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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1908)
HThe Ahited Qepulchre J- The VV Talc of O Pelee By Will LUvington Comfort Copyright. 1957. by J. a Lirrmcon- CHAPTER XI II.-(Continued.) "Still, I must leave nothing undone to night. I want the years bright for you, and I must try once more. After all, the mother of my beloved can do no wrong." "People might be safe away up there on the Monie d'Orange," she said, fear fully, "but you must pass to and fro through the city!" Gently he turned her face from the hid den city. "Look yonder into the splendid night!" he whispered. "Feel the sting of the spray. Hear the bows sing ! It's all for us, Lara, the gilded track to the moon, the loveliest of earth's distances and the sky afterward! We can't leave this great thing undone. Listen, dearest ; when the dawn comes up the Madame will be lying seven or eight miles off shore. I'll take the launch into the har bor, and climb the morne once more to the big plantation bouse, bringing your love and mine to the mother-bird whom I owe for all things good. If she will not come wilh me, I shall command Uncle Joey to take her to Fort de France. After that " She was clinging to him and sobbing. "Af'or thit'r" ?h" if-rntH. "We steam for Fort de France then," he.suid, "and Father Itamien must spare us an hour from bis labors. After that, beloved, you and I and the honeymoon out on the swinging seas !" Just now Denny Macready appeared on the bridge. "Lara, I want you to know this Den ny," said Constable. "I found him in a stoke-hohl, and haven't been able to get rid of him since. He's my steward at sea, my butler ashore, and 'Yours solid' anywhere. Denny, I'm going ashore at dawn " " 'Tis crool t' hear, sorr." "That point is pretty well covered, Den ny. I want you that is, I'm leaving Miss Stunshury in your hands." "Sh-sh wait till I putt on me gloves." "How are your charges faring, Denny V" Constable asked. "Is ut th' little wans, you mane?" "Yes, the natives." "If I on'y had some goats, sorr!" "Why goats;" "Sure, I've been petherin' with lime wather an' sea wather an wather straight an' sugar av milk whin goats could do it all, an' bettber." . Macready went below, leaving a laugh on the bridge which was no little thing. The Madame crept in to the edge of the smoke. The gray ghost of morning was stealing into the hateful baze. The ship found anchorage. The launch was in readiness below. It was six in the morn ing. I'ugh, the new third officer, was just leaving the bridge. Constable and Lara were standing at the door of bis cabin. "I know that you could do no greater thing than this for me," she told him ; "but when a woman comes into her own as I have it is terrible to be left alone so soon. . There are warnings in the wind, menaces in the silence, dangers in every thing. It cannot be that I have found you, my lover, only to lose you again. Oh, come back to me quickly, dear !" "Three hours shall see us on our way to Fort de France," be answered blithely. "Trust me to hurry back to you. Pelee Is still now. It may be that the pressure Is eased " "There, kiss me, and don't wait! The very name of Telce is horrible !" She moved with him to the ladder. "I thought I would be braver than this, Pierre Va 'eur !" He whispered a last word and descend ed. Ernst had been relieved, and another sailor was in the launch, one for whom preparations had been made in the dim hall. Constable was happy. He waved a kiss at the pale, mute face leaning over side, and the fog rushed in between. CIIAFTER XIV. The launch gained the inner harbor, and the white ships at anchor were seen .vague phantoms -in the vapor French steamers, Italian barques, and the small er West Indian craft all with their work to do and their way to win. Constable heard one officer shout to another, ln: quiring if Saint Pierre was in the usual place, or had switcbed-sites with Hades. The day was clearing rapidly, however, and before the launch reached shore the haze was so lifted that Pelee could be seen, floating a pennant of black put to sea. In the city a large frame ware house was ablaze. The tinder-dry struc ture was being destroyed with almost ex Dlosive Biiecd. "Wait for me here," Constable said to the sailor, as the launch scraped the Suear Landing. A blistering heat rushed down from the expiring building to the edge of the lnnd. Crowds wntched the destruction. Many of the people were in holiday attire. This was the Day of Ascension, and Saint Pierre would shortly pray and praise, at the cathedral. Even now the bells were calling, and there was low laughter from a group of maidens. Was it not good to live, since the sun shone again and the mountain did not answer the sainted bells? It was true that Pelee poured forth a black streamer with lightning in Its folds; true that the people trod upon the hot gray dust of the volcano s waste ; that the heat was such as no man had ver felt before and many sat In misery upon the ground ; true, Indeed that voices of hysteria came from the hovels, and the breath of uncovered death from tne W Company. Alll IghU rerd ways but the ,ala spirit was not dead. The bells wen calling; the mountain was still; brigl t dresses were abroad for the torrid ;hildren of France must laugh. ' Constable fell in with the procession on the way to the cathedral. Reaching there, he climbii to a huge block of stone in the square, and hurled broadcast the germ of flight. Many had seen him be fore, when hit face was haggard. He was smiling now. There was color in his skin, fire in hiu eyes, a ring in his voice. Fear was not In him. A carriage was not procurable, so he walked toward the Morne d'Orange. It was seven-thirty, and the distance was two miles to the plantation house. Al eight, or soon afterward, he would b there eight on the morning of Ascension Day; at nine, in the launch again, speed ing out to the smile of the bride ! Twenty times a minute she recurred to him as be walked. There was no waning nor wearing save a wearing brighter, ;;erhaps of the images she bad put in bis mind. The night bad brought him palaces and gardens and treasure houses: iMi'ij uui'ic Iik lumen, ucvv ricuC3 l;rc;;c upon him. That her face had lain be tween his hands ; that his bands had brought that face to his own ; that her whispers, kisses, confidences, her prayers and passions and coming years, all found their center and origin in himself, like bright doves that had a cote within his heart these thoughts lifted the poor man to such heights of praise and blessedness that be seemed to shatter the dome of hu man limitations, and emerge crown and shoulders into the illimitable ether. The road up the morne stretched blind ing white before him. Panting and spent not a little, he strode upward through the vicious pressure of beat, holding his helmet free from bis head, that the air might circulate under the rim. At length, upon the crest of the morne, he perceived the gables of the plantation house, above the palms and mangoes, gold-brown in the dazzling haze. Pelee roared. Sullen and dreadful out of the silence voiced the monster, roused to his labor afresh. The American began to run, glancing back at the darkening north. The crisis was not passed in favor of peace. The holiday was darkened. The Madame would fill with refugees now, and the road to Fort de France turn black with flight. These were his thoughts as he ran. The lights of the day burned tfut one by one. The crust of the earth stretched to a cracking tension. The air was beet ling with strange concussions. In the clutch of realization, he turned one shin' ing look toward the sea. Detonations ac cumulated into the crash of a thousand navies. On the porch of the plantation house, twenty yards away,, stood the mother of Lara, her eyes fascinated, lost in the north. At the steps he fell, caught her skirt, her waist, in his hands. Across the lawn, through the roaring black, he bore her, brushing her fingers and her fallen hair from his face. He reached the curb ing of the old well with his burden, crawl ed over, and grasped the rusty chain. In candescent tongues lapped the cbtern's raised coping, and running streams of red dust filtered down. It was eight in the morning of Ascen sion Day. La Montagne Pelee was giv ing birth to Death. CHAPTER XV. When the launch entered the denser cloud and faded from her sight, Miss Stansbury retired to the cabin. Over all her thoughts of the unhallowed parting from her mother the night before, and the clean, valorous act of her lover now, lnmg the defined terror lest Pelee should inter vene. She heard Macready's step at the door; the calm voice of an officer on the bridge; the morning bells. The pale winding sheet was unwrapped from the beauty of morning. Though a port-hole she saw the rose and gold on the far, dim hills. Her eyes smarted from weariness, but her mind, like art auto- matic thing, swept around the great cir cle from the ship to the city, to the house beyond the morne and back again. She saw him in the launch, in the midst of native groups on the shore, in the plantation house, begging her mother to listen, Importuning Uncle Joey to take her to Fort de France, returning through the streets with people following the crowded launch, and then the joy of emp- ty arms filled. Hut sometimes Pelee would burst into the deepening channel of thoughts, effacing the whole, nnd leaving her, a Rbrieking, dishevelled crenture, in the- midst of a chaos which would not an swer. She went on deck. Laird, the first officer, invited her to ascend the bridge, lie was scrutinzing through the glass a blotch of smoke on the city front. "What do you make of it, Miss Stansbury?" he asked., . The lenses brought to her a nucleus of red In the blnck bank. The rest of Saint Pierre was a -gray doll settlement, set In the shelter of little gray hills. She could see the riven and castellated crest of Telee, weaving his black ribbon. It was all small, silent and unearthly. "That's a Ore on the shore," she said. "Exactly," said Laird. Shortly afterward the trumpetlngs of the monster began. The harbor grev yellowish-black. The shore crawled deei er tato the shroud, and was lost alto gether. The water took on a foul look, as if the bed of the sea were churned with some beastly passion. The anchor chain drew taut, mysteriously strained, and banged a tattoo against the steel-bound eye. Rlue Peter, drooping at the fore mast, livenad suddenly into ipasm of writhing, lil.e a hooked lizard. The black, quivering ctdumns of smoke frou the fun nels were fanned down upon the deck, adding soot to the white smear from the volcano. Lara felt Macready pulling at ber arm. "Ye mufiht go below, miss. Ye know me ordhere." She rebelled with sudden vehemence, declaring that she would smother down there. "Y'ou can do no good here, sure. Don't make It crool fur me?" "Make haste below, miss squall com ing!" commanded Laird. Gentleness and jollity were gone from''the large red face. She suffered herself to be drawn down the ladder, crushed by the officer's words, and the iron fingers of fear closing about her heart. A hot, fetid breath charged the air. The water danced, olive with the yeast of worlds. The disordered sky in toned violence. Pelee had set the foun dations to trembling. Lara drifted into the open polar region. Despair. These men were nil his friends. She must not hinder them. They had much to do. Her part was self-effacement. In the darkening passageway she heard Laird shouting orders above, heard him command the native women to "tumble be low," and the sailors to seal the ways after them, heard the deep sea language and "barometer" "Constable'; There were running feet, bells below, cries from the native women, quick oaths from the sailors. The ship rose and settled like a feaiuer in a breeze. She was incapable of swift action. Macready lifted her into the cabin and slammed the door, rushed to the ports and screwed tbera tight with lightning fingers, led her to a chair and locked it in its socket. "That's the decre," he said breathless ly. "Shud so much as a slipark from the mountain raise so much as a bloosh upon your cheek, sure I'd niver be able t' face Mr. Constable again, but go on sthokin' foriver an' iver." "It's very good of you," she answered dully. She sat very still, not daring to relax the rigid tension of her face, her hands, or her brain, lest the scream of madness break forth. From out the shoreward darkness thundered vibrations which ren dered soundless all that had passed be fore. Comets flashed by the port holes. The ship shuddered and fell to her star board side. Eight bells had just sounded when the great thunder rocked over the gray-black harbor, and the molten vitals of the mon ster, wrapped in a black cloud, filled the heavens, gathered themselves, and plunged down upon the city and the sea. As for the de Stael, eight miles from shore and twelve miles from the craters, she seemed to have fallen from a habitable ' planet into the fire-mist of an unfinished world. She heeled over like a biscuit tin, dipping her bridge and gunwales. She was del uged by blasts of steam and molten stone. Her anchor chain gave way, and, burn ing in a half-dozen places, she was sucked ln-shore. (To be continued.) An Idol with a Tragic History. There are many things which happen which do not readily lend themselves to explanation. When Mine. Carnot, widow of Sad! Caruot, died and her will was read, a clause In It caused considerable comment. This wns to the effect that a certain small Hindoo Idol carved from a hard stone, which would be found among her property, must be taken out'and crushed until completely destroyed. Many innrveled at this ap parently singular request, for the Idol seemed a harmless, ugly little thing; but hpr instructions were carried out to the letter. The Idol had been presented to S.idl Cnrnnt years before lie had ever thought of the Presidency of France by n friend who hud brought 1t from In dia. Later he learned that there wns a legend attached to it which asserted that whoever would retain it in his possession would rise to the fullest height of power In his chosen profes sion, but die of a stab wound when nt the zenith of his career. Carnot traced the history of the idol and found that for 500 years the rulers who had pos sessed It had all. died either In battle or by assassination of stab wounds. Yet he laughed at the story, called the facta adduced by his search a mere chain of coincidences and retained the Idol. He died by a dngger in the hands of an assassin, hence Mine. Carnot's strange request Not So Uneloii, Either. "Wlldent mining s'tocks are not alto gether useless or worthless, either," said a New York broker who handles cheap mining stocks the other day as he hung up the telephone receiver. "Here's a man who just offered me $50 for enough mining stocks to have a face value of $50,000. He wasn't par ticular what stocks he got if they only had a paper value of $50,000. I closed the deal and shall ninke money on It, too. What did he want with such stocks? Well, I haven't the slightest doubt but that he Is getting ready to go Into the bankruptcy court and wants to show his creditors where his money has been dropped. We often get su?h requests and are usually able to fill them." To do It no more, is the true )fenO knee. Luther, Dairy Idola. Cows becomes favorites with thel owners not altogether by reason of tli milk they produce. We have know! cows that their owners thought a greal deal of because of the kindly dlsposi tlon of the animals. One cow that tin writer remembers ( ,ve but a " fevi quarts of milk a day but she was a pel. of the family. Sh would prefer tlw company of member l of the family rather than that of other cows. If thu cows were being talien to pasture she would Insist on walking by the side o!' the one In charge of the herd. It ll hard to order a cow of this kind sent to the butcher, nnd ninny people will not do It Instead, the animals are kept for a dozen years, and' not only allowed to eat up the provender without re turning a compensation for it, but am alowed to add to the herd more cows after their own ability not to produce milk. Those may fairly bo called dairy Idols, Their owners claim great things for them without being able to substan jale Uii; truth of what tiu-y say. Rut the family pet Is not the only brand of dairy "idol. There are the gen eral purpose cows that quite generally have the entire confidence of their own ers ns to their great value. They are Idols that the single-purpose cow men have demolished again and again, to their own satisfaction, but they are still o be found nil over the land. The dairy Idol is a thing that can be dispensed with to the advantage of the owners of the cows. The warfare against them will be kept up, and little by little the factors we are warring against will disappear. It may, how ever, take about as long to eliminate Niom as It took Christianity to drive the idols out of the pagan world. Farmers' Review. II Uk In Drenched Tattle. Doctor David Roberts, State Veteri narian of Wisconsin, gives this advice: Perhaps the best way of demonstrating the danger of drench ing cattle Is to ad vise the reader to throw back "la head ns far as possible and attempt to swal low. This you will iind to be a diffi cult task, nnd you will find it more illflicult nnd almost Impossible to swal ov with the mouth open. It Is for this reason that drenching cattle Is a dangerous practice. However, if a cow's hend be raised as high as possible and her mouth kept open by the drenching bottle or horn, a portion of the liquid Is very apt to pass down the windpipe Into the lungs, sometimes causing in stant death by smothering, nt other times causing dentil to follow in a few (lays from congestion or Inflammation of the lungs. Give all cattle their 'iiedicino hypodermlcally or In feed, if fiiey refuse feed' give It dry on the tongue. The proper method of giving a row medicine Is to stand on the right bide of the cow, placing the left arm around the nose and at the same time opening ber mouth, and with a spoon In the right hand place the medicine, whlHi should be In a powdered form, back on the tongue; she can then swal low with safety. llnndy fur Sorting I'otntoen. In sorting potatoes a time-saver can be iniide of boards and common wire. The best wire should be smooth and about the thickness of ordinary clothes FOR SOKTINO TOTATOKS. line. The side-boards should be about 18 Inches wide to keep the potatoes from rolling off the sides. The wires are fastened to a pulley nt the top to tighten them so they will not ung and let the large potatoes through. Shovel the potatoes In at the top and the small potntoes will drop through the screen Into the box. To Fallen l-'onln, Shut the fowls up lu a darkened place with Just enough light for them to see to eat, and feed on cornmeal, ground oats, cracked wbeiit and shorts, which mny be mixed In equal propor tions and scalded. Feed as often dur ing the day as they will eat up tho food clean. That Is to nay, stuff tlicm. Tafte a light and feed rguln just be fore your bedtime, and as enrly In the morning an possible. Supply them with grit and water and keep tho premises cenn. Half a dozen fowhi to gether will fatten more quickly thkn a large numner, as they win nor ror company. Cookfd potatoes, rte corn bread, cracked corn and whole wheat may also be fed. Give no green stuffs, as It Is too filling nnd will do no good. Fowls crowded this way should be In fine condition In two weeks. Shut up longer, they are likely to begin to mop and will "go back rather than lncreaso In weight Rural World. - Nutriment In Milk. Rulletin No. 51 from the Storrs Ag ricultural Experiment Station, Con necticut, is a most excellent one on tho origin or sources of those small or ganisms called bacteria, which are found so abundantly in milk. Tho bulletin also contains some rather startling statements and some whole some suggestions. Among the statements which ought to make the average man sit up and think are the following: "A quart of milk at 8c Is equivalent in food value to a pound of beef at 18c. This means that 4c worth of milk gives ns much food, energy In the body as Oe worth of beef. "The average Individual consumes three. or four times ns much meat in a day ns the body actually needs for re pair, nnd for its highest physical con dition. "If the American people would eat one-half less meat and consume one half more milk, they would save about $ 1. -(. MiO.fM Ml. lu money and In health, enough to make the doctors' bills look small." Improved linn Pen. A large hog pen with space for both sleeping and feeding can be arranged with a floor on one-half to ensure a PEN WITH SECTIONAL FLOOR. dry bed. The size of the whole pen lss 8 feet by 10 feet, so that the floored section of the pen Is 8 feet square. It Is made of strong materials, usually 2 In. by 4 in. stuff, and rests on cleats In the bottom of the pen. Water for Com, It is claimed that a cow needs eight gallons of water a day, and will con sume that much If It Is within reach. Milk Is composed of about 87 per cent water. Cows confined to pastures In which there Is no running water and the cows are watered morning and night, It would necessitate that a cow would have to drink four gallons nt a time In order to be supplied. As the cow does not know that she must drink four gallons, she will naturally use less and reduce her milk supply accordingly. The Milk Machine. There Is mighty little sentiment about a cow. She's nothing but a deli cately organized mllk-maklng mnchlne. Her nervous organization Is well de veloped, though, and Is easily disturbed, but If she is well supplied with mllk maklng material and Is 'let alone she will turn out a good product nnd plenty of It, provided, of course, she Is built on the right lines. A poor machine of any kind Is a curse to the owner. Money In Irrigation. Two hundred feet of the levee on tho San Joaquin River lu California gave way and flooded 4,000 acres of growing crops, causing n loss of $.',000,000. Crops worth $1,2."0 an acre are not rare In an Irrigated district, though tho figures above given would look like a misprint to nn Easterner. About acres of the Inundated area were lu celery, and - the value would run far above the average stated. El Paso Herald. Milk Veel. L'so no wooden milk vessels, and after washing milk vessels set them out to dry scalding hot. Never rlnso out with cold water after the tlnul scalding. Leave them hot, so they will dry quickly und not get musty. Note on Orchard Work. Select only standard varieties. Spray frequently and thoroughly. Clover crops prevent soli washing. Sell direct to the consumer whenever possible. Form strong symmetrical bends on ali trees. Prepare the ground the fall previous to planting. Supply an abuudance of plant food at all times. Clover crops perform many useful functions. Fruit farming has been styled gentle, men's farming. Poultry and fruit growing make a good combination. The finest fruit Is grown by thinning the fruit on the trees. Sow clover crops go that they will be thick nnd cover the ground. Keep up to date by reading what the most successful men have to say. Fruit growing and fruit eating mak people sunny, happy and sweet VJteaakaawws