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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1909)
U8r Race for a T- Wife HAWLEY SMART CHAPTER XXIII. The classic heath is crowded ; ay, over wowded. The carriages stand four or five deep next the ropes. In a carriage very close to the cords are Harold Denison, Maude and Grenville Hose or rather, I tbould say, were, insomuch as they had arrived there together; but though Deni ' ton had for some years eschewed the greensward and its fatal seductions, of course there were numerous old friends whom he had known well in the days that tho sky blue and silver braid was promi lnont at most large race meetings. He be naturally drawn off to chat over old times with some of them, and left Maude In charge of her cousin. The girl was In a Btate of the greatest excitement. She had never before seen a race of any kind. It was a bright day; but not warm, except In the July meeting, it never is on Newmarket Heath. Thanks to her father's experience, Maude was heavily shawled and therefore comfort able. In the last few mfnutes Hose had confided to her what a big stake he stood to win on Coriander, "Though, Maude, recollect, I shan't be a penny the worse If he loses. "Oh, ;r'n, how can you stand still? I enn hardly, as it is, though it is you who arc to win, and not me." "My darling, you are as much interest ed as I am. I never did bet before; I never shall again. Can't you guess why I have this time?" "I think so," she replied, as her face flushed. "It's for me, is it not?" "Yes, Maude; if Coriander wins, I can claim you from your father at once; if he don't well, you will wait while I work, won't you?" "You know I will. I'm yours whenever you come for me," whispered the girl ; "and SB long as we may write, I shall never- " and she paused. "What?" inquired her couBin. "Don't ask me ! well, never be as un happy as I have been." Grenville pressed the little hand that rested In his, but said nothing; in which he showed great discretion. In love-making, silence is often more effective than conversation. But the noise of the bursting cork Is hushed in Jarvis' the ring is deserted. Flys and horsemen tear across to where the cords, placed in funnel shape, indicate the finest of the Rowley miles. Every one is anxious to see the result of the first groat three-year-old race of the sea on. Carefully have the horses been scru tinized in the Birdcage and elsewhere. and the scattered ring, from the foot of the Jockey Club stand and from amidst the carriages, still shriek forth spasmodic offers against outsiders. Grenville has never left his cousin's side. As he has already said, the turf was a great mys tery to him. All he knows and this Is derived from Dallison Is, that Coriander Is first favorite, and that Fauxpas and The Saint are each backed for a great defil of money, and that the Lightning Colt is a dangerous outsider. "Now, Maude stand up on the seat. Are the glasses right? Try." - "Quite; I can see beautifully.'' "Very well ; now repeat what I have taught yon. What are the colors?" "Corinnder, black and white hoops; Fauxpas. gTeen and white braid ; The Saint, cherry and black cap; and and, oh, dear, I forget that Lightning thing." "Mazarine blue; don't forget again. Do you see those two bushes? As soon as we hear they are off, bring your glasses to bear on those. Walt till you catch the horses in their field, and then follow them till you don't want glasses." "Yes, Gren; but my hand shakes so. I wish you hadn't told me about all that money if Coriander wins. Oh, dear, why don't they start? What are they wait ing for?" Ah, me! Faces are a study, the five minutes before the flag falls for a great race. The teeth will go through the lip, or the mouth will twitch, and the hand that holds the. race glass will shake a little on these occasions when the possessore are involved in high stakes on the result. Once over, and as a rule it would be diffi cult to tell whether a man had lost much or little. Winners look jubilant, losers bland at the hoisting numbers. To study faces, use your eyes while the horses still .luster at the starting post. CHAPTER XXIV. Suddenly is seen tumult amongst the distant horsemen, who have gone down some way to witness the start, and almost before Maude can realize that tbey are all tearing towards her, the fierce shriek of "They're off!" announces that the race for the Two Thousand has begun. She has barely time to get the bushes wlthjn the field of her glasses when half a dozen of tho gay silken jackets pass them. Flushed, panting, excited, and utterly un accustomed to the thing, Maude grinds her little white teeth in her agitation as she finds they have passed the point more like the glimpse of a kaleidoscope than anything else; then, for a second, she can't find them again. "Oh, Grenl" she gasps, "which is Coriander? I forget! Was it blue, or black and white hoops? I've lost them. Oh, dear, that grocn thing will win! Oh, which is Coriander?" And there was a slight gurgle In Maude's throat. "The Saint wins I No, he don't 1 he's Vat I Fauxpas wins I No, the Lightning Colt; Fauxpas" when, sharp and shrill as a clarion above the Babel, came Sam Pearman'i cry of "Coriander wins for a monkey !" Coriander wins. Coriander in a walk, and the black and white hoops glide past the Judge's chair a clever length in front. Grenville draws a big breath. "Is it true?" and he glares anxiously at the telegraph board. From where he is it is impossible to tell for certain, though he thinks the favorite won. Hurrah ! Up goes the mystic 7 that represents Cori ander on the cards; and, with a yell, Grenville sends his hat into the air. Even as he does so, he feels that Maude leans wondrous heavy on his shoulder ; he turns just in time to hear a low gurgling sound, and catch bis cousin in his arms. She has fainted; He lays her back in the carriage, and sends one of the innumer able lads that Infest a race course in hot pursuit of water. Meanwhile he, in his ignorance and confusion, bathes her tem ples with sherry from a big flask. It has the desired effect, as if It were a more sci entific, or, at all events, more generally recognized remedy, and ere the myrmidon returns with water, .Maude has come to her self with a choking sob or two. "Oh, Gren, I didn't I don't I shall be well in a minute." And after drinking, first a little sherry, and then a little water, Maude, with rather pale cheeks, began to wonder how she could have been so foolish. "I got so excited about It Gren ; I couldn't help it. You shouldn't have told me what a lot of money you might win Besides, I never saw a race before." "Never mind, you are all right now. We'll go home as soon as we can catch your father; there's nothing else to see not for us, at least, darling. I've won yon nw, Maude !" "N(," said the girl, with a smile, and a slight pressure of her little hand ; "you did that before. But where s your hat? "I don't know," said Grenville, looking very confused. "I threw it up in the air when the horse won and then you fainted, and I never thought of it again, Looks awkward, don't it?" "Oh," laughed Maude, "I'm so glad Why, you were as bad as me. I think we had better go home, Gren ; we are not fit to go racing. We haven't the requl site control of our feelings, and make shows of ourselves. But though the hat, a little the worse for its aerial excursion, was speedily re turned by some jackal of the heath, Har old Denison was not so easily come at, and the cousins were perforce doomed to see the day out. Though I doubt whether they ever saw another race, they bore themselves resignedly, and I fancy passed a tolerably pleasant two hours. A gentle man on a neat hack, after a moment's hesitation, pulled t.o at their carriage. Lifting his hat to Maude, he nodded cheer ily to Rose, and leaning over, murmured: "No end of congratulation. I'm very well satisfied ; but, Gren, you have played for high stakes, and I suppose I may say have won them. Adieu ! And with an other glance and raising of his bat to Maude, he cantered off. "Who was that?" she inquired. "Dallison, who did all my betting for me." "And did he know?" "He knew what that 5,000 meant to me. He's right, Maude. I have been play ing high stakes, and to think xbat should win all." Mr. Denison turned up in the most jubi lant spirits. He had had a delightful day, and won a hundred and odd pounds, he told them. "Don't think I am going on with it, Grenville, but as I had come to see 'The Guineas' run for once more, I determined to risk my pony on it, and backed the horse that had already been Buch a good friend to me ; and as that was successful I Invested two or three more ten-pound notes on the strength of my first win, bo that my gains mounted up, my selections having proved successful." Within twenty-four hours Grenville Rose had had a long confabulation with his nncle, and succeeded . in convincing him that he was, thanks to the additional 5,000, In a position to marry his cousin at once; he could make upnow 000 a year, and he was sure business would shortly come to him. Denison demurred a little, but he certainly was under some ot ligation to his nephew about that mort gage. The domestic current, too, ran strong in Grenville's favor; so, after a little, he yielded, saying that "if they thought fit to begin the world on that income, he had no more to say, further than that they could expect but little help from him in his lifetime." Maude and Grenvilje recked little of that, and in three months' time they were married ; and one of the handsomest wedding present Maude received was, strange enough to say, from Sam Pear man, with a very correct note, to the ef fect that, "Forgetting all the past, he trusted Miss Denison would still consider him ns a friend and well-wisher." Moreover, so immensely struck was that gentleman with " Grenville',8 acuteness in the prosecution of the hcriot claim, that he threw a considerable amount of his own and friends' legal business Into Rose's hands; and three or four years after that memorable Two Thousand you seldom saw a horse case la which Gren ville was not employed. Briefs, too, fell thick from other sources; the Coriander stoiy waa bruited about, and the attor neys pronounced it smart, clever very. anJ endorsed their opinions practically. rhe picture of that distinguished race horso may be seen in the dining room at Mannersley, and Pearnian often contem plates it, and soliloquizes as be does so, les; you cost me 10,000 hard cash, and the prettiest girl in England; but you won the Guineas and the Derby you did." Over Rose's study mantelpiece hangs a print of that same celebrity. Deep in his papers in the evening, sometimes, when work is so plentiful that it becomes hard to grapple with, Maude will glide softly in, and say "Come, Gren; tea is in. Come and drink Coriander's health the dear "It old norse that gave be to eacn otner. Ana i was a runaway match, wasn't It?" "Yes, but he couldn't run fast enough. She caught him." he vields to the voice of the charmer. ' 1 ou ou6nl 10 MVe money for your. and, to the benefit of his health, enjoys family." "Yes, but " "But what?" a sturdy little boy of some three years "My family won't let me." Cleveland old or so, who, having been once taken by leader. his mother into Court, has determined on Poetry ls the art of puttlng worda being a judge almost immediately. Wether In ..rh t i It is a solemn compact between Maude .. .. . . ' a xt. p. tw when nvthin them thelr ,east Possible commercial happens to Coriander who, having much valu Puck. distinguished himself, has now retired into ) Martha Don't you think a cookery domestic life one of his illustrious feet book la fascinating reading? Maud is to be placed at her disposal. Yea, Indeed. It contains so many stir- The squire is still muddling on, but, rjng indents, thanks to an occasional look-up from , Grenville, and a change of bailiffs, con-1 She How was your speech at the tinues to about make both ends meet. As club received the other night? He for Mrs. Denison, with her temperament, When I sat down they said it was the cannot you fancy the delight she has in best thing I ever did. a visit to or from her darling daughter, Ashley Do you have much variety and with a couple of grandchddren to pet n your boardlng house? Seymour and spoil ? (The End.) BLAZE 1,800 FEET HIGH. Above It a Culnnin of Smoke As cended to a Height of 0,000 Feet. 1hn jrmntpst oil tiro in history l supposed to have been the lire which by a conservative estimate destroyed more than 5,000,000 barrels of oil last year In the Sun Gerouimo field near Tamplco, Mexico. n ' l w. r I ' Dtpatiim n'aa Rtmr1r at n Imth 1 ftlS taut Iti a klv-lnch ciiRAd narsnl' ""I"" lHT, Wll lxV.l.. I.J well. The torrent of oil burst forth and waa quickly followed by a blow- "m- and h(?, m'fht " w- " out of gas which opened a big orifice , broken nw!"-Stray Stories. In the earth's surface, swallowing up 1 "Ye8" Bald the young w-fe, proudly, the derrick and whole drilling outfit, "father always gives something expen Including the engine and boiler. The slve when ne makes presents." "So I gas and oil were ignited from the Are discovered when he gave you away," under the boiler and the great fire was rejoined the young husband. Chicago Well, we have three different names tor the meals. London World. "Nobody realizes the immensity of space." Except the man who has to fill a dally half column with alleged minor." Louisville Courier-Journal. "Tc'l me flunk!;, all, kv'uui. uo full think of my daughter's voice?'-' "Well, madam, I think she may have a bril liant future in water color painting." Figaro. "You shouldn't treat your boy so you'll break his spirit." WdMElf OF KOREAN COTJBT. Great Redaction In Their Number- IaOneace The? Once Exerted. The visit of three Korean court la dies to Japan is an Indication of the striking changes that have resulted from the Japanese occupation of the hermit kingdom. Two years ago there were no fewer than 1,800 ladies in waiting, now there are only 100. This wholesale reduction naturally created consternation, and there was much lamentation among those whose services were dispensed with, the Lon don Telegraph says. Their lot, how ever, does not seem to have been alto gether enviable. It appears that it has been the custom to take girls into the court from the age of 10, and henceforth throughout the whole pe riod of their natural lives they were never allowed to leave the precincts of the palace, so that they lived In ab solute ignorance of the outside world. The few who accompanied the em peror cn his recent tour gave evidence of the timidity which had resulted from their long confinement, for they could hardly be persuaded to enter the train, and "they finally dMd so with manifest trepidation. Hitherto the influence of these la dles at court has been very great. Having constant access to the ear of the sovereign, on the one hand, and being, on tho other, accessible to all the intriguing Influences that prevail ed In the unwholesome atmosphere of the court, their power exceeded even that of the ministers of state. Daily News. in this manner started. I It burned for sixty-two days. The Irate Diner (to waiter who perslst vortex or crater through which the oil ently hovers about the table) What poured was gradually enlarged until It on earth are you waiting for, man? I was more than 500 feet wide. A rim of don't want you. Waiter Excuse me. rocks and earth was formed around its sir, but I am responsible for the all outer edge resembling a volcano's, era-, ver- Tit-Bits. ter. According to the Technical World Biggs, '11 Why are the tugs on the the blaze extended to a height of from Wisconsin river like the co-eds who 1,400 to 1,800 feet and the column of walk up and down State street? black smoke rose above it to a height Muggs, '12 And the answer ls? Biggs, of about 0,000 feet. On top of the '11 Some toe out, and some toe In. smoke rested a great white cloud of Wisconsin Sphinx, vapor which was estimated to extend "What ls your principal object, any skyward to an additional height of how," asked the visiting foreigner, "in 7,000 feet. The blaze could be seen building that Panama canal?" "Well," 200 miles. answered the native, "we have an idea The great oil fire was extinguished It will limit the size of future battle by means of six centrifugal pumps ships." Chicago Tribune, which were kept constantly busy for "Foreign travel Is very Improving," two weeks throwing mud and water said the studious girl. "Yes," an into the crater. Heavy discharges of swered Miss Cayenne; "although you dynamite around the rim of the orifice can't always tell where a person has also aided in the extinguishing work, jbeen by the pictures on the post cards Shortly after the flames were put out he sends home." Washington Star, the oil burst forth ngniu In greater vol-1 Tommy went fishing the other day ume than ever and its output was stl- 'without his mother's permission. The mated at 150.000 barrels a day. It has next morning one of his chums met been a difficult problem to care for the hjm and asked: "Did you catch any oll. Thp Mexican government sent sev- tning yesterday, Tommy?" "Not till eral hundred soldiers to the seeue to t got home," was the rather sad re assist the owners of the well lu build- ponse. lug earthen reservoirs for temporary I ..whatr exciaimed Mrs. Flatleleh. 1 storage of the product. The oil o-er- ,Tou don., mean t0 te me vou Da . flowed these reservoirs and large quan tities escaped into the San Gerouimo River and Lake Tamlubua. Learn to Uae the Telephone. "Only about one person in every ten knows how to properly use the tele- girl $10 a week for cooking?" "Oh, no," replied Mrs. Urban ville. "We only pay her $2 a week for cooking. Theother $3 Is for staying." Chicago Dally News. Professor of Sociology If this alarming Increase in the divorce rate phone," said a district manager of one eontlnueSi twenty years from now the of the local companies. "Yes, sir, I'll nstitutlon of the home will no longer stand by my guns on that assertion ; frxl8t ln America. Practical Student aud I think I can prove my point. Nine How ls that professor? They all out of every ten persons talk entirely marry again, don't they? Puck, too loud over the telephone. Theyl A h,gh flnander Bhould be gome. actually shout and make o much noise jMng Qf an economist) BhouId he notr that they drown out all semblance of ,T dont thlnk B0 .. answered Mr Dua. clearness. Then they can't hear, and t,n gtax .The object of the econ. the first thing you know there la a Dmist is to see what he can get along complaint about poor connection and wlth. that of thfl hlh nnancier is to faulty service. The correct way to talk ,ee what he can get away with." "J over me teieptione is to tain as you ao vVashlngton Star In ordinary conversation, or even a trl-1 A , once lnqulred wh ,eaveg of fle lower. People can't seem to real-!tables wfire g0 caled snce they dld Ize that the telephone will carry a 'not resembIe ,eave8 in the least. Not whisper even. No, they must talk loud havlng reoelved a satisfactory answer. enough to be heard from 10th and he thought for some time and then said: "I think I know now; they're Chestnut streets to Germnntown, if those lie the connected points. Just caled loavea because you can leave try yourself. Try the low, well modu- 'them nn or leave them down." iarea voice, ana see lr you ao not get infinitely better service out of you telephone ln the future." Pure butter will not melt under a temperature of 35 degrees, when It will leave a sweet and wholesome liquid, but adulterated butter melts at 88 Into a liquid with a repulsive odor. A pressed steel boat, into perfora tions of which is forced under hy draulic pressure granulated cork until the entire surface ls covered, a recent invention, ls claimed to be unslnk able. What promises to be one of the greatest competitions of light agricul tural motors that ever has taken place ln North America will he held at the Winnipeg Industrial exhibition ln July. The Argentine government has be gun the development of a new petrol eum field on the east coast of Pata gonia on Us own account, and ls se curing a good grade of fuel oil from a depth of 1770 feet. By using two highly sensitive pendulums suspended ln a well a Ger man scientist has found that the sur face of the earth rises and falls about 8 inches every twenty-four hours, hav ing tides similar to the oceans.. Experiments by the United States Forest Service have demonstrated that thoroughly air-dried timber has about double the strength of green timber. Moreover, ln order effectively to ap ply preservative agents to timber It must first be seasoned, because It is very difficult to Inject antiseptics ln green wood. The loss of weight by seasoned timber is quite surprising. Western pine loses half Its weight after three to five months' seasoning. The railway tunnel which ls being constructed under the Detroit Rivet possesses some novel features. It will consist of two steel tubes, running side by side 42 feet below the Hver surface. Each tube has a diameter of 16 feet. To receive the tubes, a trench, 48 feet wide at the bottom. Is dug ln the clay of the river bottom, and bedded with a grillage of steel and concrete. On this the tubes are laid. The tubes are made ln lengths of 26 feet, and are Joined by sleeves 17 Inches ln length. When completed the tubes will be embedded ln con crete all round. Trains are to be run through the tunnel by electricity. The traditional mountain of the ark always charms the imagination, as It It were the culminating point of the globe. And It ls Indeed a noble-looking mountain, as shown in a photo graph recently made by E. A. Martel, the French geologist and explorer. Mount Ararat is becoming better known because of the growth of in terest in the eastern shore of the Black Sea, which Monsieur Martel calls Russia's Riviera. Pleasure re sorts, which may rival Biarritz and Monte Carlo, are springing up there along the foot of the Caucasus. Ara rat ls not visible from this coast, but "Look at me!" exclaimed the stout, florid man. "Never a day's sickness In my life! ' And all due to simple food. Why. Rents, from the time I Perhaps. UnD t.ontir tn nrlmn T ronM.rwl fnrh One fnUSt RO far UD thrOUEh rolieh. Mr. Stubb (reading nd.) 1 see ttaa ' yeara t nved a regular life. None ol picturesque valleys in order to reach 'Lives of the Hunted" advertised down these effeminate delicacies for me! : the lofty plain over which it domln at the book sale to-day. 'n late hours! Every day. summer "tea. ,ws. BiuDu -wyes or uie uuntear and winter, I went to bed at nine; got Gracious, John, I wonder who wrote up at flve; nved principally on coined mm uoottt k.nf nnj rnl.n v-rond. Wnrkeil hnrH Amateur Gardening. "Have you harrowed your vegetable ;ueei biiu corn uieuu. vvurHuu nara, ' pi-. Jones'" Mr. Stubb Oh, some bachelor during Kents, worked hard, from eight to one; I ,.n w V hava v ... , leap year, I presume, -tEhen dlnner, plain dinner; then an .J L2T m hour's exercise; and then " "Ex- ;use me, Bill," Interrupted a stranger, . . . . . uwri mnii h, ;Use me, am," interrupted a stranger, Our Idea of a ereat talker is a worn- "I saw such a funny old fossil ln the who had up to this refrained from wh ha Tenough mZn uZ Z museum today, professor. I thought ol entering the discussion; "but wU Low her limit: you at onot," 'tvera vou ln for!" I