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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1908)
w hited Tale of Sepulchre Pelee The JL The By Will Lbvington Comfort Copyright, 1956, by Will LoTtnrton Comfort Copjriiht. 1907. by J. B, LtirmcoTT Comi-akt. All rls-hta re.errej CnAPTER VII. (Continued.! "I guess thnt's right, too. So you had 10 iock up stembridge?" "Yes, I found It advisable one dav tit tcr he had tried to steal the ship while I was ashore In San Juan," Constable explained Ingeniously. "I'm glad you came, because It will save me from taking him back." That is, unless you decide mat 1 II have to go back, too. I did play pretty rough with you, but your man had me goiug strong about that time. You've got to acknowledge that he's an artist. Let's get out of this. What do you plan to do?" "Go out and get Stembrldge, and settle with you." "Tho word 'settle' usually refers to dollars up in the States," Constable said delicately. "It doesn't pay to buck the detective bureau, Constable, and I'm authorited o take cash for your part this time." "How much?" "Five thousand dollars and expenses." It costs money to keep you off ones ship." "I'm Crusoe of the detective bureau, and I usually go where I please," was tiie dulcet answer. "I'll have to go out to tho ship to get so much money," Constablo declared re signedly. "I'll have to go out to the ship to get btembridge," said Crusoe. "We'll go to gether." "Where are your men?" "I'm working alone this trip." "You can pick up a couple of ccn darmes to help you, if you think you'll need help," Constable suggested. This was the galvanic instant. Crusoe glanced at him keenly. He had been able to pick no flaw in the moment's talk. He was a shrewd man In his line and schooled, but Constable had run true. There is no inclination on the part of the public at large to concede brilliance of acumen to the heirs of mill ions, unless the sparkling quality has been exposed in a strong light. The suggestion concerning the gendarmes, and a last glance into the face of the young man. vanquished Crusoe s final doubt. "I can handle Stembrldge very tidily. having your moral support," he declared. He s too old a bird to resist arrest when he's once cornered." "Just as you say," Constable said swiftly. "Turn your rig about and fol low on. . My launch is ahead, at the Sugar Landing." It was not until the other was behind, and the back of his own carriage shut ting off the view, that Constable realized be had lost his headache, and was drench ed with perspiration. It was now eight. The ladies had agreed to be ready at nine. In case Uncle Joey had returned with the mail by that time. His several er rands must wait. The present matter would take the entire time, and must be done decently and in prder. The driver was commanded to make good speed to the launch, which was in readiness. Cru soe dismissed his. rig; Constable bade his driver wait, and the two men boarded. "Make her buzz, Ernst," the owner said to the sailor in charge. "I'm expiring for a drink and a moutbfu) of clean air." Crusoe was deeply interested In the present manifestation of Martinique's cli mate, and was not readily diverted to the subject which challenged his companion. Once launched, however, upon the deal ings of Nicholas Stembridge, alias Hay den - Breen, he became fluent, and Con stable learned, that his guest was "the Rajah's Diamond" among the swindlers f civilization. Stembridge, according to Crusoe, had started a Central American revolution in order to seize a range of rich silver hills ; had made good, worked the mines, and sold them, a year later, "salted to a brine," to a syndicate of New York capi talists. He had engineered the Yarmouth-Learns oil syndicate which disor dered London financiers for a day. Of these and other Interesting engagements Constable learned as the launch sped across the fouled harbor. "What does this prince of manipula tors do with all his money?" he asked finally. "Well, you see," Crusoe replied, "he has his army to pay, and he must pay the men pretty well, for the rumor is. abroad that tbey would go on the cross for him. And then be Is a golden glory of a spendthrift. I've heard that Paris looks for his second coming as for a Mes siah, since be has promised the Tender loin a punch from the Milky Way. Here we are. Perhaps you don't think I was pleased to see your craft lying here this morning when I came in on the Pan ther?" "I presume you were," Constable re plied idly. They were on the ship's ladder, Crusoe walking ahead. The sailor above, on the main deck of the Madame, caught a strange gesture from Constable's hand, and a stranger expression from the eye of his owner. The sailor did not under stand exactly, but he stood ready for anything that might occur, and accord ingly made haste to assist when Consta ble sprang forward and pinioned the nevc6mer about the waist. Crusoe ac cepted bis defeat nervlly, but when his gun was removed and his wrists enclosed for the time being In bis own manacles he regarded bis captor with eyes of hate, Jn which a little reproach was mingled. "What's your lay, Constable?" he In quired almost steadily. "You're smarter than I thought, and a deal more crooked." "Listen," the other said hurriedly. "I didn't like to do this, but there wasn't any way out of It I'vo got a lot on my mind this morning, and you complicated matters. It may be that I'm saving your life The mountain yonder looks as If be were about to blow his brains out, and I couldn't be interrupted until I got certain ladies safely aboard here from the town. As for the fascinating person you call Stembridge, ho may be my guest, and he may not. I'll see you about that later on. He's been square M plumb-line to m you're a good h, Otw, " Breen Is, too. Your lines aro different, that's all. You'll get your five thousand that I promised to-day. Just sit tight, ma can tor anything you want. We'll bo good friends yet. Captain N'egley, have Mr. Crusoo quartered pleas antly aft, and tell Mncready to servo hlra wuu anyming ne desires. I'll bo back With tho ladles in about nn hour. YnnMl of course have the ship keyed for a sprint io ron ae i rancc." Constable hurried down the ladder, and an Instant Inter wn nmln in tn innv. which was aimed at the low-hanging pall, back of which lay tho tortured city. It was now twenty-five minutes to nine. Ho could make the plantation houso slightly aiier inc nour. It was but a moment from the pier to the carriage, and then the half-strangled ponies struggled gallantly through Rue icior xiugo and up the morne toward the plantation house. Uncle Joey's rig was at the gate, good evidence that tho mails had been brought. Constable entered the house hastily at ten minutes past nine. There was a word of cheer upon his Hps. No one was in the library or the music room; no one but a maid servant was on the lower floor. She was gathering up tho litter of uroKen envelopes and newspaper wran pings upon the library table. Constable imagined that the . maid servant regarded him strangely. He ran to the stairway and called: "Are you almost ready, ladies?" He heard, footsteps above and low Voices: then a door onened and Mr Stansbury crossed the upper hall and appeared at the head of the stairway. Al ready he was filled with a confusion of alarms. 'Pardon me for calling you. but every thing is ready as soon as you can come." We are not going on your yacht. Mr, Constable," the elder woman said coldly. He sprang up the stairs and faced her in the dim light Two or three times in his life he had become cold like this. some trait of his breed equipping him with an outward calm, when the issue of the moment was won or lost, buf lifted from his hands. What is the latest difficulty, please?" I would rather not discuss the mat ter, Mr. Constable." "May I speak with Miss Stansbury?" It was not given to the mother to ac cede or refuse, for the door behind her was opened and the girl stood in the aper ture, her anguished eyes intent upon him. I returned to announce that every thing Is ready," he said quietly, "and your mother tells me that you are not going." No, we are not going, she repeated In a lifeless voice. . "Is it too much for me to ask why?" She did not answer at once, but seemed trying to penetrate his brain with her eyes. XTien, you have not seen the Isew York papers?" she sald. "You may have this. The others are below." She banded him the front page of a dally journal, dated three weeks before. His own name was there, and not in honor. When he looked up from the pa per the door was shut. Constable went below. Where Is Mr. Wall?" he dully Inquir ed of the maid servant "He went out to the plantation, sir, immediately upon bringing in the mails." "Where is Mr. Breen?" "He went down to the city, sir." Constable left the house and walked rapidly out the driveway, turning toward Saint Pierre. Here the man's pride in tervened. He had committed a folly, perhaps, but no broad evil. The state ments of the press were farcical. Lara Stansbury should not have allowed her mother and the New York reporters to shake her trust. With reaction piling upon him its most bitter and tragic phases, Peter Constable cohceded bis fail ure as a lover, and turned to ms second ary passion Pelee. CHAPTER VIII. Ttrppn was not wholly unconscious of danger when the large bundle of New York papers was brought with the mails intn tha Iibrarv. The ladles had busied themselves over a Joint epistle" from Mr. Stansbury, and were scanning the front pages of the journals, when a sudden exclamation from Mrs. Stansbury inti mated the ugly truth. Breen was chang ed from guest to outlaw. MIbs Stansbury followed her mother upstairs, the former honrlnir the Tinner with her. A second account of the demoralizing incident was. not difficult to find. Breen read the fol lowing hastily: 'Th Madame de Stael. Mr. Peter Con stable's. splendid private yacht, cleared for West Indian ports this morning, having on board the young millionaire-owner nnri If In alleged. Nicholas Stembridee. the notorious revolutionist, adventurer, and swindling promoter. 'The nurnose In common of the capi talist and fortune hunter cannot be told. Mr. Constable has figured in the public , i prints on several occasions, uui cmeuy fhrnnph his eccentric ideas of practical nhllanthronv. So far as is known, he has never before allowed himself to be sub jected to the attention of the police. It is feared that ho will lose at notn enus as a result of bis present atuiiations, 'Mr. Constable's friends aver that the young millionaire could not have under stood the character or nis companion lor the vnvace. and noint out that Nicholas Htmhrlri?e. at his best. Is a man of fasci nating manners and rre personal accom plishments. It has been added also that Mr. Constable Is of a most impulsive tem perament and flPt t0 choose his compan ions from queer arteries of society. The young man's Innocent intent, however, if.t mnre readily be accented, were It not for the Important fact that Nicholas Stembridge, who is known to nave neen In hiding for several days in New York, .. . nn hnard the de Htael shortly before she sailed; positively recognized, it Is said, by an astute ana rename mem-1 ber of the local detective force." A spirited description or tM pnoo on j the Brooklyn pier followed! also a nnr. tlon of Nicholas Stembridge'a police rec ord. Tho coiiBorvativo character of the paper in which tho forecolnc anneared led Urccn to bellovo that tho account which had fallen Into Mrs.' Stansbury's hand might bo considerably more emblaz oned and embellished. Ills first thought was that ho had becomo a source of hor ror to the women, and that he must put himself out of their sight. Breen was not a conscienceless man. A fatalist, a spendthrift, a power that prey ed upon tho powers that prey, a polished reveller nil these ho might be, but his blood was clean from the taint of person al treachery. He had come to llko Con stable. The friendship was guileless. Ho had even thought, with a traco of humor In certain momenta, that It was worth belnr called back from the Brooklyn pier for such n large and clear emotion. It is possible that he had never In his, llfo been troubled as now, having brought a vital hurt to the man he wished only to serve. Ills face showed nothing, not even the heat of the day, as he left tho house. Ills own body had felt all, oven the moral dissolution which crawls into the brain to prepare a place for the sinister guest, suicide. The law of cause and ef fect, unable to find any hold upon him self nor Inspire any fear this side of death, had linked him with another, and made that other suffer through him. Breen was smitten with the ugliest pun ishment thnt clean fiber is given to wrltho beneath that of seeing a friend beaten to the ground by the rebounding volley of one's own sins. Half way down the Morne d'Orange, he saw Constable's launch turn shoreward from the ship. Constable was probably aboard. Breen wasn't ready yet to meet tho man ho had hurt. He must think. Moreover, by no means did he Ignore the possibility of tho Panther bringing one of his logical enemies, nor was he ready to face an accumulation of consequences in the shape of a man hunter. Ho turn ed to the right at tho bnse of the morne, and made his way up one of the winding paths to the terraced streets. That his steps led him to the fruit shop, where he had planned not to go again, seemed now but a paltry addition to the incubus which had so suddenly possessed him. At the first terrace he turned and star ed back through the smoke. The launch had just touched the pier at the Sugar Landing. The tall figure of Constable uteppcd forth and hastened to the car riage, which was driven rapidly toward the morne. Breen smiled, because It was easier for him to smile than to cry for mercy. Constable was being driven swift ly to the plantation house, where he would find the ugly work that had been done there. Mrs. Stansbury would not board a ship that had been a thief's refuge. Rue de Rivoll was white and empty, The door of the shop was shut but not locked, and the little round window dark ened with a cloth. Breen entered, slam ming the door quickly, to keep out tho hot, poisoned air of the street The dark shop was as empty of humans as the thoroughfare, but a quick step sounded in the rear. Pere Rabeaut entered from the ash-quilted court "What a day, M. Breen I The birds are dead and dying. Soronia Is ill unto death " "Soronia ill!" Breen said under his breath. The old man hastened away. At the rear doorway, Soronia pushed by him. Her hair was unfastened, and the loose' white garment that she wore was open at the throat. The father stared as if she were a specter. His lips moved, and he turned suddenly to the man standing In front of the shop. She moved toward the American. Her eyes aroused him. The darkness bad no power to divest them of expres sion, for the passions were burning there fear lest this was not flesh which filled her gaze; ecstasy in that he was there at all, in life or death or dream. Ilia act of yesterday had wrought the ghastly pallor ; the deathly illness was heart-starvation. She touched bis shoulder and bis cheek wj& chilling bands; there fell from her lips strange, low words of no language that he knew. Suddenly she caught bis hand to her breast, whispering that she had feared she was dreaming. "What were you dreaming, little one?" he questioned. "I thought I was dying when I heard your voice. You said you said you would come no more." "But did I not come, little fairy? Who could remain nway from you?" She seized his face in her cold hands, whispering, "Do you mean that you will stay?" (To be continued.) s : ' a. . .uumi: mi iaan i -"- aaw .i-t ir.' Mart. Loading1 Freight by Cards. "I don't know whether the practice Is still kept up In the far south, but I remember bow tickled I was at seeing the method used In loading goods Into freight cars down in Mississippi some while ago," said a railroad man of St Louis. 'A lot of strapping black fellows will be on the Job under the supervision of a white man, who will bo Issuing or ders with great volubility. 'Put this aboard the king of diamonds; tako this to the ace of hearts; lond this on the ten of spades ; this to the Jack of clubH,' and so on, and then you'll notice encn one of the long line of freight cars has tacked on It Borne one of the flfty-two cards composing n full deck. The Sen- egamblun loafers for tho most part were Ignorant of letters nnd figures, but every man of them know the paste board emblems which ho had often handled in games of seven up. That next to craps Is the chief diversion of the colored sports of Dixie." Balti more American. The Heanim. "I was sitting In a crowded car to day when Mrs. Nabor got on." "Did she thank you for your oeatr' "Er no." "That's funny! She has such a rep utation for being pollto; I wonder why sho didn't" "She didn't get It" Houston PoBt Ilia Jonah Number, Blocker Do you believe that thir teen Io an unlucky number? Meeker You bet I do. My wife wi the thirteenth woman I proposed to. NKronen from tha Air. A detailed account of tho progress of tho works now In courso of crectlou on tho falls of the Svaelglos nt Noroddcn, In Norway, for tho separation of ntiuos pherlc nitrogen, on tho system of Messrs. Blrkeland and Eyde, I" given in La Nature. Thcso works aro tho property of a French company, nnd tho nvullnblo power Is stated at 84,000 horse-power. A Bocond undertaking on a far larger scalo Is now In courso of construction to mako uso of tho falls of Rjukan, whoro not less than 200, 000 horso power will be utilized. Pho tographs show that tho buildings aro now completed, and that much of tho inachluery Is In place. Tho factory Is contained In two scpnrnto divisions, tho hydro-electric generating station nnd the chemical works. Details of tho revolving furnaces, with tho Inter nal electrodes and 'the tlanio arcs, aro given. Let Women linn Incubator. . Please do not get the Idea that tho Incubator Is so everlastingly automata that you do not need to give It any at tention. Tho result with tho use of an Incubator Is a great deal llko tho re sults with tho uso of other things. They will bo In proportion to tho effort you mako to a great extent Of course 1 nin not personally acquainted with you, but as a long-distance proposition I would a heap sight rather you would turn your machine over to your wife. The women folks have more natural good sense in raising poultry, nnd you can bet your boots they look after the pennies nud dimes In whntcver they undertake. Whllo a man that Is accus tomed to dealing In big money often overlooks seemingly immaterial things that go to mako tho uso of Incubators and brooders a success. M. M. John son, Nebraska. A Clover Rancher. Clover that Is pastured until the mlddlo of Juno and then permitted to mako a second growth will escape In- Jury from tho midge and usually glvo a better yield of seed. When 05 per cent of the heads are a dead brown color tho mower may bo Bet to work. The Illustration shows a finger-like mowing machine attachment for bunch ing and laying tho clover out of the way of tho horses. IIIrtMl Mnn nnd The Horae. Every man who works on n fnrm ought to know how to enro for horses. By "caro" It 1 not meant that ho should know Just enough to feed a horse, but ho must know how to tnko caro of a maro In foal, how to break n colt nnd how to feed It to tho best nd vantage. Ho should know nil about horses' feot nnd something about shoo ing, too. Many n man has dropped into n flno nnd permanent Job because ho know thcso things. Horses nro tho most vnlunblo animals on tho fnrm, of course, nnd tho mnn who enn tnko tho best enre of them Is the most vnluauio help. Ganngea In 1'nrmlnn. Farming Is not what It was twenty years ngo from a revenue standpoint. Corn nnd cotton were tho innln prod nets from which the farmer drew his Income, nnd that, too, only onco a yenr, Now tho process has changed up. In stend of tho ono crop, cotton, farmers hnve invoked a multiplicity of crops, nnd not only grow corn nnd cotton for revenuo, but hove supplemented pota toes, both Irish nnd sweet; penches nnd penrs, onions, melons, berries, peanuts and ribbon enne, nil of which bring money at all seasons of tho yenr, nnd there is n continued market for what he has to sell. Sulphur Springs (Tex.) Gazette. aroTTlng Dated In Texna, An experienced dnto grower of Cnll- fomln wlro visited tho lower Rio Grande region of Tcxns two years ngo discovered lnrge numbers of dnto palm trees, some of them very old but nil of which wero bnrren. IIo proposed to polleulzo tho trees artificially nnd shnro In tho proceeds, a proposition which wns eagerly accepted by tho owners. Hundreds of thcso trees nro now bearing delicious fruit Tho poor, crippled and sick Mexicans of that sec tion regnrd the mnu as n sorcerer nnd when ho visits them they fall upon their knees nnd beg him to euro them of their Infirmities. To Prevent Tomnlo not. Tho disease often attacks plants that are not sprayed. It Is first noticeable as small black or brown Bpots on tho leaves and stems of the plants, occur ring first on the lower and older leaves, but with favorable weather It spreads rapidly till the plant Is defoliated and the spots on .tho stems have coalesced into Irregular blackish patches. If a piece of bark with these spots bo ex amined under a high power microscope innumerable small, crescent-shaped bodies may be seen. Thcso nre tho fruiting spores of the fungus. Spray with Bordeaux mixture. Get a Dlak HarroTY. Tho disk barrow is a tool that is almost indispensable on an up-to-date farm. For working land that is Infest ed with weeds that spread from their root systems the disk harrow is tho only harrow that should be used. It cuts tho roots whoro they lie nnd does not drag them from one part of the field and transplant them In nnother. With plenty of horsepower It will do the work of a plow on some kinds of soil, especially In fruit orchards, where a plow Is liable to tear up largo roots and start suckers to growing up whero tho root Is cut nation (or Covra, Experiments conducted last yenr nt the West Virginia Agricultural Stntlon go to show that, whllo a ration of grnln given to cows that nro on pnsturo may keep them In somewhat better physical conditllon and keep up their flow of milk, the Increase in butter fat 1b not sufficient to pay for the cost of the grain ration. This would seem to be on tho nssumptlon of a flush pasture nnd that the cows would ent additional grass to take the place of tho higher- priced grain ration. Lejrumlnoiia Oropa, Nature has provided a leguminous crop for every part of the earth whoro It wub Intended that mnn should farm, Cow peas, Boy beans and Japan clover In tho South, crimson clover in tho Kustern slope, red clover In the Cen tral Btatca, alfalfa In the West, and Canada peas Jn the North show how thoroughly the distribution has been effected. Machine Hoe Ilelpa, The machine wheel hoe Is a great thing In tho garden. It makes garden work n real pleasure If you have ono of tho modern combined drill nnd wheel hoe arrangements. Tbey nro not costly nnd not hard to operate. Any one that has a garden as big as a town lot can afford to have one, as It will snvo Its cost the first season and will Inst for twenty years. You can do as much work with ono of them ns ten men with hand hoes and do It better. Pratt Tree Borera, August Is the tlrno to look for borers. Dig tho soil away around tho stems of fruit trees to the depth of 3 Inches, scrape the bark with n knife, and If nny sawdust or exuding gum In found It la time to get to work. Dig out tho borer nnd wnnh tho uncovered parts with n mixture of soft cow dung, Ilmo- wood nshes and n little crude carbolic acid. Then return tho soil. The quince, dwarf pear nnd peach trees nro pir tlcularly affected by this pest Vom of the Green Das. Last season farmers of tho South west were greatly alarmed over tho np pcarnnco of tho wheat plant louse, com monly known ns tho green bug. They caused a tremei-dous amount of dam age, but this yenr Its ravages wero much less, owing to tho nppearanco of a pnraslto boo which destroys tho bug. Tho bco lnys Its eggs on tho body of the green bug, which nro shown In tho plcturo on the whent leaf. When tho eggs hatch out tho lnrvm feed on tho bug until they becomo bees, when they lny moro eggs on the bugs, nnd this proc ess Is repeated over nnd over. The bees nro shown in tho picture, nnd farmers should becomo familiar with them, so they may recognlzo them ns ono of their best friends. Exchange Grcnvliitf Manirels. Mangels grown continuously on the snmo lnnd for four years, yielded over nlno tons of roots, containing ono ton of dry mntter, whllo on land uuder ro tation they yielded thlrty-four tons of roots and four tons of dry matter por acre, at tho Now York Cornell Experi ment Stntlon. From 215,000 to 80,000 plnnta of mnngels, rutnbngns nnd hy brid turnips, nnd from 40,000 to 00,000 plnnts of enrrots, por ncro, nro Bug gested ns proper stands. Spraylnu to Kill Weeds. It has been proved thnt such woods ns fnlBo-flax, wormseed, mustard, turn bllng mustard, common wild mustnrd, shepherd's purso, peppor-grass, boll mustnrd, corn cockle, chlckweod iinn. dollon, Cnnnda thlatlo, bindweed plan- uuu, rougn pigweed, klng-hend, red river weed, ragweed nnd cocklobur may bo destroyed by spraying tho Hold with a 2 or 8 per cent solution of Bulphate, using about eighty gallons ot water per ncro, Ll L I I laV mufm hi 1810 English defeated tfc. p. 1004-New Amsterdam u "L tho British. -k" "npwwi Now YorkV ""ttruwt 1738 Brandt made th . per imentH Al'V td arsenic. ""MtW( jjrssa tptaa - n inn ciuomcnti, 1770 British rifM..i u.. i . i.ti. ; r wictai ... vi j,Ms laiand, huius at Kimira. N V 170JH T- i,ni ' tt DCClttra,ID ' 180-1 Margaret, widow o( MtM J nold, died In London, . the British itrM.t. . ....r city of Wa..,ing,on:.:.CT nclv .uBptaaea la raki phla. 1818-Tho Savannah, U,e flntitMa? io crow me oewn, lsundxj i I82fJ First temperance wlt In Ireland.... Warfare bttveu I lotnliltt and Peru ended. 1830 The steam locomotlre km iliy to iwssenger service for tt time in America, on the Ml and Ohio railway. 1835 Sir John Goiford, Earl tl home, sworn In as Governor l ( ada. 183(1 Opening of the Buffalo ui agara railroad. 18-17 Republic of Liberia laturarttd. 1848 Trial of the Charily kept I London. 1831 The yacht America bt tl I yacht Tltanla on a race of tad miles by eight mllea, 1853 The- vwwel eneared to lav the d marine cable betwera Cape Ri;, A V., and Cape North, 0. II, trut pay It out 1850 The Dudley obwrratorr wu ik cated at Albany, N, Y, 1857 Brtrlnnlnr of a financial Male ! the United Statu, wbldi mlsta In an almost entire tutpeniknoft banks. 1858 first treaty stpied between On Britain and Japaa. 1V .Victoria ratlwiv bridff at Sis treal opened by the Prince of TO 1800 FI rut Confederate Mldlen axi ment unveiled at Griffin, Ga. 1872 Severe storm and Uih tide i great damage along the Ne Esjli coast 1878 The Independence of SeriU claimed at Belgrade. 1883 The Balvatloa army bfjao if tlnna In Canada. 188-1 England closed a contract M Chicago Arm for imfW pw comprewed beet lor we twrami Klnn to Khartum. 1880 William J. Kendall, clothed faj ara whirlpool rapids. T....f .. I MAnna ntn1 tilt 1 1HrU nf PrtMnHfl At 423r34i . . 1 ... iWtf fift Sea of Arof and caueea w 1.000 Uvea. 1807 President Borda of unirw" of Salvador adopted the oM f ,1 O IaMa flf PS ard. . . .uen. J, r. . uw'" , "ij sylvanla elected commaad nf f Jin I. A. 1U 1002 Monalgnor Guldl w apostolic i delegate to the PUW by tho l'ope. , 100-1 Battlcahlp Louil" 'DcW Newport Newa. brWH till Cort ruvr rm. nam rantileVCr Lawrence river, u y- lap-ed, caualng Itagfjg 100 worKincn . , . . -- . j riage wiw . , tl.ua nettling a Ion pw""' tlon. .. ...... . h ti it rein ..... 1 II I Albert T. tW " , , ;Btlr, E tonco for the murucr " hlI, , New Y'ork Bevera r..-(r0! appeaiou to mo jeBJ5f ' claim ihAt tho llfo sentence U of penalty over that of chair which waa formerly hlra. - ALL ABOUND King Wwrfpui -' to aormany wiw u 1000. .t bf Tho New Zealand ",a T. .!, .rant of a UW" - dian-AuatTaliau nn TMia Missouri law Wu'r B'lti( .- -I naases to snri. Ml m kith . .. to '- J takers of live stoc, (i back borne, has been dectoreo Ueaul,