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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1908)
JL The W hited Tale of 4 Sepulchre Pclee 1 By Will Levington Co Wif ort Coorrlirht- 10&. win rjinnn Copyright, mi. br J. B. LtPFtNCOTr Company. All rights reaerred m J CHAPTER VI. Constable remembered turning Into the driveway nftcr his terrific exertion; re membered that the girl and her mother were standing upon the veranda ; that the former stretched out her hand to help him and the elder woman released a cutting remark", 'men a servant brought a chair, and billows of nausea surced over him. Just as his consciousness waned, and he was launching, chair and all, into space. Lara's voice reached him again. Then he was in the hallway, through some miracle, and insisting most uncom monly that lie was not to be taken into the library, but Into the music room, be cause the windows there commanded the mountain. He awoke to the Interesting discovery that Miss Stansbury was fanning him. Presently she re-chilled a towel In the Iced basin and folded it upon his fore head, now deliciously cool. "It's mighty sweet of you to take care of mo this way," he muttered gratefully 'How is rclce? How long havo I been here? The last I remember, I was lost in the hall, and you found me." "You've been here about three hours, Mr. Constable. Pelee is quiet again, but the"trhole world is white, outside a per fect blizzard of ash has fallen! They say a terrible thing has happened at the extreme northern end of the city. The R iver Branch overflowed her banks, and ran with boiling mud from the volcano Thirty people are reported killed aud the Lsinc Guerin destroyed." She thought he was considering the disaster in the silence which followed, but m reality he was battling with the old problem. "Miss Stansbury," he said, finally, "is there anything a man possessed of full faculties could do, say or bring about that would induce your mother to spend, the night off-shore?" She shook her head. "You know that the Madame could be brought in for the mails to-morrow morn ing." "I have taken the liberty to suggest that to mother," Lara replied. "She says that to-morrow will be time enough." "Miss Stansbury, won't you put your eejf in the care of Captain Negley to night? I hope I'm .'Wrong, but the Guerin disaster may be only a preliminary dem onstration like the operator experiment ing to find If it is dark enough to start the main fireworks. You know, I would stay ashore, and Negley is a good old man of the sea." . "Don't you understand, Mr. Consta ble?" she said, in real distress for deny ing him so repeatedly. "Don't you see that such a thing would bring down a miserable scene upon our heads? Besides, I am not thinking of my own safety as such a paramount thing. I don't want -to be one of Job's lone survivors. Mother and Uncle Joey and you must go when I do." The pah;, searching face regarded her. Again he was silent. His lips were shut, bis eyelids half-closed. A swift intuition was borne to the woman. He was about to renew the siege: She was not ready, and shrank from being moved to a, decision which she had not formed in the privacy of her own mind. The last two days of suffering had rendered her strangely responsive to his mental ac tions. His quest had filled her brain with wonders, but they were not yet coalesced impulses and inspirations without unity, unbound as yet by judgment. She wanted to yield with grace, if it came to that, but not to be overthrown. His hand reached for hers, but she drew away. "Miss Stansbury " "Please don't nay it now !" she whis pered swjftly, her words startling herself quite as' much as the man. "These are such dreadful hours! We must think of the crisis only of that putting behind that passed last night!" "Until?" said Constable, sitting up. "Oh, who can tell? One knows Mr. Constable, isn't it wicked of you to mud dle me this way?" A smile from him had given her the saving turn. The tension was eased. Now, as be held out his hand to her, she was not slow to accept it, or to miss he meaning of the compact. ''Pelee will be beyond the sky line for us all pretty soon," be said cheerfully.. "We'll be very good pals in the mean time. Please go to the window and see bow our ogre is faring the giant who thinks he's going to eat us when we're prime 'member the fairy story? By the way, Jlisa Stansbury, did you ever have a set of billiard balls cracking off caroms on your brain lian?" "Yes, and ten-pins. Men don't know headache matters. The north is clearer, sir. A little while ago It was all a seething mass of blacks and grays." An exclamation broke from her lips, aud Constable joined her at the window. A dozen birds bad fallen to the lawn from the eaves. Most of them were dead from the tainted air. The sight brought the situation more forcibly than ever to her mind. "I should think the birds would fly away!"-she said pityingly. "Perhaps the mother birds are waiting for mails to Come in," suggested a voice behind them. Mrs. Stansbury was stand ing In the hall doorway. A gracious rain cleared the air of early evening, and Constable settled himself for a further nap at the north window upstairs. He had not realized his ex haustion, and was astonished to find Qiat it was midnight when he awoke. He was stronger, but a cyclonic headache still oppressed him. Glad though he was for the hours passed, still he was by no means unappreclatlve of the chances' be had taken. A forlorn hope of saving the lady, even though a destroying eruption over took them at the plantation house, bad grown In his mind since the night before. To hi caught asleep would render this chance a far one. The Guerin disaster might be consid ered among the promises of a favorable issue, as well as a f&rerunner of chaos. Vb Bountaln's overflow into th Hirer j Blanch might havo cased the pressure upon the craters. There was no authority nor precedent for such a hope. If Pe lee's fuse were burning shorter and short er toward a Krakatoan cataclysm, It was tlot for man to say what spark would shako the world. Still, Constable held the hope. 116 turned on the lights in tho room. A cablegram had been slipped under tho door. It proved to bo an answer to a message he .had sent to Basse Terro in the morning, regarding the movements of the Panther. "Str. Panther arrived and departed here on time." ho read. There was strength In the word. The mail liner reasonably might be. expected to call at 'Martinique with the dawn, according to schedule. The mails should be ready for distribution at niue. ' "We'll have luncheon aboard tho Mad ame to-morrow," Constable mused, Vand while the blessed maiden is passing cake and pouring tea, the Madame will be running like a scared deer, to hitch her self to the solid old norn, built of rock and scaled with icebergs!" He shaded his eyes at the window, star ing beyond the city into the ashen shroud Pelee's flag of truce. "Grand old mar tyr," he murmured devoutly. "Hang on, hang on!" There was a tap at the door, and Breen was admitted. "I haven't seen much'of you In the past three rnons, miscalled days," said Consta ble, l "It is true. I have felt my own in consequence in the presence bf the big drama here. It is your drama, Peter. Then, I have found a place of many mar vels." "Pere Rabeaufs?" "None other. There is something like coolness in this thrice-burned isle. Also a maiden creature, half child, half wom an, wholly wonderful." "I have been glad to see you make the best of things. Of course one can never tell on a cruise where one is to encounter a series of business obligations such as here." "True again," Breen said gravely. "I have been busy as that, but have accomplished nothing. Seriously, Breen, times are running close. Guerin's the first volley. To think I haven't been to the mountain ; haven't taken a photo graph or a note! My fellow researchers in things seismic will never forgive me for this. Breen, I thought I had a sci entific mind thought that even though I bulled in all else, I was a loyal geolo gist; but I have betrayed even that de cent instinct. Another man would have had the women away to sea and be at tending the mountain now; but here I am, a child with man's tools, gassing the night through, and she across the hall marked, for all I know, for Pelee s, own! It's good to talk, though." "There's only one way when words fail, Peter. If the mountain won't recede from the maiden, you must snatch up the maiden and make a get-away from the mountain.' "I'm not pirate enough, Breen," Con stable replied wearily. "By the way. I'm sending some of the natives of the city the women with babtu out to the Madame for cool air. There is no reason in the world why we shouldn't entertain our friends of the shop. Soronia is too rare a creature to be immolated by Pe lee's bursting boilers. She and the Pere might just as well share the benefits. You see, the presence of others makes it possible. Attend to it, will you' "Good old I'eter," ureen saiu souiy; "but I don't think they would come, Who'd feed the little song birds?" "Have her bring the birds along. They'll die there!" "I had planned not to go to tne nine shop again, Peter." Constable turned upon mm aorupny. Why?" said be. You see, Peter, she is such a rare lit tle soul asking so little and so ready to give her all for the promise of a man think of it. 1 have rounu a gooa many nlnvthlncs. pottering around this little sunebot planet clear little films they are now. which stick In the Drain anu won t fnde. Let roe alone, Peter, and I'll wan der back to reason presently. A very ugly album Is a sinner's memory, and when u l nulte full the sinner usually cues sometimes off Brooklyn piers. The truth t. I found a shred or conscience devel oped under your culture and Pelee's heat ; and so 1 refused another plaything, re- fOsed to crowd another film into tuat sul lied album of mine. I lied, said I didn't understand that admiration meant any thing to her and went away. ivot too late, I trust. She is a natural optimist, and slow to lose faith in mankind," Constable believed that uoronia nau found her first lover in Breen, and he .pitied the heart so suddenly Impassioned and so swmiy ueiumu n rpm(nibered the face or Horonia in tne court shadows, and his pity lingered. Wrhev ta ked until the rantner -iignts shone afar In the offing, misty with dawn and. volcano fog; then parteu tor an hour's rest. Constable was the first be low, and there was little Joy with the coming of the day. The rumblings of the mountain were renewed, xne great iow- . i 1 . . . ma.Ia,iTv it.nu utlfl fnll. er oi asn bhui i - inn., tha trees and shrubbery in tne gar- dens were bent with the weight pf white j in,i.ml manv branches were uroKcn. xne dismal bellowing of cattle and the stamp ing of ponies were heard rrora me uarns. It was only by keeping the doors and windows of the bouse tightly shut that living was bearauie. vine nguve who brought the copy of Lea Colonies wore a thick wet rag over his nostrils, and bad the appearance of having freshly emerged from a bin of cement. Constable and Breen were first in me preoiai Tlil nndirv editor." Constable declar ed savagely, as be read the morning paper. "Yesterday I caiiea upon imu " sweet modesty and limping French ex- plained the proper policy iot n.u. m, To-4y ft derotM half-column of !n- suffcrnblo humor to my forco of chararter ann extreme, views." Constablo translated Mondet's account of tho Guerin disaster, and his assur ances of the safety of Saint Pierre, so lar as tne mountain was concerned. "Oh. nho flaklnesa of that French mind!" ho exclaimed. "With a volcano In tho pangs of dissolution, towering over the city. is apparently In dread of an earthquake I 'Where on tho island,' thus ho inquires editorially, 'could a moro securo place than Saint Pierre bo found in the event of an carthauako visitation?' " Constablo crushed tho paper in his hand. Ho glanced at his watch and then at tho mountain, from a habit now grav en deeply. "Tho northern end of Saint Pierre. Is flooded out like an nnt hill under a kettlo boiling over," ho capitulated thoughtfully. "Tho mountain Is gathering for another demonstration. Let us flee with all dis patch to tho craters of tho volcano, to escnpe this hypothetical earthquako! M. (Mondct certainly enthralls me. I must call upon Aum again, Breen, is there any way to stimulato the dlstrl bution of tho Panther mails?" CHAPTER VII. Immediately after breakfast Constable drove down to the city to send out final orders to Captain Negley, and attend cer tain matters having "to do with tho Mail ame's facilities for entertainment. Uncle Joey was to go for the mails. If he could prevent. Constable was mlntWi that there should be no hitch nor tangle at the last moment. In spite of darkish apprehensions, his heart would burst now and then Into singing, since ho asked but two hours more of old Pelee, upon whoso summit was now written in lightning and blade cloud the ominous letters of Dis aster. The ladles were left to such graceful ministrations of Breen as were found needful. Mrs. Stansbury, having gatned her point, Imposed no further delays. The eagerness of the daughter was controlled, but in no way concealed. The past three days had left a pallor upon her face, and shadows under her eyes, but the innate fineness of her features seemed intensi fied rather than diminished by physical suffering, and the more subtle perturba tions of the inner woman. "When n strain brings out the splendor of a woman's face, mark her well for a thoroughbred," Breen had found occasion- to whisper to his friend. The sentence was soul's refreshment, as Breen Intend ed it to be. Constable, Indeed, was contemplating the full significance of the words, and their possible bearing upon his present and future, as he rode down the Morne d'Orange Into tho Rue Victor Hugo. The little black carriage of Father Damien was approaching, and, gripped by a sud den Idea, Constable halted It, saying to the elder spirit of the parish, whom he had met at the plantation house: "Father, take this two thousand francs and use it for the maintenance of the homeless refugees in Fort de France. I shall see that more funds get to you to-day." A little way further, another carriage approached, one of the public conveyances of the city this time. Behind the driver loomed the head and shoulders of a white man hard head and broad shoulders the sight of whom struck the music from the brain of Constable, as a knife that Is slashed across the strings of a harp. Both vehicles stopped abruptly. "Well, I've got you," the broad Individ ual remarked cheerfully. "Where's the other fellow?" v Let it be known that the man whom Constable now faced "was the same ener getic person who occasioned discord on the Brooklyn pier, Just as the Madame swung blithely forth into the harbor. Constable was thinking very rapidly. He felt prepared to commit murder rather than have his plans for the morning thrust aside. . "The other fellow?" he repeated gently- "The man hidden in your cabin when you cleared. His name is Nicholas Stem bridge, if you don't happen to know," the stranger said, with some Impatience. "Where is he?" "Where you saw him last," Constable said, with sudden cordiality; "and I want to state that I'm glad to see you that is," he added doubtfully, "if you've come to take him away. If you've looked me up, you'll have found that I'm usually ready to pay In money, hide, or liberty, for the mistakes I make." .(To be continued.) No I'ay for Mother. "Mother gets up first," said tho new office boy. "She llghts.the fire and gets my breakfnBt bo I can got here early. Then she gets father up, gets his break fast and sends blm off. Then she gives the others their breakfast and gets 'ein ready for school ; and then she an' the baby have, their breakfast" "What is your pay here?" asked the man. "I get $3 n week nnd father gets $3 a day." "How much docs your mother get?" "Mother!" he Bald Indignantly. "Why, she don't have to work for any body." "Oh ! I thought you Just told me she worked for the whole family every morning." "Oh! that's, for us but there ain't no money In thut." Saved 1r " Trolley, Knox Snw Green nnd his wife at the opera last night. I can't see where tlmlr enjoyment came in, as neither pf tiiem knows tho difference between a symphony nnd n sonata, Blox Well, I ought to be ashamed to confess my Ignorance, but I'm In tho same boat. By the way, what Is tho difference? Knox Why er a sonata, you know er I mean a symphony is say, there's my car, old man; see you later. I'uKKle the Small Hoy. The small boy Is apt to wonder why a young man has tho shoulders of his coat padded instead of the seat of his trousers. Philadelphia Record, Buenos Aires has a population of 1,200,000, of which about 80 per cent is foreign, the Italians forming about 00 per 'cent of tho foreign population. IlullilliiB n Ilnin. I expect to build a dam on a creek for n saw mill. Dnm will bo nbout 100 foot long at top to raise tho water ten feet. 1. What would lo tho cheap est way of building tho dnm? 2. Will you give a plan of such n dam? 3. What size of turbine would bo neces sary to run a -18-lnch circular saw? , Ans. Tho nccompanylng sketch shows n cross-section of tho stylo of dnm that would be required for this purpose. Dams nre sometimes con structed by a curbing of wood, mason ry, or cement, tho Interior being filled with dry stones. Such a dam Is called a rock-fill dam. If stone is plentiful, the dam may be, built entirely of ma sonry. The top should bo laid cither with plnnk or cement. As the Illustration shows, tho dam Is laid on bed-rock, tho bed rock being blasted out sufficiently to securo a key and a solid footing generally. With a ten-foot dam tho Imso should bo ten feet wide. On tho upstream side, tho batter or slope of the dam Is about 1 In 4, and on tho downstream side tho upper part of tho batter Is about 1 In 3 nnd the lower part 1 In 1. Tho dnm throughout Its length should curvo up stream, so as to present a concave sur- 1 BIB ROCK nxt ron saw mij.l power. face to tho pressure of the wutcr. Tho mnsonry work should be constructed of rubblo with cement mortar, and all tho work should be very thoroughly done. . necessary provision In connection with a dam Is sufficient wastoway for water not utilized for power. Tho com mon form of wnstewny Is a tunnel through the dam sufficiently lurgo to provide for the maximum nmouut of water that would be required to pass through It. In addition sluice gates should bo provided, by which tho flow of water would bo controlled. The wuter to be utilized for power may bo carried to the wheel by means of n tlume. A fifteen-Inch turbine wheel would provide from 8 to 10 horse pow er, which would be sufficient to run n saw of the size mentioned. Montreal Star. Puf Feeding Stock. A bucket of peculiar construction, designed especially to bo used by fnrm ers and dairymen In feeding slop to stock nnd In the handling of fluid sub stances Is tho Invention- of a Michigan mail. It serves in u sense as a dipper. The arrangement Is such that It can be filled by forcing It bottom downward In to u receptacle of fluid substance, tho hinged portion of the to permit the NEW DUCKET. bottom being opened bucket to bo filled and closed to hold tho contents until curried to the place of feeding. The contents can thus be discharged Into a trough without wnstjug it and without tho liability of spilling it upon the clothes of the operator. Tho hinged portion of the bottom of the cun is operated by a rod extending above tho top,1 which term inates Into a handle. As the bucket is carried by the latter, pressure Is always maintained upon the bottom to keep It closed. When It Is desired to dlschargo tbc contents tho bundle Is pushed downward. I'ltr Money In Wmlo Laud. The woven wlre fence is revolution izing tho hog Industry In tho whola country, nnd when farmers lenrn to utilize every bit of wnsto land for pas ture for their hogs tho herds will bo healthy and tho cost of production will bo decreased many dollars. It won't do to allow the pigs to Ho In the shado of tho corn cribs or to allow them only a run of pasture. Feed a llttlo corn all of tho time that tho pigs aro running in tho pasture. Tho grass-grown pig does not appear so attractive with his working clothes on, but when ho Is well developed nnd ready to bo fitted ho makes tho pampered pets look llko 80 cents. He makes a lino lippearanco and i a credit to his owner and feeder, Portable Caunlntf Machine, A machine, by which the farmer can preparo and can his fruits, tomatoes, corn, beans or any other farm produco which can bo canned, In tho fields or orchards In which tho vegetable or fruit is growing, Is described in Popular Me chanics, Mounted on a wheelbarrow arrangement tho machlno can bo pushed from one orchard to another or from a tomato patch to a cornfield ns necessity requires. Water for the process is' heut ed by a kerosene burner. flnlt for Mvo Block. Why salt should bo regularly nui plied to slock Is thus put by a famous ICngllsh authority i Uccauso In tho blood of animals there In six or hovou times moro sodium than potassium, and that tho composition of tho blood Is constant. To keep animals In good health a deflnllo amount of common salt must bo assimilated. Tho excess of potassium units In vogotnblo foods onuses by chemical exchango an ab normal loss of common suit. This Is proved by the fact that tho craving of an animal for common salt Is most no tlceable When tho food contains a largo proportion of potassium salts, such ns wheat, barley, oats, potatoes, boniiHnnd pens. Tho addition of salt to animal food Increases tho appetite, promotes tho repair of tlssuo by its searching diffusion through tho body, and stlinu. latcs tho rapid using up of Us,vato products. BoiiKHlngault's experiments showed that salt Increases muscular vigor nnd activity, and Improves thoir general nppearanco and condition. The Illirlit "Way to I'aoU Fruit. If tho fruitgrower simply tumbles his apples into tho barrel without sort ing and without arrangement, In order to get the greatest number Into the barrel, heads It up and ships to mur ker, ho will 'discover when ho got Ills !nck that his fruit has been so'd for the lowest price. Tlw only way to got the top prices for fruit Is to sort it according to grades, arranging In bar rels or doxcb in layers, placing each applo In by hand, nnd selecting for tho top layer fruit of the sumo color, tho top layer should bo mado up of npples all of tho same size If possible, and the fruit should come JiiBt to tho top of tho staves.' Then the heading should be carefully placed on top and gently pressed down until It slips Into tho chine. This can bo done better by tho use of n block placed under a lover. Nltrnla of Soda. The value of nitrate of soda applied to barnyard millet nt tho New Jersey experiment station was stated by tho experimenters ns follows: Amount ap plied, 100 iKiundn per aero; yield un treated ncre, 7.U3 tons; treated ncre, 13.38 tons; gain by uso of nitrate, 5.70 tons; per cent of gain, 75.4; valuo of gnln. ut $3 per ton, $17.25; cost of nltrato per ncre, $3.00. net gain per ncre by use of nltrato over cost, $13.05. The crop ws seeded on June 10 on well-fertilized lnud at tho rato of three fourths bushels of seed per aero, nfter a crop of ont and pea forago had been harvested, which averaged six tons per ncre. Tho nltrato was applied soon af ter tho plants wero well rooted nnd cnpablo of absorbing food rapidly. Covr Hlnll. The stall as shown here Is four feet over all, but can be mado less. Cow when eating will stand with her hind feet Just lKhlnd the 2 by 4, leaving the droppings behind it When she lies down sho will bo com pelled to lie In front of the 2 by -1 COW HTAI.f. with her bend under the feed rack. It Is not necessary to havo a gutter lu a stall of this kind. Thero should bo short partitions, however, to keep tho cows from turning around. For building, use 2 by 4 for bottom feed rack ; bottom of rnclt 3 feet nbovo floor. Strips of 1 by 4, (I Inches npnrt form the rack, aud should slope back 00 degrees. From 7 to 8 feet from front of stall placo 2 by 4 on edgo; If sot In dirt uso stakes. Chemical Action ol Manure, Although cultivation Is necessary and will Increase your crops, no matter how much you cultivate, or how you labor, it should bo remembered that tho plant food in tho soil Is tho vital clement of crop production. Tho crop removes this clement, but by applying manuro it la put back again. Manure not only en riches soil with the elements of fertil ity, but nlso renders tho stored plant food of tho soil moro nvallnble, Im proves tho chemical conditions, makes tho soil warmer and enables It to ro tain moro molsturo and to draw It up from below. Farming Note, Remember tho Importnnco of tho kitchen garden. Somo genius has figured out that a beo will on n busy day draw sugar from 120,000 different clover bonds. When mustard Is a serious pest tho fields aro sprayed with n Bolutlon that kills tho weed, but does not harm tho crop. The government spent $10,000 this lost spring planning ways to deatroy tho green bug In Kansas, Oklahoma aud Texas. Ono hundred and thlrty-iilno cows, comprising tho best of thlrty-six Ml. nols herds, produced an avcrago of 801 pounds of buttor fat last year. A cow owned by William Maher of Shellleld, 111., gave birth to threo good sized and perfoctly developed calves: Bho Is half Jersoy, and raised tho calves tho first threo weeks on her I own milk. nt WFrriv mil. . JM'l .li.lt i MMk UICT tiiwiil W..V 17(1.1 1H I- -I. . "iwunt m iv. 1775 Conilnimtnt a. .v ......nil in, nn a. . i. . ..( Annum, imIf,"' 9Porfl.r5n. the Irrec tint. It - " vIUin. 1(0.. I) ranch directory MtnhlLW w " 'vuwi nnn Ktu. lure ni vimicrn, In I'ortnnL 1814 British evacuated the cltj Washington..., The city of W, mgiun imrnen Dy the HrltUb. 1818 Till) Kninnnnl, il.. ... . t . - - FltU( It. -' I. wio ocean, lnuncM New York. XOJll LM UUkO Of lllrlitTvmd Utile IRftwfVhttrtne .1 ........ I ... n t i mw vi vru ul ifiimf l , ... ,,v viHjjerftW$ clety formed In Ireland. sua. - -"- r w ti.. rr.i. . . i m agara railroad. 1810 Annexation of New Mexico to united State. 18-17 Itepubllc of Liberia inaurorttrf. io-io 't rims or me u&aruiu tm 1 ,011(1011. fill.- I.. i I . .. oi J.HU juliii America woa tot famous cup at tlm Internatkmtl .. a t f i i Gnf ? i. 1 fll . . . I ichii run iiuron. aucn., incorponiM nil v . . nn(infnnf nr a rintnvii r f . il. ... . t of the banks. Ilrltnln and Japan. r4 m wmmmm iim iit in uilllkllt tiwiiisw mi Ml - - ----- -"C ---- - 170(1. iMjr.i ii'irar -nnrviirni imnirn num mimt unveiled nt (Jrlffin, Gl 187H The IndciH-mlence ol Btrru. claimed at Helnrnile. 1880 William J, Kendall, clotied la sr km) Mtffi m i hrvtfiirn mt nil whirlpool rapid, .aaa .. . t r. .. f.1 n MM.tf.fA. irM Jini. lipn. nir r. if. jtiuiuv. nnd Inn nillltln. 1801 Decennial ceinuw placed tne Jntlon of Cnnnila at W$. Ben of Axof and caused the Ion 1,000 live olf Tl...l.l.... In nr ITnirtUT 1 Kinnirii ti iuiiiikii""". - . I a.IaiiIuI iiia pnin i oi omvmiur iiiKii'nw --- - urn. . lion. .1. . o. - .. : . . . . .mKJ. syivnnin eiruru w of tho 0. A. It. 1001 Itattleshlp Louisiana launcta! Newport News. t j i 1D07 HrltUli House oi , , bill legalizing mnrrwgr. -censed wife's "Inter, tini long pending nuwstlon. T i-- . .n..... in ecnro ' . ii ,1 M(i liftweeu p" t scheduled for laoor uaj " nnllnl off. ,. ., ..t.llnnl9 It U ' ... nnl A l.Mltll If I III W " . w. T.nlii between a i rAa rwruu , lln Hiiffalo Lake uaed two. u .i f I m eieCU"" " . X a UieiH'iir, nnur OI teo of tJlie Central , , elation it wns deciaeu - r ,jt grand prUo for he n . Uahi i Niim i.unnin w j,i ni . . ill it a it n a wr 1 1 .A,iaiii in will a"'" i i run nHHiiLiuiiwii . w-nnn l Club of Ht. r(..entei a iiauuBuu'o -..' ..toeww n.,rilnirton floating " ,!nbl Mouni Tciiy and the Sou tor first honors. . ialfl HlA II llfl" v .- t . Mtnieiro - ' 1 1 1 1 it ( n Wth medal.. Qe t fifteen gold mW v. v- mi. ..a wilu y ' .1.- .t.wlllini. -IIIV" .lira of silver and bron" embkm. 'mado m ami brone r run ii n ijy i uuut " ' . - rn niij ... iw "jeweiry "" a (0 j.;ogian r Ira's v ctory, 11 l'1' ,0,' recori amicus vwm . Amen". 715 100 w 4 r. .i t-n pom" " frt vnr U t- . f T: . .... nfllftU" Amerli-nns camo l Ing as much a ' blued.