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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1906)
7 1 1 s REf Term of Natural Life - -8U:By MARCUS CLARKE f - Entire10 r 1 t Wo ntjj- v pun vJIKnT,S,XX.-(Contlnued.) .Itnteteil ns overpowered by the rev 2!M1, httUnly made to htm, had Cf , under tlio Aeew m0tBent8 motionless meeting to near tne ocavj- ' " innfar ilrwir whteh ftllOtllll yHUlV him the departure of the " -T5 ,But" h-did: not hear It, and edtehlm that the nir in the djrrown suddenly cooler. He ''the ilaar, aitih looked Into the r; ?cprridbr, 'expecting to see the i njr countenanco of Gimblett. To Utonlshment the door of the prison iwide 6pen, and not n soul in sight. leMftpked nround. The night -was fall f sullenly; the wind was mounting; M'beyond the bar came the hoarse jfcHirMur of an angry sea. If the schoon fer "was to sail that night, she had best Jfget oat Into deep waters. Where was jthe chaplain? Pray heaven the delay "Aad been sufficient, and they had sailed .without him. Yet they would be sure 'to meet. He advanced a few steps nearer, and looked about him. Was it possible that, In his madness, the chap' lain had been about to commit some violence which had drawn the trusty Gimblett from his post? The trusty Gimblett was lying at his feet dead drunk! "Hi! Hohot Hillo, there!" roared somebody from the jetty below. "Be that you, Muster Noarth? We ain't too much tiam, sur! From the uncurtained windows of the chaplain's house on the hill beamed the newly lighted candle. They in the boat did not see It, but it brought to the prisoner a wild hope that made his heart bound. He ran back to his cell, clapped on Northjs wide-awake, and, flinging the cloak hastily about him, came-quickly down the steps. If the moon, should shinet out now! "Jump in, sir," said unsuspecting Mannix, thinking only of the flogging he had been threatened with. "It'll be a dirty night, this night! Put this over your knees, sir. Shove her off! Give way!" And they were afloat. But one glimpse of moonlight fell upon the slouched hat and cloaked figure, and the boat's crew, engaged in the dangerous task of navigating the reef in the teeth of the rising gale, paid no attention to the chaplain. "Lads, we're but just in time!" cried Mannix; and they laid alongside the schooner, black in blackness. "Up ye go, yer honor, quick!" And the anchor was a-trip as Rufus Dawes ran up the side. The commandant, already pulling off in his own boat, roared a farewell. "Good-by, North. It was touch and go with ye," adding, "Curse the fellow; he's too proud to answer!" The chaplain, indeed, spoke to no one, and, plunging down the hatchway, made for the stern cabins. "Close shave, .your reverence!" said a respectful some body," opening a door. It was, but the clergyman did not say so. He double locked 'the door, and, hardly realizing the dangeriie had escaped, flung himself on the-bunk, panting. Over his head he heard the rapid tramp- of feet. He could smell the sea, arid through the open- window of the cabin could distinguish the light in the chaplain's house on the hill. The trampling ceased, the vessel began to move swiftly, the command ant's boat appeared below him for an instant, making her way back; the Lady Franklin had set sail. "That's a gun from the shore," said Partridge, the mate, "and they're burn ing a red light. There's a prisoner es caped. Shall we lie to?" "Lie to!" cried old Blunt. "We'll have suthin else to do. Look there!" . The sky to the northward was streak ed with a belt of livid green color, above which rps a migh'ty black cloud, whose shape was ever changing. CHAPTER XXXI. Blunt, recognizing the meteoric her alds of danger, began to regret his ob stinacy. He saw that a hurricane was approaching. Along the south coast of the Austra lian continent, though the usual west erly winds and gales of the highest lati tudes prevail during the greater portion of the year, hurricanes are not infre quent Gales commence at N. W. with a low barometer, Increasing at W. and S. W., and gradually veering to the south. True cyclones occur at New Zealand. It was one of these rotatory storms, an escaped tempest of the trop ics, which threatened the Lady Franklin. Rufus Dawes, exhausted with the ex citement through which he had passed, had slept for two or three hours, when he was awakened by the motion of the vessel going on the other tack. He rose to his feet and found himself In com plete darkness. Overhead was the noise of trampling feet, and he could distin guish the hoarse tones of Blunt bellow ing orders. Astonished at the absence of the moonlight which had so lately silvered the sea, lie flung open the cabin Window and looked out. The cabin al lotted to North was one of the two stern cabins, and from it the convict bad a full view of the approaching storm. The sight was one of wild grandeur. The huge black cloud which hung in the horizon had changed its shape. In stead of a curtain, It was an arch. Be neath this vast and magnificent portal shone a dull phosphoric light Across this livid space pale flashes of sheet- llghfnlng passed noiselessly. Behind it was, a dull and threatening murmur, made up of the grumbling thunder, the falling of rain", and the roar of contend ing wind and water, The lights of tho prison-Island had disappeared, so rapid had been the progress of the schooner under the steady breeze, and the ocean stretched around, black and desolate. Gazing upon this gloomy expanse, Ru ins Dawes observed a strango phenom enon lightning appearing to burst up fward from the sullen bosom of the sea. , At Intervals, tho darkly rolling waves 4askad fire, and streaks of flame shot 'upward. The tone of a woman's voice relM him to himself. Cautiously un iMklac the cabin door, he peered out Tfe e&d? traa lighted by a swinging ln'H' "wfctafc rsrM irlrk quwrtlealug j mm t tb wwm eeaeeralag the trm. Locking tho door, ho proceeded hastily to dress hlmaelf In North's clothes. He would wait until his aid Was absolutely required, and then rush out. In the dark ness Sylvia would mistake him for the priest. He could convey her totho boat If recourse to the boats should bo ren dered necessary and then take the haz ard of his fortune. While she was In danger his place was near her. Front the. dock of the. vessel, the scene was appalling. The clouds had closed in. The arch of light had disappeared and nil was a dull, windy blackness. Gl gantic seas seemed to mount In the hori zon and sweep toward and upon thorn It was as though the ship lay in the vortex of a whirlpool, so high ou either side of her were piled the rough pyra midical masses of srta. The vessel lay almost on her beam ends, with her helm Up, stripped even of the sails which had been furled upou the yards. Mortal hands could do nothing for her. By B o'clock in the mornltig the gale had reached Its height The sea, pouring down through the burst hatchway, toro the door of the cuddy from its hinges. Sylvia found her self surrounded by a wildly surging tor rent which threatened to overwhelm her, Sho shrieked aloud for aid, but her voice was inaudible even to herself. Clinging to the mast which penetrated the little cuddy, she whispered a last prayer for succor. The door opened, and from out the cabin came a llguro clad in black. She looked up, and the light 6f the ex piring lamp showed her a face that was not that of the man she had expected to see. Then a pair of dark eyes beaming ineffable love and pity were bent upon her, and a. pair of dripping arms -held her above the brine as she had once been held in the misty mysterious days that were gone. . In the terror of that moment, the cloud which had so long; oppressed her braiu passed from it The action of the strange man before her completed and explained the action of the convict drain ed to the Port Arthur coal wagons, of the convict kneeling in tho Norfolk Isl and torture chamber. She remembered the terrible experience of Macquarie Harbor. She recalled the evening of the boat building, when, swung into air by stalwart arms, she had promised the res cuing prisoner to plead for him with her kindred. Regaining her memory thus, all the agony and shame of the man's lopg life f of misery becamest once ap parent to her. She understood how her husband had deceived her, and with what base injustice and falsehood he had bought her young love. No ques tion' as to how this doubly condemned prisoner had escaped from the hideous isle of punishment she had quit occur red to her. She asked not even In her thoughts how it had been given to him to supplant the chaplain in his place on board the vessel. She only considered, in her sudden awakening, the story of his wrongs, remembered only his marvel ous fortitude and love, knew only, in this, apparently last instant of her pure, ill-fated life, that as he had saved her once from starvation and death, so had he come again to save her from despair. The eyes -of the nuin and woman met in one long, wild gaze. Sylvia stretched out her white bands and smiled, and Richard Devine understood, In his turn, the story of the young girl's Joyless life, and knew how she had been sacrificed. In the great crisis of our life, when, brought face to face with annihilation, we are suspended gasping over the great emptiness of death, we became conscious that the self which we think we knew so well has strange and unthought-of ca- pacltles. To describe a tempest of the elements is not easy, but to describe a tempest of the soul Is Impossible. Amidst the fury of such a tempest, a thousand memories, each bearing in Its breast the corpse of some dead deed whose Influ ence haunts us yet, are driven like feath ers before the blast, as unsubstantial and as unregarded. The mists which shroud our self-knowledge become trans parent, and we are smitten with sudden, lightning-like comprehensions of our own misused power over our fate. This much we feel and know, hut who can coldly describe the hurricane which thus overwhelms him? As well ask the drowned mariner to tell of the marvels of mid-sea when the great deeps swal lowed him and the darkness of death en compassed him round about These two human beings felt that, they had done with life. Together thus, alone In the very midst and presence of death, the distinctions of the world disappeared. Their vision grew clear. They felt as beings whose bodies had already per ished, and as they clasped hands, their freed souls, recognizing each the loveli ness of the other, rushed tremblingly together. In a stately home in "dear old Eng land" a bronzed, serious-faced man knows the peace and contentment that come only with tho calm after the storm the rare joy of love requited, the sol emn satisfaction of Innocence vindicated, the "glory of sunlit lawns" and "green pastures and still waters." They who had robbed Rufus Dawes, convict, of tho best years of his life could not restore their golden promise i or atone for the shipwreck of youth and early manhood. But they could tear the false veil from the past -Tho storm that swept the Lady Franklin to the cruol rocks drifted to a friendly shore the man and woman who, clasped in each other s arms, saw love ineffable in each other's eyes for the first time. Rufus Dawes escapod to England, Syl via Frere followed on the next steamer, for, at the first port, she had learned of the death of Maurice Frere, brained by the manacles of a convict he had goad ed to desperation the very night of the escape of the man ho had so cruelly wronged. Then the world knew the story of the man who had twice saved her life knew as well of his Innocence, and Mr. North, reformed, repentant, from a quiet parish in Australia,; supplied the final evidence that cleared his name of every bUck vestige of guilt As mix Ulchard Devine. as afclp- l wrecked mariner Bftfo with home, tore and mother, tho old Rufus Dawes be-, came r man among men, notable tor charity, probity and Justice famous M tho first to lift his hand to strike, from , the fair, false faco of Tasmania the hideous mask that had converted Into a living hell an earthly parmiise, YVYT plague-spot of tho unlverso to which ho had been condemned "For tho term ol his natural lire." 2(The end.) t STRIKING FACTS ABOUT SLEEP. Oho ot the Most v.Myatcrlous of tho Wn of Xntnrc. "Shaksponrc," snld a scientist, "cull ed sleep tho apo ot death. Tlmt U striking name for n strlktng tiling. Sleep Is n wonderland. Let us explore It. "Self-hypnotism Is a, mysterious force that we cmi exercise on ourselves In sleep nlone. Wo nre nil self-hypuo-tlsts. Wo nil, on ccrtnln nights, tell ourselves firmly tlmt we must not oversleep; tlmt the next morning nt 4, nt 5 or (1 precisely wo must wnke up. Our sleeping solves respoud to the hypnotic suggestion made the night be fore by our waking selves. Tlmt Is mysterious nnd striking, isn't It? Still more mysterious ami striking, though, Ib tho fact of our keeping track of tho time somehow In our Blumbcr. IIoW on earth do we do that? "It l.s Impossible to do without sleep. Men lmve slept standing, even running. They lmve slept in buttle, under lire, with guns roaring on all sides. They have Blept in unendurable and deadly pain. "There Is no torture equal to tlmt which the deprivation of sleep entails. The Chinese nre the crudest folks on earth, and the most Ingenious of tor turers. Well,, the Chinese place the deprivation of sleep at the head of their torture list. "Sleep Is a state of rest The heart rests In sleep. The heart Is n rhythmic muscle, not one tlmt never reposes, but one that works nt short shifts, like a puddler, a moment on, a moment off. Well, when we sleep, the heart's shifts of rest are redoubled. It works then, one on, two off, getting, Indeed, pretty nearly as much repose as we do. "The brain fn sleep becomes pale nnd sinks below the level of the skull. When we nre awake the brain Is high and full nnd ruddy. "Not only the brain and heart but even the tear glands rest In sleep. Tlmt Is why when we awake wo always nib our eyes. The rubbing is an instinctive uctlon that stimulates the- stagnant tear elands and causes them to moisten properly our. eyes, nil dried from their inaction." Hunt on the Ocenu. "To talk of a 'dusty' ocean highway sounds absurd, but the- expression Is perfectly accurate," states a writer. "Everyone who la familiar with ships knows that, no matter how carefully the decks may be washed In the morn ing, a great quantity of dust will col lect by nlghtfnll. You say, 'But the modern steamship, burning hundreds of tons of coal n day, easily accounts for such a deposit' "True, but the records of sailing vessels show that tho latter collected more dust than a steamer. On. a re cent voyage of a sailing vessel a Jour ney which lasted ninety-seven days twenty-four barrels of dust were swept from the decks! The captain was a man of scientific tastes and made care ful observations, but could not solve the mystery. Some, no doubt, comes from the wear nnd tear on the sails and rigging, but that accounts for only a small portion. To add to the mystery. bits of cork, wood and vegetable fiber are frequently found in this sea dust Where does It come, from?" Corea Dally News. . ItlKht to the I.ettrr. A New Yorker was once referring to the stolidity find lltcral-iuimledness of the British shopkeeper, when he w.is reminded of an amusing experience of a friend In London. The American had been mnklng sov- eral "purchases in a Jewelry establish ment, among others a silver set, and finding tlmt he had with him Insulll clent funds to defray the entire co-it he desired the clerk to send the set lo hla hotel, marked "C. O. I." Due note was made by the eler.c; but when the articles arrived at the hotel the purchaser was surprised to find that no charges had been cdllected. Opening the package the American wan dumbfounded to discover that each piece of silver had been carefully engraved, In a beautiful monogram, "0. O, D." Success Magazine. . - Taken nt Her Word. Green Servant HI, mum, they's n man ut tho dure. Mistress Tell him to take a chair, I'll be down directly. Servant (a moment later) He's gone, mum. Mistress I thought I told you to glvo him a chair and Servant An' bo I did, mum, the big leather one, an' he's gone wld It ou his wagon. Cleveland News. Where He Wan. "Major Longbcau tells such exciting stories of the civil wnr, doesn't ho?'' "Yes, he does -tell Bonm good ones." "Which side was he on during the war?" . "Tho-other Bide,.'' "Confederate?" "No tho other sldo of tho Atlantic" Cleveland Lender. Ou the Go, Mrs. Stubh John, that now cook says sho used to bo on tho stngo during her younger days. Mr, Stubh I don't doubt It Hor past record shows that sho has beon doing one-night stand with every turn' lly that engaged her.i VrotccMl miiu " t llw mini- and .i.'- .ii... mi, i ii tit milk Is W1U Will IIIHIU h-' the process of mllklng-most of us 1 t tiKjAiHtHnu to over ...I- ..i. ....i. i i. tni.m, nun nt tllO U1IS OlIUUlll DO HUM". methods of protecting tho milk" m pall Is to arrnngo a cover of tin U llnrn n tin COVOf H1HU URVOU Vl ..., - go over tho pall loosely so us to n forthospneotnKon uy wn cun" iii us hlclier In center than at the sides (see small much of during now, rcoino best tho nnd lo to llow strainer. the cut Uli. WOTECTED MILK PAIL. to right) and a holo about four Inches In diameter miido In tho front center through which tho milk is directed. Then have plenty of chceso cloth cov ers large enough to reach flvo or six Inches over tho side of th pall, where It may be secured by a tape or by slip ping a hoop of Rheet Iron of proper slr.e over it. nnd pushing It down hard. Put on one of theso covers, then the tin cover, nnd you nro ready for milking. Tho cheese cloth will prevent any filth getting to the milk, and If theso covers are washed In boiling water and Bun dried they may be used a number of times. Tho Illustration shows tho Idea plainly, the cut to tho lower left show ing tho pall complete with tho strainer nnd tho lnrger cut showing how the cloth Is slashed at Intervals so It will fit around the pall without trouble. Iudlanapolls News. Hanilllnir Gntnrn Kurrla. Young guinea fowls are quite tender and need feeding frequently, say every two hours, for a week or two. They can be raised successfully If fed simi lar to turkeys or young chicks with n variety of feed, Including smnll seeds, etc. They must haye pure water and shnde nnd some animal feed, such as worms, grubs, or green Iwne. Mrs. Tate wrote to Farm nnd Home tlmt her chicks are fed equal parts of bran, corn meal, crushed rice, aud a llttlo bone meal, and some ground raw potatoes each day after tho first week. Chicks are fed nil dry food In hoppers, so none is wasted or soiled. They nro fed nil they can cat of the dry corn, meal, bran and crushed rice. Gravel nnd fresh water aro kept before them all times. Wnter must be In tin nnd galvanized drinking fountains so chicks can Just get their bends In, but not their feet The corn pUut Is X rm Ifterte 'and accept any kind of iilMiiure tHt may be applied, but It will not thrive fa partiiowthlp with any other pfahto, for which rcnHon It must h4 kept free from grfw and weeds, In wrdcf to have It, mature hofore frost cornea in im full, which necessltalcH the 'frequont fcN of tho cultivator. The clean prepwirtldn of tho Innd beforo plnntlng mwl stirring of the surface soil after every rain destroy weeds ami gran, wWdi penults tho fanner to accomplish wbli task at tho least- cost, as lie benefits tho com crop whllo preparing the Und for another tho following eaoon, For this reason, where large fields are cub tlvnted, thoro can bo no suhstltuto for com. and whether price rn or fall tho corn crop' Is n necessary adjunct 'te farming In this country. On the' farm It vnluo I not confined to Its grain alone, but tho ontlro plnnt can be util ised for sonio purjwsp. It Ifl, therefore tho most Inexpensive preparatory crop known. Every firmer aim to secure a crop of corn, and Into planting I re sorted to rather than Incur total fail ure. Success with a Inte-planted crop depends upon tho condition of the soil, tho variety and tho modo of cultiva tion, hut tho main drawback;.! the ap pearance of frost early In the eenB&n, which, however, docs not frequently occur. I'oullrr lntruotloH. In response to the urgent demand for Instructional aud Investigation work along iKMltry lines, tho board of trus tees of tho Iowa Agricultural College, at a recent meeting, created a new po sition In tho animal husbandry depart ment, that of Instructor In ntiliuni bus Imiidry, In charge of poultry. Howard Pierce, a graduate of Cornell Univer sity, has been placed In charge of tho work. Mr. Pierce I one of the best trained men In America along all line of work pertaining to the poultry In dustry, aud tlio college authorities con sider themselves most fortutmto In so curing tho services of so competent a man to build up this new and Import ant lino of college work. l'lans aro now being prepared for the erection of tho most modern nnd coin pleto iMiultry plant to ho found nt any educational Institution In America. The plnnt will be located ou the farm re cently purchased for tho dairy hen! and ixuiltry work. Hoth Instructional and Investigation work will bo com menced with the owning of tho college year. During the first few year spo call. attention will be devoted to the most economical methods of feeding for egg production, and of fattening chick ens for market Itnr SlncUrr. Tho hoy derrick shown here I for stacking hay In tho field. Tho skids nro 10x12 Inches, 10 feet long. The two cross pieces nro 8x10 Inches, 8 feet J long, each set In 2 Inches. The upright Kcononiy florae Msngcr, This Is Intended for 0-foot stall and can bo any width. Stall posts aro set up In front of troughs also, two feet buck, with cross piece mortised Into each, two feet from floor, for trough to r.cst on. Trough two feet wide, 7-Inch breast plank, 0-lnch front Kntlro trough mndo of 2-Inch oak plank. Hay board two feet wide, one Inch thick, hinged to edge of trough. Ilraco on outer edgo of board to bottom of trough. I uso an old buggy top Joint Hoard can bo dropped down out of way when not In use. Itnck fits spaco be tween stall posts, hinged at top so as to swing back when placing grain feed In trough. Uncle Is made' of 2x2-lnch hemlock, corners smoothed off. Horses will not chew hemlock. Hack can bo ECONOMICAL IIOUBK UANOKtt. mndo of Iron or any kind of wood. No animal can toss hay from this mangor or wnslo any grain. C. 13. Scroggs, In ITarm Progress. I'enohea Peeled with Iye. The method of tlio California Fruit Canners' Association at San Jose of using yo for eating off peach skins as a substitute for paring was investigated by a member of tho California State Board of Health. Uy this process the fruit Is Immersed In the hot lye and quickly passed Into pure cold water, which Is constantly changing and quickly washes away tho alkali. The process Is believed to be entirely cloan ly and tho fruit healthful, the peachee not being handled as they must be when peeled by band. Two cans of peaches thus prepared were analysed with reference to acid content. In both practically the normal amount of acid wu found. It la stated that the Mate proet la ueed with prunes- Ufa. UienZ FOB BTACKINU HAY. post Is 8x8, ami l) feet high. Tho three braces aro 4x4, or round poles. The boom polo Is 82 feet long, 4 Inches nt top and 8 or 10 nt butt Tho chain can be shortened to raise tho boom or lengthened to lower. The boom . Is swung by u swing rojie, a can lw seen. "A" shows the fork ou which boom pole Is swung. The bole lit the post Is lined with a pleco of 'gas plpo with solid plug In bottom. A 0-tlno grapple fork can bo lined. T Ilrlv Aivny the Green Fly. Next to clean wafer for tho destruc tion of green lly iijkhi the majority of plants, gardeners vnluo soft wmp tho most; when Judiciously used It Is an unfailing remedy and attended with no risk. Dissolved In water, nt the rato of two ounces of soap to ono gallon of water, and tho plants dipped In tho liquid, or syringed with It, so that it reaches Insects In Hiilllclent quantities to thoroughly wet them, It will do Its work In tho most effectual manner, It Is, however, n remedy that requires ihe excrclso of n llttlo forethought If It Is to bo used In houses It nhould ho ap plied In tho evening, when tho houso will bo closed for Hoveral hours, and when It will not dry up too quickly. When tho liquid Is to bo applied to plants or trees growing In tho open air It should bo dono In tho evening of warm and still days, if there Is only a llttlo wind blowing (ho liquid so quickly disappears that It Is dried -ip boforo It hns tlmo to comploto Its work of destruction, Thlraty I.nnda. According to an export In the em ploy of tho Interior Department, the enormous basin drained by the Mis souri Hlver absorbs no less than 88 per cent of all tho rain that falls upon It, whereas the basin of the Ohio nivr absorbs only 70 per cent. The amount of rainfall In the course of a year la proportionately greater In the Ohio than In tlio Missouri basin, mid so the rormer river, although much the short er of the two, contributes more water to the Mississippi than does Its tlaan. tic rival from tho west, Ken Hratem of Cbeeae Making-, A Jorge cheeae factory la projected In the province of Ontario, Canada, by New York produce merchants. f v'Wa fa) Consul V.u. gant from Kingston, xt factorv la to Im onornttut nn an uiti.. ---r - - -" f"Hitf new system of cliee-inaklg. White cheap Is .now In great dwuiaud at Ur mm), belug 48 cent hUcber titan 1- wv imi rn..i-.i-. - . ..... . 'KiauailK tak hn... , 15-10 An no At v.7r3 lW-IIrnry Hud,- h of the Amtrltt cootl ' lOOi-KnglUh defcaw.rnu1 nt tuitil. f ll..r. """Nl ... ...... v vi Afnnnv Urltlfth and I. J771MlMloa of JkK.km w tit 1770 Btotiy Point Uta'W &T 1 780 American faiu il. fcated Hrlth t Hllumi',, tfltlon. Houtb (krall.. ' 1782 Savannah, WmmltlJ Ilrltlah. 1 J780 Treaty of and the IlnlM Sutu 1780 Itaitlle ol ferh Utauij stroypd. p 1703 Charlotte Conkr, iLj .unrui, Kuiiiviiafw 1SOI Alexander UmUm wounded In dul with Atmfcsl ISOU Mutiny of tk few f 7S it e . t t .. iniim....umwmiwi oiuu formed. , 1812 flen. Hull. ttltk'Wal j volunteers, lnvW tiukifc - 18;i2 I'reihknt Jecfeiea nii rfcharter United atttci Bet J8S7 Evacuation of Pratt j Ur lies. f J8G1 Conffdmtr xiMt it I of Itlch MoudUIs, ta,.,fi of foreign debt stfcipwtoto 1802 Oen. II. W, HlWt.ati mander-ln-chUf of irnir. r. ' -iCii't irit.i HirIm Mb VfrawrJ frated Japan c Is mm! tal HhlmoBOwkl . . JKiwa itp i claimed: JUxlwllka M w Draft riot In w ii . 1801 Gen. Hood wpwft Cj uton In cofflBMM IUIV-WM a l.SOd Frwlmtn' Wamt bill President Johaa. iO-A rrtiti Wtlkl6 nor annum to Mr. tfM&nV m-n Vttln . ballot baH JOI. . w.f . sumed command of fcU put! J874--Atteropted aita 1 UUmnrrk at KlMtBKR. J878 Creation of Ovtfarh V H of Hcrlln. 1882 HrltUh bosnburW AM Mnntunba In Central AfrW- 1881 Survivors of Ijj reached 8t. JohaV, t i . . .. I.. FtxlMMI III fiw I IS8.7 Arrival in 1 ot fruit hlipc4 frow j itQitfSov West of lo imm t r im7?',' ::ntn.t tbe Mom 1887-Cyclone nearly toWH"' Waupaca, WI. 18SS Hrflkemeri on d v- . went on sinr. . 1to0ivoaldent npprovri Ion of 7uZi ir.v neritoni KlHP'i Lako renin, Minn. Pmncil Win vjrui" . " Hi circuit of the wwM d.ya....NIan w wire cable by . J ..i..ir ah n csnsl oW 181)3-8corc of lire Ml . flro at unicsg 181M Hundred klled . t ...ntitlnnmei i land slftned act dn statehood. near Johnstown. IM killed...- 1008 Cuban Senale ratiw In7unhd Stain station. t'J gwiterianO' i.ivK -T?tiiv.CIenriaii sailed from N expedition. MoW iHrV ud b : hd tfc1ftM-. bot. I" 'JK'ftaiJ HHII) f