 years ago that the late Judge O. N. Benny, then United States Consul to China, noticed these handsome birds, exposed, alive, for sale in baskets In the Shanghai market. There they are common, finding their hauntB chiefly in the ancient temple grounds. The foreign residents hesitate to buy them dead, as the native hunters pot them with a charge of Iron scraps, which are unexpectedly hard on teeth when the bird 13 brought to table. Judge Denny saw no reason why they should not thrive in the moist climate of Oregon, where brush covers the hillsides, and wild berries and seeds abound. So he sent over, I think, 14 pairs, which in cluded with the ring-necked China pheas ant, so common today, both gold, silver and bronze varieties. Probably more of the birds were shipped, but 14 pairs survived the voyage and were turned out, some In Marion and some in Linn Coun ty, to take their chances. . They were protected by law, and even so had to work to survive and perpetu ate their kind, in spite of the envious eyes of the farmers, small boys, and some, I fear, of larger growth. What helDed them was their fecundity. It Is hard to extirpate a bird that has two, and sometimes three, broods a year. especially when the gentleman of the family (he certainly looks like one) takes charge of the first brood of half-grown youngsters while the lady Is preparing to hatch out a second family ten or twelve strongr Opinions differ somewhat as to their domestic relations. Bach partisan has some story to telL He who upholds the ring-necked beauty as a model of hus bandly virtue, tells of the care of the beautiful bird over this same family of young" ones, .while the mother Is far off in the next copse, sitting tight on the new clutch of eggs in the nest in the thick grass between the rose stems. But the other side tells of watching the soil tary king over a harem of six or seven modestly clad wives, marshaling them out Into the sunshine on the wheat stub ble, and showing off his fine feathers and sheeny colors in the early norning. In the glory- ot Jiis dandified dress. Perhaps the truth lies midway. Pos sibly ' a choice. once made Is for good as far as that season goes, and the rejected fair ones are left on the market for the next comer to choose from. The bright plumage of the male pheas ant Is plainly his chief attraction. His nearest neighbor among the game - birds relies on his" voice to catch a wife or two. The- big. dusky grouse files up un der the--dark stiade of the fir tree limbs. and havlntr found a clear sDace for his antics, swells out his breast and hoots, hoots, hoo'ts, till the wood re-echoes, and the air Is full of his deep bass voice. Presently a 'single note in answer, and he listens and.redoubIes his efforts. Then his first raite- steals quietly to the tree and "flutters up beside her lord and mas ter on the" limb. But the scamp is not content, .and hoots th more until yet an other ontvo or even three have answered to his blandishments, aad joined the fam ily group. The Chlaa'pSeMaBtv though, is a ged father,-whatever else soar he Ms weak ness; He' TkSiM the tttU troed afeent which Mrs. Maybrick says: "Mr. Michael Maybrick holds no documents written by my husband which require further inves tigation, or which -were not submitted to the court at tho time. . . ." And again, in reply to the Baroness' statement that Michael Maybrick prevent ed her from seeing tho children, Mrs May brick writes: "The decision that my children should neither visit me nor receive vislfs from my mother, was a necessity under the conditions of their custody, and received my consent." These flat contradictions of the state ments, of her mother, while decided, are by no means all of thai denials made by the released woman. Heard Maybrick's Song. There appear to be many points, in con nection with the famous case about which the Baroness and Mrs. Maybrick dis agree. The Baroness tells of the friend ship that existed between Mrs. Maybrick and Michael, of his kindly attentions to ber; and of their later disagreement, and the coolness that followed and that was followed by the bitterness of feeling dis played by Michael Maybrick against bis American sister-in-law. She relates how, on board a yacht, Mrs. Maybrick was the first person to hear the strains of "The Holy City," which was sung, to her by the composer, and she recites a number of in stances of the seeming friendship of Michael Maybrick for the young Ameri can. Mystery In the. Relationship. Mrs. Maybrick writes in reply: "Mr. Michael Maybrick and Mr. Edwin May brick met me only once before my mar riage, and were' guests at my home, not oftener than once a year, uur relations were friendly until their minds were In fluenced against me by raise imputations of mv enemies. That there is still some mystery in connection with the relations existing hntrreen the various members or tne Mavbrick family seems certain. Mrs. Maybrick of course is desirous or Do ing restored to her children, ana it is difficult to see how tnis can De pre vented, as they are of age, and cannot be bound by any agreement entered into by th,e mother. According to the Baroness, .airs. Maybrick was surrounded by a perfect network of enemies. James jaaynricK, she says was a debauchee She adds that when he married the attractive younsr American girl, Michael May brick was a frequent visitor at tne Maybrick home. This, again, Mrs. May brick denies. James ilaybrlck was 44 years old. He led a dissipated life The brothers were very close to each other, and Michael presumably knew the life that James was leading, when May brick married the handsome Miss Chandler. Michael was anything but inimical to his sister-in-law. He was mmctilious in his politeness for some time Then his conduct changed. Regarding Mrs. Brlggs. Another element of hatred in the Maybrick family against the young American was a .Mrs. Brlggs, who, ac cording to the Baroness, had known James Maybrick a number of years, and who acted as his housekeeper. The Baroness von Boques declares that Mrs. Brlggs was once the fiancee of James Maybrick. She declares that prior to Jam.es Maybrick's meeting with her daughter he had promised to make Mrs. Brlggs the mistress of his house. "When Mrs. Maybrick came upon the scene of action, James May brick's life plan was obviously upset, so far as it might have . affected Mrs. BriKKS and it was evident from the first that the young American, was re garded bjr nearly every one asan in terloper. ' In the house with Mrs. Briggs were several other female servants, to all of whom James Maybrick had been from field to field, scratches here and there; and keeps an eye ever watchful for the approach of man, dog or hawk. Jq bird takes a hint more quickly to run or fly, and .he does both to perfection. It takes a fast dog to put him up if he thinks a race up the furrow, with out stretched neck, is safer than to take the chance of a charge of shot In the air. Shortly after Judge Denny made his first successful importation,, he tried again, but being brought in a sailing ship t oan Eastern port and then across the continent to Oregon, the venture failed and all these birds died. The serious effort of the Multnomah Rod and Gun Club, nearly 20 years ago, deserves to be described. This club was then in its glory in Portland, and many men still prominent here were members. They arranged for a large consignment of birds, several hundred In number, and in due time they arrived in Portland. Four varieties were represented, the now common ring-necked, the sliver pheasant, the bronze, and the copper. The names suggest their differences. The birds were delivered here, weak after their long voyage, and half their numbers gone,, at the beginning ot winter. Tne rlsK or turning them loose then was too great to run, so a large store was rented by the club on North First street, and fitted up with fir boughs and greens, and an attendant paid to care for them. In the early Spring, thanks chiefly to the good- offices of Frank T. Dodge, a member of the Club, and then superintendent of the water ser vice of the O. R. & N. Co., a home was found for the strangers on Protection Island, near the Straits of Fuca, Puget Sound. There was an area of about 600 acres of rough land covered with brush and thickets, far enough from shore to give security from coons, minks and hawks. The one inhabitant of the island was engaged -by the club, at a pay of $25 a month, to keep off poachers and hunters till the club should send for the birds after the following- nesting sea son, and return the Increased numbers to Oregon. All went well the pheasants multi plied and replenished the land. And the guardian was faithful to his charge. But as the months rolled by he asked for his pay. Unfortunately by this time the club's' finances had got into dis order and the money was not forth coming. Time passed, with repeated de mands, but no pay. At last the man's patience was exhausted. He notified the chib that the pheasants were eat ing him out of house and home. He told then that his garden was ruined, that the birds were eating out all his turnips and positively digging up his potatoes and that he should protect himself by having- his visitors killed off. Alas, he went scientifically to work, and got even by selling shooting" privi lege3 to the officers of the United States revenue cutter and to sport3 men from Port Townsend- and Vic torla. Great tales were in the air about the splendid bags made. It did not take long- to clean up the Island, and not a bird was left to be returned, to Oregon. Still one or two survived, and In, the end the Island itself changed handsand is now, as we are tojd, the hunting ground of a well-to-do sports man of Victoria or Vancouver, B. C. So much for the pheasant venture of the Multnomah Rod & Gun Club. Fortunately the Oregon law protected those turned out in Marlon and Linn Counties, "and from those beginnings th rlng-aecked pheasants have cov more or less kind, and other clrcuwC stances arose that made it quite pleasant for the young wife For In stance, some of James Maybrick's trigues with other women came to ill attention of his- wife, though in an ac cidental way. She saw in his office books, where he had paid out a larg sumof money to a woman in LivatSi pool, who. together with her children, he was supporting in splendid style. Stormy Scenes Ensued. ir - Mrs. Maybrick was allowed only enough money to run her large hous- . hold, and pay actual expenses. Stormy scenes ensiled. The servants did not like the change In the atmospheric conditions that had remained so Iocs' undisturbed. None ot them -loved Mrs. Maybrick, and a good deal of petty spite was aroused by her presence. when James Maybrick became ill. Mrs. Brlggs was the first person Jto leiegrapn 10 j-ionaon lor Aiicnaei Max brick. Mrs. Briggs told Michael May brick that Alice Yapp had told her that Mrs. Maybrick was poisoning her hi$r- Out of that piece of gosslD jrrew the charge against Mrs. Maybrick for miirV aer. The charge was brought asrainat her while she lay In a comatose condi tion, for some hours after her hu. band's death. She was sriven no onndi- tunlty to explain herself. . Police offi cers were brought into the house, andt she was practically convicted before the post-mortem had revealed a tittle of evidence. She was noti allowed to see her own mother, to consult counsel or to be defended in any way. Poliqa officers were placed about her bed and she was carried practically from her house to prison in a manner at once outrageous and unusual. A Mother's Untiring Work. So much for the facts of- the case as narrated in various conversations and letters "by the Baroness von Roquar, Since the moment when she was con' vlnced of her daughter's innocence, the Baroness has left no stone unturned to wards vindication. A few years after the Maybrick trial the Baroness 16ft Eng land and began that wonderful crusade through the press which has kept alive the spark of life in the Maybrick case- The Baroness found, however, that her malls were tampered with, and It was impossible for her to accomplish any thing under the system of surveillance -to which she was subjected. It was for this reason she moved away from England and went to France, where' she was 1st least away from the species of persecu tion. For many years she conducted a monthly newspaper and published all the new facts bearing on the Maybrick case. She never allowed a statement to appear in the press without an answer from her. She wrote regularly to hundreds of cor respondents, and her monthly newspa per was sent to every important member of both the English and American gov ernments. Indeed, the Baroness has been thougfit at times- to have tried from her little home In Rouen to edit the newspapers of the world so far as they affected the Maybrick case, and to a great extent she has succeeded. Certainly .she has pur sued to a conclusion the most wonderful press crusade the world has ever known. There are some statements made by the Baroness that, like the wisdom of Providence, passeth all understanding. As an example, in Bouen she was au thority for the statement that her daugh ter's mind was affected, and vthat it would be necessary for her to go into a retreat that she was a nervous wreck, and had been handed over to the world a human, derelict. These statements -do not seem to be borne out by the facts, though there did not appear at the tlgee to be any reason for making a mislead ing statement. (Copyright, ISOi, Percy Lindon-Howard.) Pheasants ered Western Oregon, finding- their best homes in the Willamette Valley coun ties. It was believed that they were suf ficiently established for sale of them-to be allowed for half a month. And thia next two weeks will see festoons and bunches of these beautiful birds adorn ing all the markets. But our Legislators have been pre mature and have not reckoned with the money gree,d of the two classes of the birds' enemies the farmer boys and the pothunters from the towns the latter the worst. The law should be modified at TStk -coming session of the Legislature, fe bidding the sale of the birds absolute ly till further notice. This season Hs been a lamentable example. Bird's tne size of quail have been shot down, by the hundred, before the season conr menced, and when it did then the cold storage houses and markets, all over the country have been filled up. Talking this over, a well-known member of the Rodvand Gun Club sug gested that strong influence should 'be brought tos bear to have the old male birds spared first, because they are tough; second, because without them next year's families, being composed ol young- birds, will not be up to the ways and wiles of the wicked hunter, and will die young and foolish. But the no tion of sparing the brilliant bird, at he risses In the bushes, of the fence cor ner, with a rush and dash into the air, that fetches your heart Into your , mouth and sets it beating like a trip? hammer! Or. as you watch him skimming- and floating towards you at the head of his brood from the wide field yonder, where your friend's setter has put him up! That Is just more self sacrifice than one in a thousand sports men can compass. No, long life to th China rooster while his craft and quick--ness, quick eyesight and instant decisj Ion can keep him out of shot rangVl and a noble death to him" at the ha( of a sportsman good and true, who ha kept to the rules of the game, followed on the heels of his well-trained dog-, walked long and widely for him, amd killed his quarry clean, at fair rang and in fuU flight. A good many attempts have been mad; to establish them in other states, pairs of breeding birds having been pbtained from Oregon. But as far as is known none have succeeded in anything llki the same degree as in this state. The climatic conditions here seem exactly adapted to their breeding, and maturing; For tame breeding It is by far the safest method to secure birds bred aruf raised in confinement. In a wire aviary, supplied with growing- bushes atfd plants, with dirt and gravel to scragffh In and abundant fresh water, the bfcrfr flourish and get as tame as chlcke I have known tame birds to lay frifm 75 to 100" eggs in a season. An aviary of this sort Is a pretty adjunct to" a cool conservatory by the side of the. house. In the old country the tiny chicks are Jed for the first few weeks of their lives on ant eggs, brought-ln. from the woods and poured out with the dirt of .the ant nest on the gToutid In front of the coops. Hard-boiled egg crumbled smalU with boiled rice, is ths following bill of fare, and then "the maggots from meat are fed to th&n. until they take to the woods on tRefe own account. "WALXJJ3 JfASHL? Portlaad. Nov. IS, 1M4. r"' 3T V