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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1906)
The Trail of the Dead: THE STRANGE EXPERIENCE OF DR. ROBERT HARLAND By B. FLETCHER ROBINSON and J. MALCOLM FRASER (Cepyrllht, 1905, by Joseph B. Bowles) Why docs ho allow this dlsre- ' anil cheese, flanking a great ham. I turned from the food with disgust! but, my cousin fell to diligently, complaining the whllo nt my roily lu uot eating wi I had tho chance. . "You must pull yourself to together, ho nrotcsted. with hist mouth full. "Try tlita limn HOW. It isn't half bad." More to humor him than with any In tuition of following his advice, I drew . nil- Kent to tlin tnble. I "Come, now; that's bettor." ho cried, earvlnir awav. "To tell tho truth, I haven't tho slightest idea what that villain Maniac has been up to. Hut what 1 do know Is that we'vo got to catch him -dead or alive. Therefore I recommend you to stoko up your body with this ox' celleut hallo 1" "What's tho matter now?" I asked Ir CHAPTER VI. (Continued.) means. It snowed that night, and to some ef- pair?" foct, as tho morning light showed me. "I do not think the professor cares. r,tnl,. fnr ,,,,, ,,. l.nnrlr nnnetlte aunoved mo. For answer ho roso and pealed tho bell. Tho old manservant, with tho brandy flushing his white cheeks, tot The broad, slovenly street beneath my He shuts himself up with his experiments windows was thickly coated; and though when he Is here which is not often tho fall had ceased, a dull sky, streaked now. Ills rooms look to the south on as with muddy whitewash, threatened a I tho other side. For the rest, tho house further downfall. It was bitterly cold Is not furnished." tered Into tho room "I nm sorry to trouble you," said Gra- den courteously, "but we both set such store by your hams that we wish to know where they can bo obtnlned. Do you euro them yourself? "No. meln Herr, but It Is dono near by," nnswered tho man, with a look or nnd I flung on my clothes in a vile tern-1 "Well. I suppose there Is a servant per. who will Heavens! what Is that?" Ornripn wan mmlltatinir before tho roni somewhere within the house stove when I entered our breakfast-room, there came a shriek, a cry of supreme with the strange book ho had shown mo terror. Again and yet again it was re- durinff th iournev In his hands. pcated before It shrank away into si "Yon look nale as a chost. Aro you icnco. urauen ran across tno court to quite fit?" he asked kindly. the main door, and I was hard upon his I blank surprise "Oh, yes; though my night was not nceis. MC piuieu ino oeu ami nnmmereu "in.w.i Tho T.Pma.lorf ham is a dts particularly peaceful." nwwiy upon ine ucayy oa panels; out covcry. tt should make a stir. I wonder "What do you mean?" no one answereu. I had not heard of its merits before." I told him briefly of my unknown vis- i uon i neueve ine inmg is ooiteu, .y . tt be curnR i ft l r "Ik AKn Ha ImniHn tiikha,! I ' " " "c; " station has not long been established." let me try what I can do." A , ,,,'-, TT. 1 1 ... .1 I wuviirii.t o Bieiiiicu ubck a uozen paces, ana .Ya n.nln Urr If l.M.mir. In Herr ltor. He seemed grcaty Interested, ques tionlng me minutely on various points. "Your theory may be correct, he con eluded. "Some guest may have mistaken then came running at tho door like a Drob,; South German. Two years IiU chamber, anu nnrrieu nu on uiscuv- " -: ,mni. whSih h. sniuuvi wu ering his mistake. Yet, if he had a light the point of Kls shoulder; there was a with him, how came ho to make such an sharp crack; tho next Instant we wero obvious error; whereas. If it was tho both sprawling on the floor within. striking ot a matcn mat rouseu you, uuuu uuiaocs m u sui ami -what was tho man doing wandering In dusty hall, indifferently lighted. Against tho dark?" "To tell the truth, when I first woke, I imagined it was Marnac himself. "I have considered that point. I do not think it could have been he." "And why?" the wall on my right I could dimly dis cern the figure of a woman crouched on the floor, sobbing bitterly, her face burled In her hands. She did not move, despite our violent entrance. At tho foot of the main staircase an old man was bending Ana wuyi ,i over something that lay motionless. Ho "Before you were down this morning ... I had a talk with our landlord guests at his house are of two classes commercial travelers and those having business at the dye-works. They do not stay long usually a week at most. Of the niue which he now has, none has ex ceeded that limit. He knows them all personally six commercials, two dye- The ,ooked UD at us witu a white. pitiful ago he took the big farm nt Gran, which you passed on your way here. It is this side of the dye-works. He has many pigs In the forest. His hams are becom lng famous from Warsaw to Kouigsberg. It is said he has sonic secret in the feed ing or curing no one knows which." "Thank you that Is all." Tho door was scarcely shut when turned hotly upon Grndon. "How dare you sit hero in this house of murder nnd talk of tho excellence of tho food? cried furiously. "It is shameful, inde cent!" "Yet we will visit the farm of Gran on our way back. " I have some llttlo inquiries to make." "We shall do nothing of the sort,' snarled. "If you wero a soldier or an explorer, "He Is dead the master la dead!" he whimpered. Gradeu strode up to him, and I fol lowed at bis heels. Professor Peter Mechcrsky for Btich I tenon It mner ho lnv Im.ltlliwl .....Ia.. nn i 1 cousin uobcrtv lie saiu. leaning across works men, and a rich Englishman, one , . ... .. Ji, . ., and tannine me kindly on tho nrm. "vou George Wakefield, who has been staying oak of U)e a Prom h, f t would know that in any expedition one Mth some magnate in the neighborhood. h h ,t wag anfl w, h d,g alone can be responsible. The rest obey. .uui. ucic n I ho mnat linn han n m , i ., . nueuiwiuti ue ii-n ur iimiif. A3 ll is, I "Gentlemen," said the landlord, bow- ,, ,lnf, n Bjnlllnr ,in tT beg you to recognize that fact nnd to ing low, "your sleigh Is at the door." .,, na .... ... ... obey." "How faf it it. then, to Castle Oster? Vo. hnp f ,, 7. r He was right, nnd I knew It. But to 1 asked him. himi if t ti, i.i., ,,. save appearances I walked to the win "Close on twenty mites; and with this was abnormal, impossible, and ghastly dow nn(1 8t0l- drumming upon It with my psh snow it will be heavy going." to behold. fingers for a while before I answered him. "Well, do as you please," I said at length, "I think the sleigh may be ready by now," lie said. "Come, let us go out and inquire. There is no need to dwell on this mis- fresh Ten minutes later we slid on our silent it was not right that a body should runners, to tne tmuie ot tue oens, out resemble nn egg that is broken, through the squalid, sprawling town, out My cousin swept aside the cloak for tnrougn tne woouen novels ot tne suo- a moment, nnd replaced it reverently, urns, out past tue uye-worss, witu ineir though with a hand that trembled tall, melancholy .chimneys, out into the u hns not n snnmi hnn In Iwwlr. snow-clad levels beyond, and there from he muttered, nnd then, turning to the old cn,ble drive. The tired horses dragged out of the east there sprang upon us a servant "How did this hannen?" said 8'0W'Jr forward, the driver, sullen and great and bitter wind, chilled by its long he. -n .. u. ii e I 'W UUUUUICM Ul "TTn liflfl hnon ill fr.n ennytx nnnL-a r,,oin f-... T,.: TT 1 .1 . I "v-" "vv..., the plains, a whiff of powdry snow, like t!ia mnkp nr npnw tiin nrnnlrl Ipnn . - . ... , - " tt ; u better, tie InBiHted that he should ue up before the fiercer blasts, only to burst lcend tQ U)e ,.,jra Ha,f dowa and fall as they lulled once more. To the eolith and east the pine woods ranged their formal ranks black against the h, crouched-lik scene of utter desolation. We drove In silence. Graden sat in a huddled mass, his chin buried in the great woolen comforter he wore, staring out over the plain with fixed, introspect the stairs he tripped and fell. 1 ran to his side and found him, as you see J like- Like a toad?" "Yes, niein Herr, like n toad.' frightened, urging them on with blows nnd curses. Mile nfter mile of pine woods marched past us, but we did not speak, crouching in the furs. At last, as night was failing, we reached tho edge of the forest and swung aside from the main road into a track thnt sklrtod the edire of the pines. The ground sank away into a hollow like tho palm of tho hand. At the lowest point I could see a square, wooden building flanked by rows of out buildings. It was, as I imagined, the ing. The man broke into hysterical weep- our driver suddenly drew up his horses. us Xue cingllShman, xlerr WaKOUelU, Was I i mnn wn n.Irnnrln,- tnnrnnl Ive eyes. For myself, I s'at amongst most anxious about my master's health," through the trees. Our driver turned, the rugs beside him in vague speculation. he stammered out. "The Herr professor an( wittl a wave 0f the whip explained What could be this danger that threat- "e-uje muispuseu auuie ieu uu,a asr tfce situation ono.i iiu imMf frm Sf Ppf prsi.nrf. in ls arrival: since then he has been most it is Herr Dmhln " until he. Lis home at Castle Oster? After all, ,uu' u"st , cpus ueraie, biiuug uy iue might not our whole journey be a folly master s bed for hours. He would allow bora of Graden's imaginings, a blind " ol" "otlor ,l ,a"- l"f thnr i,,i .imB,! ... t.nif nrnu is a kind, good man, this doctor, the Europe? I shivered, and shivering, mut- Ue" .Wakefield." your master "I am not sure; but I think he brought (To be continued.) CAUSE OF CHINESE BOYCOTT. How came he to know Sloveiuent Declared lo lie Wholly Dae to Individual, Not Nation. Xo doubt the boycott was wholly due CHAPTER VII. a letter of introduction from a Professor to tne stringency ot tne exclusion Jaw, We entered the forest. On every hand Marnac, of Heidelberg, a gentleman of but the paramount object of the move- stood the pines, stretching avay in long, whom my master disapproved, yet ad- inwit Ik to raise the Chinese iMjile to Westward tho gypsy moth takes Its wny. It hns caused millions of dollars worth of damage In Massachusetts, Jms escaped to New Hampshire nim uon nectlcut, anil now tho Invasion Is turn Ini? toward Now York Stnto. Tills 111 tcriMtlng Information Is conveyed In ft letter of warning Just Issued by E. V. Felt, State Kntomologlst, The brown tall moth Is more recent Introduction, nnd. uullkt the gypsy moth, flies readily. It Is not only n very destructive leaf feeder, but tho barbed hairs of the caterpillar cnuso a very severe Irritation upon tho un nrotected skin. Two rows of wnrts down the back of tho gypsy moth caterpillar mnke It easily distinguishable. It Is about two- Inches long and tho ten nnterlor wans are blue, the twelve posterior red. The gypsy moth will cnt anything l tho tree or shrub line, and on the siigiiiest disturbance leap on pnssershy nnd cling to clothing. Brown tall moths have white 8iots on each slde-nml a single pair of red spots near the Mil. They prefer wild cher,ry, pear, apple, maple, elm anu white oak leaves, nnd have barbed horns, which, breaking off or blowing from the cocoon, produce an Intolerable Irritation, the "brown tall Itch." Caterpillars of both wpecles, says Mr. Felt, may be destroyed by spraying with nn arsenical poisoning, preferably live pounds of arsenate of lead to fifty gallons of water. though the gypsy i.ioth caterpillars, especially when nearly full grown, are quite resistant to pols on. Eggs of the gypsy moth may bo de 8troyed by treating the egg ninsses with IfESTS Of TIIK MOTHS. a preparation composed of 50 per cent creosote oil, 20 per cent carbolic acid, 20 per cent spirits of turpeutlno and 10 per cent of coal tar. nil equal footing with ui.y other people In relation with the United States nnd not for securing the actual economic ndvantuge of exporting laborera to America, says T. Y. Chang In the Re view of Itevlewtf. It is for national right and dignity rather than for nny- thlng else. There are, however, more lmiwrtant points regarding this ques- melancholy nvenues floored with drifted mired for his learning." snow. The laden branches bowed before "And this Englishman, did he prescribe us, now and again, at the whirl of a pass- for your maBter?.' ' ing gust, flinging their burdens from I "Of course. They loved each other, them. Once a willow grouse, white as and sat late into the night in their dis the snow beneath it, swept on steady cussions. When my poor master was -wing through the trees. Once from the I taken ill, "Herr Wakefield took complete far, far distance, borne upon the eastern charge of him. Acli! If ho did but know breeze, there came a cry, a weird, hope- what had happened!" less echo in the air, that set the horses "Then he is not here?" ti-linr If mnat l.n a "V... Iw. .1 wolf who felt the first nanirs of the win- afternoon. He had to return to his own 4,0,1 tlmt 8hou,(1 1)0 carefully exam ter'a mincer Catherine round him. But countrr. Aeh! If he did but know!" "10(1; that Is llrst, tho boycott has there was no sign of man nor marks of It was plain enough Marnac, the Iln- never been authorized by the govern sleigh tracks on the newly fallen snow. guist, was Wakefield, the Englishman, uient ; second, the boycott has never We did not travel fast, though our It was he, new from this thing that he I been carried out with any forcible or driver a:u nis nest, xne snow uau not i uau aone, wno naa come creeping to violent means lianlnnml nml enftlntl tntrt tltrtr- onnhnnr. I - wrr m I n n rt rknlnrf aiianlnlmia r t I Ing surface on which the runners speed the strangers from tho south. It was . The government has done nothing so swiftly. Midday was past before we he that had brought about this mysteri- toward promoting the boycott. On tho saw, through a sudden gap In the forest, ous horror. I turned from the poor contrary, the Pekln authorities have a rising mound crowned with a Jow, grey monstrosity upon the floor and leaned, tried hard to advise tho merchants to building. "Castle Oster!' cried our dnv- shuddering, against the wall. As I did modify their disposition. But no kov er, turning lu his seat to claim our at- so, Graden strode past me to tho open eminent In tho world, however absolute xention. in ten minuius more we au uoor. ,t b ,. to . lt . halted at a gate set In a high stone wall. "Driver, can your horses tnko us Jects to ,)Uy oods froni - c0.tn,n 01lll. Before wo were clear of the rugs the back?" I heard him say. ?! ,.," f.! LI T. . . ' ,U'1 driver had slipped from his perch and xot without rest and feed, meln " , .. tuKued nt a rusty Iron bell-pull. Wo TT.rr. Th nnw Ir vppv Yi.ni. nml thv doubt this disagreeable movement waited without an answer. Again he are tired." "as been stnrted by tlioso who hud per rang; but uraden uiu not wait tue result. "Would a hundred marks to tho driver sonnlly surfered maltreatment under The door was not bolted; it opened to aualst them?" the regulations of tho Chinese lmmi- mh v gorous arm, ana we loiiowe a nun it is impossible. They could not grtl0n service ofllce. But there has iniu me uiuuu buui.ju.u ul uic wnirc, reacn uau way. wait, mem iierr, anu VtnfVirn na Rtirnwlnil thn mnln lnllillnc I u i. .!.," flanked by little towers, liko the pepper- My cousin came up to me and laid his force' m th(J bo'cott lias spread through. liox turrets of an old Kcotch mansion. ereat hand unon inr shoulder. severni proviiices. it is purely n voluil The windows wero shuttered; the chlm- "i'm afraid it's tho truth," ho said, tnry action of Individuals. So long as jieys were smoKeiess save ior one anove And then turninir to tho dead man's serv- there Is no disturbance of noaco. "Imv tho central porch, from which a dark ant, "Your master had he horses?" he cott" Is considered n legitimate move- piBinBWMuuiii t ic I asKeu. monf bv nilV civilized mnntrv nf tlm ward the solitary sign or nauuatiou. to "Three, meln Herr, but they hare ...-,., u .mn,nrpili, '. our right and left wero ranged outbuild- not yet returned from Lemsdorf' where lr , " , L -X - S fCB,8llIn"d Ings, otames, coacu-uouses, mm me hko; tiey went th8 morning with the big ..w ifc ,a ,UI. but all in a condition of ruinous decay, sleigh for provisions." vidunl action nnd not a national policy. Patches fallen from tho roofs laid bare with a sharp order Graden sent our There Is, therefore, no good ground the rafters; from the broken gutters ,rjver hurrying to tho stables. Then, upon which tho recent alarming news iraiieu ong ptuusuu ui with his arm linked In mine, wo fol- could be supposed to havo been based. iu uuuro uu nui uuxt iiiicu i.ovii iu lowed tno oiu servant into a iow-rooied '"'heavy drifts. No sound broko the brood- dining-hall. As I dropped upon an oak Ing stillness. It wob a picture distress- Bettlo before the great china stove, ho Ingly forlorn. thrust his flask Into my hands and, with "Has Professor Mechersky, then, no a word of encouragement, slipped awny. servants?" asked Graden of our driver. I knew that he was examining tho body, I noticed that ho hushed his voice In but, doctor though I was, the spirit of spoaklug; he, too, felt tho uncanny in- investigation had gone out of me. I fluonco of the place. could no more have assisted him (ban a "Two, meln Horr a man and a medical student can watch, unmoved, his woman, I cannot think where they can first operation. bo" In nbout twenty minutes he returned, "I had uadarstood be was a man of bearing a tray upon which was set bread I quar Their Great Scheme. "Ilnvo you and your wife reied?" "No; why?" "I notlco that when you tnko a trip you always go on different tralna." "That's for the children's sake. If either oiio oit tho trains should bo . oxporlenco gives nn opportunity to wrecked,', the" kids would havo at least know moro of tho newer varlotles Nov one parent left." Cleveland leader, eltlea should bo tceted In a limited war Sprnrinir to Destroy Basra. Tho recognized formula for bordeaux mixture for use on potatoes Is six pounds of copper sulphate, blue vitriol, four pounds unslnckcd quicklime and fifty gallons of water. Tho copper sul phate Is dissolved In ono barrel and the lime In nnother. Add to each twenty live gallons of water and then mix thoroughly. When to be used strain through a wire strainer, preferably one of brass. Spraying should he started when the potato plants are six Inches high uid bo repeated every ten days or two weeks, uccordlng to the weather, throughout, tho growing season. If bugs are to bo destroyed, add ono pound of parls green to each fifty gallons of bordeaux mixture, but tho bordeaux mixture should bo used alouo until the bugs aro noticed. When It Is Hgured that tjio cost of spraying does not exceed f7 an acre, and It 1b often less, whllo experiments havo proved that tho valuo of tho cop was Increased threo or four times tho cost for spraying, It certainly pays and pays welL atilk I'renervntivu and TuliercuIoaU, The use of ml lie preservatives has been rather favorably considered by the dairy department at tho New Jer sey Experiment Station. Thus the nu thor of a recent bulletin believes that tho uso of formaldehyde added to milk, ono part lu forty thousand, destroys tho tuberculo germs and leaves unin jured tho bodies found In tuberculous milk which tend to protect against tho disease. The chief danger of Infection of both calves and children Is thought io occur in eariy iiro through drinking milk containing genus, although tho appcuraneo of pronounced symptoms of tno disease may not bo noted until Inter life. Henco tho suggested uso of tho preservative In the quantities mention, ed for milk Intended for young chil dren. "Noveltle," Now varieties are often sold becnuso thoy aro 'novelties," rather than bo cause they aro better than tho old, tried and standard kinds. It Is better to uso varieties of trees nnd .vegeta bles that aro known to be tho best for tho section where they havo been tef. ed, In preforehco to using others, until niHklnir KrHlt 1'hI. Hard fruits, such as apples nnd pears, are cut Into small pieces with out being Jieelod or liH.vln the core or weds removed, nnd placed In cold water containing l.S ounces of salt to tho gallon to prevent discoloration, The fruit Is then balled to r pulp and strained, n yield of about one-fifth the original weight being obtained. lMuins and soft fruits nro treated In practlea ly tho same manner. With plums the strained pulp I sweetened with about 1.0 pounds of sugar to each hundred weight of fruit and the boiling con tin ued until tho pulp Is thickened sum clently to hang from tho spoon without dropping. With raspberries and atraw berries the boiling must not be pro longed and tho pulp need not be strained through so flno a stove an lu tho enso of plums. The chief points to which euro should bo devoted aro tho processes of tolling tiie fruit. Tho first boiling should bo continued only so long ns tho consistency of tho muss Is such as will enablo the pulp to paiw through tho slevo for straining. Mule In Mtronir Drmnntl. As Indicating the steady growth In public favor which tho mulo Is enjoy Ing, wo aro glml to nolo that tho pro prletor of a Mis sourl Jack farm hns Just sold sonio flno nnlmalB nt. high prices J.'l.OOO, $2, 000, $1,500, $1,250, llvo for $1,000 each $000, $800, $700, threo Jacks nnd ono Jennet, $3,000. letter from Austin, Tex., says thero Is a great shortage of mules In that State. They nro In strong demand by farmers and ranchers, ami the supply Is Inadequate. As a result. the prices of good mules hnvo gpno up to the highest figures ever known In the State. ,lt will bo but n few years until this mulo shortage, which Is said to exist throughout tho country, will be relieved, ns much attention Is now being given to breeding tho animals. Country Gentleman. WELL lllir.O JACK To Mnke (Jootl Corn Urn if. Any farmer handy with tho ordinary tools on n farm can make a com drag attachment for his cultivator that will pay for Itself many times lu one sea sou, If projK?rly used, says un expert enced agriculturist. The common farm harrow Is too heavy and uuwleldy for harrowing com after It Is up, except under the most favorable conditions of soil and weather. To make, get cnlt one and one-half Inches by three. Mdku In two sections of th.- litim each. Let each section be long enough to cover all of space between two rows, Brace same as other harrows. No. CO wlr. spikes make very good teeth. Set teeth a llttlo slanting and as close its will work In your soil without clogging. At tach to beams of com plow, Arrange so that tho drag will cover all the ground when you wish by connecting tho two parts. You can, with this nr rnngemcnt, adjust the drag to suit. Flle nnd the Milk Yield. The effect on milk production by the uso of tly rcpcllant has beeii tested at tho Missouri Station. Various mixtures wero found which would keep off the files all day if put on In tho morning; but a measurement of the milk and test of tho butter fat for a jwrlod of two weeks Indicated that keeping off tho (lies did not affect tho milk yield. As somewhat similar results wero obtained by experiments at the Connecticut Sta tlon, It seems fair to concede that tho Injurious effects of the lly pest havo been exaggerated. During tho tly tlma tho feed In most pastures Is growing poorer every day nnd tho cows nntu- rally shrink then, but It Is probably n mistake to binmo tho flics for much of the shrinkage. For nil that. It Is worth whllo to uso the mixtures to keep off tho lllcs for tho pence and quiet obtained In the stnhlo for both tho cows and for the milkmen. Good Croim for Old (JrnwD I.nnil. Tho question of what to do with grnsg land after haying, where tho land Is run out and poor, Is a rather puzzling one, but If we should get rain enough to soften tho surfuco and penult easy plowing, It may be broken up, enriched with rnanuro or fertilizer nnd Immedi ately seeded with Hungarian. In caso tho weather should provo too dry for this, barley may bo sown cither alone or with rye In August for fall feeding. Off good, strong land, well enriched, n crop of Into cabbago plants may bo sot as Into as July 15; the turnip seed may bo sown even ns Into as Aug. 1, though July 20 Is a better time. Wlm t Merino Ilreednrn Did. Merino breeders In Vermont took a sheep that sheared ulno pounds, and they developed a sheep that sheared forty-four ikhiiiiIh. They took a car cass that weighed 100 pounds, and they iimdo ono that weighed J100 pounds. They sold nuns for $3 per head, and they Bold rams for $3,000 per head. Thoy sent merinos to ovory part of tho world whero bettor sheep woro wanted. Agricultural Atom. An early ploco of ground sown to tar. ley makes tho pigs smile. It is most exasperating to attiwnnt to fix a pump when tho siock Is standi ng nrouuu waiting and making? HiIhm unpleasant Tho man who breeds a breed because ho likes them Is sure to sue coed. Moro depends on the man than on tho breed, All fonco rows Bhould be set in trrauM so as to keep down a dense growth of weeds. If wocds are allows t nooscvrli. W2ST3 a..-.iiw for MM. Hoose.e t niii'unii'n .- . .iifr w self, tho V"; " theK.tlonil- sociation ( , ,1., .(fort " Pre deep sympathy wltl th eronpt tho salo mni tr,je . ' known lntoSJiMW rottos." -i.no v .-. u ml)r( imr thing, Mw. Roosevelt than ho AwtoSyXli9 .Unburn ra of l'"iau imllar oxprcs"" --rr;1h i ... ii h mm Thb MWrary - neW ?- votcd by I r. I " . purpoolJ varos, iiunifv, m ductal abdominal brwtww tho body, the c'7be!U. JJ nectod by tubo with & d i, ;.. ir,.ately compre?.r nrf,ni ? t means that they wUltaT. to AnUff 17157 Fori vint. Montcalm. m'm 1702 The HwIm fin..,! t konthTuiSm IHOO-Non-lmnoriatlon m ' l'Ment Sladltoo. PW,J 1813-I.attle of Stoning Co8t 4 ....Uuri miHUtled 111 Sin. ' man, died. ' 1 5 1830-LouI rhlllppcpiocUhrta l ranee. ' lWl-Stcamr Krie barwd m lle; 17.1 lhf ot. IftlO-Davld Wllmot lolndu.! vlso lu ConErM....fi1t.t,.i..'. tltutlon nt W!hlastoafojiiU? 18.V.! Permission granted to M. nk mm oiner iolitlcal exiles It i to Prance. 1858 Ottawa mde the capital I nun. 1801 Hainntoii. Vs.. Iim.,i e Wilson s t'rwk, Mo. 1802 President Lincoln cjIWImJ uuii men for nln tnontk 1870 Paris declarwl In a ttii r i'J Frnnco-dermnn wnr, 1871 CVIebrntlon o( iht Sir u2 WH centfiiary st Kdlnbard. 1873 Htenmer U'awanwt burnei n M teniae rlvrr; tnlriy-flrt m lo 1871 Mnrslial Iisuilne rnicl tmm Isle of 8te, MarKUtriw. j 1878 International moneUrr rail enco opened at l'arli.,,.tk!uJ the Austro-lioiian war. 1880 Dr. TanniT iuccefull mfl a fast of forty lUjt. 1881 Transvaal ctM to tbe Uot M public proclaimed. ; 1883 Dynamite rontnlratofi it Vm ho senteucrd to ptul ttnkdt m life. 1831 Oklahoma "boomer oM Mj Indian Territory by United SttH troona.... Severe esrlkoiij m along Atlantic cojit. 18JJ5 Imtwitlmc funeral of Gen. Crst hi New York. 1887 Hawaii adopted a new conttitstli ....One hundred exctintonuti tin In railroad wreck at Forwt, II 188S Maxwell, the murderer o( Ch A. Preller, hanjed In St. im. Larry uonovnn, Amerima or Ititiiitor. Irnnd from Haoprf bridge, London, and wm drnwl 18S0 Mrs. Florence Majwirt i guilty of murdering ber mimm i Liverpool. 1801 United State reei ordr4 1 China because of dUturWDee. 1RA.1 fli.nrv art enforced. Flnt.Cw man deporien irom can ii.uij Forty-third Congrew B'" traordlnnry mna. noi Severe trtll California. 1801-Tho yacht Hrltannla . W : lT ?l in ,hU. TeDn....C Hrltnln declared neutrality la l.'iMrtn iifir. 1805-IlrltUh steamer Ctattertta J dercd near Sydney, .V, &W w four lives lout. 1800-Iletrini m r. w dies; 2,000 drowned. 1003-ropo rius i Gen. Nelson a. '" - U1W wreck on no 1005-Prfshlcnt Itooscveu m meeting of w .liter. Je( Now York City, destroyed by n- mowed. 111 IHL'llwiii"' i.laM ( h tifM wkea tbe IUM m