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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1907)
THE OREGON ' SUNDAY JOURNAU PORTLAND, ' SUNDAY MORNING, JULY, 21, ; mt AW W V. .aasaaw V . 1 a WAT -AW .a" "SBa M W m -ay fc. -a v ' .jssw W , t 1 . ..aBBSSsaew - - i-f trs t. : ! r is vw-'wim va vow .ivy f pwrr. yv . . wvsa TVa VyV A f r KlTTI O By Margaret Caruthera. CART STANLEY sat silently by the camp fire holding a letter. Why did she reproach hlmT Did aha not know that fold ' vii all he sought T Had aha not known It before aha tnarrled hlmT For yeara he had wand r red through ithe gold range, sweating, starving, Greeting In hla search Tor the beloved reow lodea. And why should she .tjchlijo him about her lonellneaaT Was not hla Ufa without one alngle fCleara of color or pleasure? She an jrled him the Joy and freedom of the mountains and praJriea, she wrote. Little she knew of them or their fcardshlps. If aha only knew hla suf ferlngs. He took the letter from hla pocket, glanced at It once more, and threw It 'Angrily Into the fire. What did she marry him for If aha Wouldn't be happy? ' Suddenly a aenae of his cruelty oe jcurred to him aa he snatched at the letter with a vain endeavor to save it (from the flames. Only the aahea remained, and he oould not help exclaiming, "Poor little girl!" "Pleaae come hum, Cary, I'm ao lonely. I thought I could stand It, but It has been ao long since you left. Don't you understand T" Yes, he understood. She wanted him back. She bated the city. But what did ha oare for green fields, fair akles or blossoming flowers T He wanted gold! goldt He lay that night for a long time unable to sleep, watching through the moonlight aa it sifted through the trees, and when ho, fell asleep at laat It was only to dream of gold! gold! He arose at dawn but slightly re freshed and he made ready to return In a Mttle while. All day he tramped, stopping occasionally to study rocks that Indicated precious metal. But dis appointment was at all aides. At night he pitched camp, built a fire and cooked hla frugal supper. His mind waa easier. He would go back and take her away and maybe she would understand. Then he could come back and reauma hla ceaseless search and find his beloved gold. Boms dis tance away a mountain arose and on a little plateau at Its bade was an In dian camp of a dosen wigwams. As he lay there he heard a smothered rumbling and the rattle of -stones and glancing up, hs saw that a landslide had begun upon the mountain. The great dark mass, starting at the summit of the mountain, tore out great boulders In its descent, snapping off what pines blocked Ita way, and landed ila awful confusion In a huge mass upon the Indian camp. Cary leaped up and rushed across to where the little camp had been. He found the lodges ruined and the Indiana killed or burled alive In the debris. Only one of them was left an Apache squaw. Her leg wan broken and she was suf fering Intensely. Cary carried her to his-camp out of danger of further slides that threatened to occur at any moment. He set the broken limn end made her as comfortable as possible. Then he returned to where the wlg wanis had been, but everything was ruined and there was nothing of the Indians simple possessions that he could save. When he went back to his own camp Cary was puzzled what to do. He had started home out of pity for his girl wife, and begrudglngly, too, and now he found himself in a quandary. He could not leave this Indian woman alone and helpless to starve. But, murh as he knew Helen wanted to see him, he felt she would not grudge him this delay, and he decided to remain until the squaw was able to proceed to her tribe. With practiced skill ha fash ioned tepees for himself and his charge and went forth In search of provisions among the rivers and forests. He at tended his patient's wants, and the squaw appealed more easily to pity than Helen, although perhaps the white girl needed It more. Time wore on and the squaw soon became able to be about. One night as they sat partaking of a forest supper before their wigwams Cary addressed her In broken English, as was his custom. "Toko, tomorrow me go back home. You go to your own people." Yuko hesitated for -a long time as she gased Into the fire and at length looked up at Cary pleadingly and said: "Pale face no leave Injun woman. No go away. Injun woman want you ntay." Cary felt sorry for her and said ab sently, "How long you want me stay?" fine leaned across the fire and her eyes seemed to burn through the shadow as she said. "White man star all time: In jun woman love him." Cary stared at ner In mute sultorlse. What would he do. How could he rid himself of her. He had found it difficult at tlmea to rouse affection for a white girl; as for feeling affection for an Indian, never. They were elmply Injuns and that was all the consideration he had every given them. The answer decided. "No, me go tomorrow, Yuko. Me got wife at home. She sick, too. You go back your people." But the squaw pleaded that she was without people; that they had all been killed In a land slide that had ao nearly cost her her life. Besides she said he had been good to her and aha loved him and aha could not give him up. But Cary Insisted he must go home and finding her equally persistent he at last went Into his wig wam and to all appearances was soon asleep. But Yuko would not give lilm up. All night ahe eat by the fire sway ing to and fro moaning and catching at some possible meana to hold the white man. Wne aha not a woman that would not be reimlsedT Suddenly at early dawn when tho forest rustlings announced the day, she .rose, went to Cnry s wigwam and wak ing him gently said: "White man stay." "No, me go today," anawered Cary. The Indian woman bent low and whispered. "White man like gold, huhr Cary gated at her questionlngly. "Look long time for (Wild, no find him, huh?" Cary frrunted, "Yes," for hs had told her that n their talks and he could not deny U now. "Yuko know big plenty gold." Cary sat up Interested, Wss she telling him the truth he wondered or waa this mere ly a plot to keep him from going away from her. "White man marry Yuko, she fnke him where plenty gold way off down canyon, way off where Apache hold war dance heap plenty gold." Cary leaped to hla feet He had forgotteu everything. Helen, his promise, Yukr. everything but the gold. The thought of It blinded him anl he sag,rcril over against the rocks repeating over and over again, plenty told, heap plenty fold. "Yuko, he said flercwly, "If you le to me I will kill you." She smiled meaningly and answered: "Me tell truth, white man." "How big la this place, and how far off?" The squaw stretched her arms far apart and pointed down the canyon from the wigwams. Little she knew or cared of the helpless, wistful little wife wearing her soul out In wait ing In the sunbaked city she hated, and Cury thought jiot of her. He only thought of the gold. "Come on," he said Impatiently, "we must be on our way." The squaw embraced him affectionately, kissing his face en 3 hands over and over again with still unsealed Hps. "My man," she muttered. "Yes! yes!" he said. Together they started down the river bank and on through the canyon. Cary did not even want to stop for meals or rest, and the aquaw struggled on obed iently. What cared he If she were exhausted, what cared he If she were tired was he not her man now? They followed the creek for miles down the canyon tin at last they came to the place where the Apaches held their dances of war with their terrible re sults that struck tenor to the white sutler's heart. Yuko stopped suddenly as If scenting something , than s?w crossed over to a little space between two rocks that loomed like bUge walla on either aide. Sha stepped Into the space, stooped down and scooped assay the earth. Cory's face was drawn as If In pain. Her face, her letter In the ashes, her waiting arms, all came back to him. but he set . his lips hard together, clenched1 his flats and knelt beside the squaw. He hated her and be wanted to kill her,, but he loved fhe gold, and there it was. hla precious gold. She lifted a rook. And there It was, the yellow glinting In the sunlight. "All way down creek," she Rid. There at least waa the gold. Pile of lt( Just as Yuko had said, and all his; hut, oh, God, he bad bartered) hla! soul for It He snatched a pleoa of thai yellow streaked rock out of her hand! and almost kissed It. Again the squaw embraoed him. "My man! my manl aha aald. Suddenly a look of suspicion rmma into his handsome dark eyes. He broke off a piece of It, held It in the light scratched It with his knife and tossed' It In the air, as If to weigh it and then, with a deep muttered curse ha threw It far down In the canyon. "Qodll oh, OodI such gold!" He took oat of his bosom the faded, worn picture and' kissed It passionately. The face ha had' bartered for gold. "Oh, Helen, Helen. he moaned. "THE THINGS THAT ARE CAESAR'S" Tn,'a S.f ISAAVAaVava-w vm xa-wv m. gw vr-a. a.M s v.avr a. t'h"e,r e.oeidats, VlBf; per- have her Rand tattoed could possess no a NEW chapter In the history of still Rome waits, and still tha thorv lng to the rental one pays for a real- relative and 5 par oent If It passes to a on" m otner degrees or oonaterai con- """"" "uuul - n uia popes win do opened ir tna ""r''"pero - .P.VP'i dence that is. If the yearly rental ba ,u.t aangulnlty, strangers and corporations, .v IX Ingenious nrooosal of Mr. Ma- I,n." -?..po H Pape-Re!" (the "Popa. M m - - Maavw M-wes Tint AVAmn Sinn 171 1 W : I IT tUTIMg I I 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 I WflTTlM.I1 Ut M H v - over ,w.. Z-V"? "V"f- ... ..:(i 'k7 -w k. h.,.-v. i A A teanTfte:,yr.khBa'd PRISONER OF THE VATICAN Kintf of tha .white calico dress and a red shawl over g j i. IT 7 1 1 Tk "V -v It t r n-ri i "Wu-aWd seen the ppie who Catholic World, Pius X, May Not Cross ThrWd of a daughter. $500: tincles. aunts and ' ? " !.ta!..h9:. of Hi 3 Palace Without Rermdiatind Pnlirv nf CrMtrk descendants, Z60f; brothers or wrI" vory ruuo uwui ii, uui suppus r e - - - of the grana rather or grand- moumt mm a woman wuu wouiu or their descendants. 1B0; per- have her hand tattoed could possess no warn mora than $500 a year. lng to the rental one pays for a real- relative and 5 par oent If It passes to a on" in other degrees or collateral con- "JI' BDOUl D,ln siareu ai m Not all pensioner, and annuities are Smi111 l- u "le r1' rental b direct hair. f ",Yo"0"l,'r" vimtiy across from this woman sat axed only thoae exceeding $140 a year. " "In Germany very small Inheritances After the inheritance reaches $15- another, who would have haughtily re- Contrasted with the only system In ( .V . v are exempt, uui m uui i so enarpiy uuu mere is added a progressive rata wns "una t in uun uinm vjw.n umjr ii; i.uryuBo ui yj- progressive tnat an inneruance no VYanoe, the change will mean a serious lng the expenses of the Boer war. There agricultural or forest lands which m.na have been stretches of as manv as 10 I7KQ AAA it it nui i duiini The small bondholder whose Income Par" . wlo'i n0 infwme t"x wa" tives, la taxed at the rate of about 25 over $600,000. 15 per cent of the whole. 6h had on a plum-oolored auit, mad The world knows, or at any rata gaa- world, and that he will go to Venice ins small ounauuiuor, wuubv luuvuia Imnosed in Enaland. and tha amount is i-v. . . . ' i i. .. , v.r, tio-ht tiirnurh tha waiat htnm .. . .. . .. . t ..m. . a. , aa - ... ill u -... lit . . , . ... . , I'1-1 " nnici I m.ni law 01 ' ,- n .. " " f ' arailV DeilOVeS. IDH Ut POPS pines IOT . vuui.i Twin iur a cfl4lira) 111 Is $1,600 a year, will have to pay $4S a arranged .according, to a eliding scale, ,.ThA -r.nh v.. 1898 was reoealed. so that the nroh- WiJe lace revers and cuffe were used ' "!" ": .V afl !L v" .w- the summer. But the nrobabilitv 1. tha - - . , - ' ... a , i.n. a i t n se iriMnnm wnicn linn imi iijju li t i iib . x . . s way re- f J"? v .ni j 7i.. . .v wul never F na th-t he wui die noi in or taxation. Which Starts With 1 Der cniicmm u leu lo we ioi or in, i uuui. -t,r a rn.l rnrt from tha vatlnan to . owan lch ex- cent and reachpa. In tha nun nf distant- Thla woman waa dressed in the height r ....... that Plus Intends to break down int rel- ly related or unrelated persons receiving of fashion, according to her own opinion. . carriaa inio eneot tnB barrier between himself and tha Klnsr'i And tha nnrta rumiln, fha loney, the Philadelphia financier, "prisoner of the Vatican" the third of for buying a strip of land to oon- hla line. mow ana again it caa been aaserted Intends to break year. Instead of $25 at present He who receives an annuity of $1,600 a year must pay $74 a year, Instead of H25 now. imposed for paying the expenses of the next lower rate, governed by the exigency which makes .wui, .. , v.,m ti,. lem of amrin- rolnK in tht. any tax at all necessary. nrr,.iv. Hntnia t tn anri tht mains with the states. Jacket. Her hat was tilted far over her politics of tha Vatican. and be Interred In his tlnv kinrrinm Not generally known Is the fact that each higher rate la Imposed only on the , The main difficulty in the way of nose, and long ostrich plumes were For tj,a spaa Of an average man's The Italian government has left tha In the United States an Income tax was excess above the amount subject to the leaving such a matter In the hands of raised high over the. top and fell oyer Dl , T ,,a , n . ,. three prisoners of the Vatican, one ur ine state governments is the lacic or onw iuw, nm iran u wwr prajnuu -- . ier anotner, unmolested. At any hour a snarp wing inai looaea aangerous to as a iaa n ran unrtiwwu um the pope ohose he might rlda forth a ,, ... . . to school every day. As a bishop he free man, for no one believes that tha uvcr rn.it l 1 1 1 litHuiiniir wbi - . ... - rfAAAnm nr ava a..i . orately embroidered veil, white to wana.r aoout tn. v.nic. -- her waist. A large glittering waa elected pope. Oulseppe . Sarto be- lu. T " J hl? XMZJ vou were axnectail to wini iiir name the "nrlsonars or tne Vatican, ana - .ir . : ' : Z.- : Z rw7 Th in.m.. h is 000 a civil war, out at no other time baa it r. t,i..i i unirormuv ana tne preference shown ln- r , , 7 Vt been found necessary. niZ'ttKant tAtement hearlna heritors in one state over another. get near. wear must pay $120, instead of $63. . .. vnh this significant statement bearing shm, m th. ntinni )nv,,it. t. Hanainsr The bondholder of $S,000 Incoma TT". "a," J,," ,'" 0n ih? 'uW8?t:. again be passed and approved; this dlf- elan M pay $16, in place of RrCI. vro Ar comes ei?her to the coury. aa whofe" fctf ImSr "of&.s SStt ine ciuien gaining iiz.uuu tnis is ' ","''"" '"il'l ''" r to the lnaividuaJs lnnerltlng the have been reshaping their tax lawa pin. which the sa!nry of a member of the French " . . , -i u0- money by permitting the transmission In other ways. In rarta of the west, diamond ',,.,, .. Q t7.K ,..,, With the public mind engrossed In in their entirety of such enormous for- for instance, there is a disposition to Another pin was stuok on one side of when he realised that In all probability vu !m,n r' -"'"si pay io, inaicaa i war matters, the ineomo tax passed by tunes as have been accumulated In avoid taxation of personal property ex- her waist A big buckle, atudded with ha would never again set eyes on Ven- f thmrt, ..fv, . . 1248. the congress of the United States in America." cept securities, but to make these.' to- stones, emphasised her waist line. Be- ice, never even take one step beyond the Mi.r0i. "h -n 'JSM. The bondholder of $12. flOO income will 1S2 met with hardly any opposition: While the United States government gether with real estate and corporatlona, cause she was corpulent her skirt Vatican walls. He entered the conclavo "J"" VP' V" witkXl At.n ,v ., 12n .,,.. nf ls4 t f hl, aI but when, in 1894, congress again passed has done little thus far In the way of gear tha burden. There are other states, hitched up In front and disclosed a pair a free man. He emerged -the pope- f-V0 i"" fv ay $1,120. m place of 1994. If hla sal- gn lncome tax tne ,prem, COUrt, by a taxing incomes and Inheritances, tndl- however, which still maintain such ot feet encased In low shoes with enor- king of tha Catholic world, but a king ) V1 ,51,0". a"u"!L ,' th f eJa5t ?fih? ary goes up to $:o,000, he must pay vole of 6 to 4, declared it unconstltu- vldual states have done a great deal. fine meshes on the personal property mous black bows and very high French who might not cross the threshold of F. p. (k., 7l ,,. a 5 ?C ?! 1,910. instead of 1,541. tional. , More than half the states have Inher- drgnet that even watohes and finger A larg gold chatelaine purse his palace Vlthout repudiaUng tha pol- J" ei1,1JJ,J n.i J,' JJJLF.Jl if the nre-irfent of PVanr. h. inei,i.d Tho law of ls62 flrst relieved all in- ltance taxes. The first to adopt It was rings do not escape. dangled from one wrist' In the other lor Of the church of Rome. SiL anh.i el. .aiH 1 eyIf r y If the president of France be Included, romes under J600 ,hen ,,,. ) 000 rennsvlvanla, in 1826. Then until 1R9B Altogether, It ls an Interesting sub- hand she held an umbrella with a heavy Vhatever view be taken of the policy th?rK"chesme , f?r J??8'"" ne P.pe tie must pay from his $120,000 salary Bmi finally, before It was repealed in tho legislation was confined principally jct, this question of rendering In tha ld handle. of the popes in choosing to be prisoners TP" J? coPtd by the Vatican, for n im nrnhahia that nn tne simple reason that the 40 rearsr oh- n.onu. ii HirHU ill ii m. j u'iiuiioiuer i ' i . utiun v i. . .i . . . 1 " " . " - " " " JV v . . . , -. -- iiiuisi njuutuia auiu l uuuifti uonBvr. ini iiavlng tha same income must pay $12, 4)00, Instead of $7,600. In one important respect the pro posed French income lax differs from relieved all Incomes under $4.U00. Mnre l9fi most of the Inheritance tax things that are Caesar's." Thus It can. De seen tnat tne tennency iiiinm nas oeen passea oy ino va- which ls bound In this country has been to shirt the nuns siaies. tentlon of 1 v.,,T.An rt tavatlnn nntn (hn rr-Y ir A nationnl inherltflnra law waa naaned hana k.fn,. wel-to-do. and Inter repealed. probiem ls readied! That an Income tax in rnis country vnauun is noticea in a com those In vogue in Germany and Eng- would ot be collected without difficulty parlson of the inheritance laws of the land: in the later countries only the in- 1b shown by the experience ftacK in ishs. 1 u ,""" iax rang a... . .m.j ,n- p when all incomes over $1,000 were sub- several instances, from 3 per eoclal standing- or business of the i dividual and the amount of work he Ject to a tax. Out of a'population of I'" cent of the fortune bequeathed, but T3 A "D If A TTTD V wa n" 87 000 000 It is said that only 259,888 the mn!,t prevalent rata is 6 per cent -UxXXVAVJ X. A A 11X Jj-" Both W he persons acknowledged Incomes above usually Inheritances of less than $500 f T 1 "Kf 1 l)a-r1 that figure. are exceptwi from tax. but some states LiOStlimeS W Om by Mod- was the i inn ww vskcms ui . asrss vw nova 4 a vmi Vfc a s Y . j. i " . n " . . la. one . laughing at the tattoed woman, but didn t organisation except tne cnurcn or Kome ,.' , i m lu" aims Roma Rut tha tattrtax" lmttttn n,v,t tliAiiaht ita aiinrama head anil raiaaa a narnatua 1 would no longer hold the most eminent of laughing at her, undoubtedly because barrier against the friendship of tha prisoner In the world. she saw nothing unusual in her appear- Italian King. at nd to engage the closest at- succeed very well, for a broad smile could have maintained such a policy so worm or the imprisonment" of eglslators for years, per- would spread Itself ovar her face every unflinchingly for so many years & pol- Pppe would be lost. The papal cla the wisest solution of the few minutes. ley which exacts such a sacrifice from """vi forth, but R nUBt eXDend In iraln nir h s Income ra. "ni ... v,., i,j .1.. , 1 " ' ' " Among the rank and file, perhaps the .'"i 'V. i.i SurB a" '!0U, T-tT T 1 1 . sentiment in favor of an inheritance tax "f.h"" "8lvh a. IIJ-OOO. Crn Women 3S RlfllCuloua u iimur 11 is ciear. xaKe ine income or is more pronouncea. : . "wbioomo 720 a year. On thla the tradesman tnust pay $7. the larger the difference In actual personal labor expended In earnlnsr the Income posmon or it. - A- n . ... . By Irene waraner. I HERE was a certain woman In The Idea is simple enougn. wnen "":;."," '"-''s io raio a Ifhva aa I affnn IVI a lr one has exerted energy and enterprise K a,moU?J of tha 10 WtnCrfl 43 a0 XMarK8 sufficient to accumulafe a large fortune, inn "i h..n ,,h wld aPPal. the 3Ja, A -.a, T T- one is held by law and popular opinion a l h t0 CU.rb the Aassln. n a OaVage XrC TO Ufl to have a considerable say as to the dis- lr, ,"ne " '"!.ion t0 nther of irwn oz inn a . , inH ita.w no nges, In the Af JMbN IN RAR- ance- Bn was dressed Just aa thou PrUoner for Life. er cent to i .. ' sanas or otner women ores, mat i,ost 1 emoortl jf Owef. bo to tne end or his days Pius x. women were examples of bar- Sine the nine thousand remaining will probably live rent ud within th toms, wnicn you may tninit Frenoh Zouaves received the nontlflcal r.ti.n nr,a. .m'. ..i.u . more glaring example depends , . ' "--. ""i"'"" upon your point of view. 1 oiesomg in tne square ox ot meters, m friends In Venice, yet unable to look 111 oeptemDer, itiv, ana marcnea ou or on Vanlce again, surrounded with some Eggs Without Shells. Rome, which had surrendered to tha 0f tho most wonderful treasures tha From tha National Druggist. Sardinian troops, the "temporal power" world has produced, yet deprived of thT Russian exporters, to avoid an ex- or 0" nM Deon mwa most treturured possession of tha poor- In other words th. n,r,nn,i nff.. i. ..... "T.r"". ' " l,ut ln the cases or persons nneriting . i - v """ J" " M iven preieiBnce, wnue tne ability of fortunes In the making of which they jeV York iVuf..r. i i, 1 I money to earn mor.ey is more heavily have taken no part, that feeling. Is dif- pW 10rK leIslt"'"9 In 1897 served I Tlfe same Incom-I7.0 a XUlIy 1 this applicable to those cJrT &W.U?bS? & a?.".?! v.sr In - --j - -f .. . I coiiaierni neirs. wnere the, .atnt. Oermnny is taxed $17 a year, while in fa"('8 wnere persons pi oistant ties oi reeded $500,000, there was to he levied England It is not taxed at all. oioon or no ties at ail innerit lortunea. ln addition tn the reEular tax. an ao When one's yearly Income rtach.. "",J'llJ"Ltan H nnhf " Ih. cum.ulfitJn A'lV' !.??' "t. ceeslve freight on eggs as well as to toP which St Peter's and the rati- ,ft rtallan peasant his Ubsrty. avoid loss from breakage and from stanas. nut rope i-ius ia, wno The vatloan gardens have often bn anniiino- h ht ahtn them without the haa convened the council which pro- described, as amon tha mnit heantlful certain street car the other day ahell 1. s., broken and tha contents put e'almed the dogma of papal infallibility, in the world, but Mr. Douglas Bladen who attracted no end of atten- up ln airtight block tin boxes, with or waa "Ind man t0 acknowl- My, ln ij, recent book on the vatloan tlon. This on account of her left without salt according- to tha taste of 'ag' on enaiI r,"f onurcn f fm that If he wished to Walk one mil hand. th d-tnmai such a collPe ' Immemorial claims Plus X would have to follow an tha Tt -mum a hl0 hrnwn havi1 fatrl rlaan - 1 . temporal power. noma, 11 - IB SaiU, 1U in- .yii ewi.iruiiiiu --a r w ALffltt. II UVJJk. UUfldaillw BUT VI O-a -c s 90 wim f l.ooo a what his 021; .in Oermauy. $32 atame income ts tax atmallar traaesma 117; and the bon - As enacts nisurr ii iuui, nun. t-vrn xne man? hiv. f,ii.. i.Va nV. I.aa In nronnrtlon thnn dn n.r. "" "ave fallen into line. in an h nan h can always afford to wait and Plus -IX V -.1. a.V, . ' . ea WKn,H. ""2 the vatloan and ' i""", " ."f posed, the degree of relationship of the In the " of direct heir, .h... .h- " rested on th handle of a market l8 sol(J b, weight the slie running from Zh t hlmaei ,.V& in rTK .P Lh? donort wel1 s the Prt a.gtate exceeded $1,000,000. there was tc basket. It was highly decorated. These half kilogram up to a pud (soma 18 waited the opportunity when hs could ana. vineyard, besides the claesio i t.. ... . vimL him i.t'i r mav nave ian in iiio win- nA- .riH in o.Mit i . . , . j , Li ,,i i v.. .1. v. fninmn.w it,. , . i nram oi mora rajnoua memo nr. in ins ixed, ln the case of the i" ,t thn fortune, may be considered, tax an aocurnulating rate of onj-li.ii f r,a.iaH smiles, of tha kind that "won't v M, tforiiSIln Mokina-and for power which had been taken away from Prln time vlo eU Md axemonest cyola n 117 the m.rrh.M In the matter of Inheritance tax, j per cert for each 1250 oon iTr ii peoples smiles, or the Kind tnat wont five rubles. For use in cooKing ana lor r. . . ItaJia bwota mens and squills, "blus aa the Roman nL?;'' ratrclmi, Swltxerlann th- rir-t munin m io cSA n,m n'h. ,. .J. J.U0 .U.D ta .m.nfr" fnr ih. hj in a limited time these tinned or preserved "lm..Dy t"8"""? wPrP- .v- .,.. x. ci.a k. na tne nonanoiaers, 02. io n i ; a.vw,vv j cn.tn-r, un rate oi l per v. ... - if. that la rnr nearly years mi popo nas ' ' a " . . . , the Income mounts higher. France nrfZl lfi Progressive rates. Great cent on the entire estate for each $250.- an elaborate design St-Vnnlll d doesrVt remained Xht . prisoner of the Vatican. aXJn, P- Oranges Wg in golden l-hlgher-trtbutr from even th rm.nTw.tri wrrt:. 81,(5 .1Franc nd Oer- 000, yxcept where the estate exceeded Around the wrist ran an intricate pat- "hS,J UT? nljF fSJ, etill refusing to recognise the new king- TrofusJon-rroni ths trees. From ithaterw nV.antttr-. . ion of Italy, still waiting tne moment " wners ins pope wants me yaow 2ki- which never arrives when he tnay Campagna can be seen spread out Te tu..,.J emerge once more aa "pope-king" In if act a" these delights can caroalyWoni.! knuckles were lace-like branches with tarf, Jl2. zUll iUftiCB nciti lauv-iiAQ us mivim Willi . , i v w i tv i the assem- little spirals running out from them Russian eggs, pays aignt r. . p tn senate. here and there. The longest of these Ior n iff"J)lall.lX. "7 X. -llZt as fffVench merchant $1,410, and the French -r,m n . - - 4, ... ....... gxaansman. , . . ... After ones salary has reached $20, 0o there is no further increase in the taxation In France. - Whlla, in Franoa, a salary under $50 ays tax, an annuii muiu 1 1 - I fn. IK. lanlr A wkl.h i r, o . . L. , . i. .a a-i aff-ffaft. nANId tnfl Wfl EDI Or UIO SneilS nrL ni TV Jl.l T WT . - a,,M-.a) . ... 1. . .a 1. 1 . .W..TK 1 , . .j .... w v, VM , . , nuO Mil innHTT- I Mil 1 1 1 1 in II U I F I III 1 II M III 1 11 1 1 1 1 1. 1 . -kib-i . " . T n I1HII r lllfl 1A. lUWi. 1 l.ll A I 1 I 1 in. VUUU.W . 1 u.B HUUI Ul 111. IU1UIVU, leas are practically exempt itance aet which fulfilled most oi tha Thia fkeev oealtm was o-lven rharartar and tha extra freight tarlft on eggs. .. fiexiblT carried on tha exeat hattli mf The world's riohsst tanestriea. son hair kilo (a tiio is a hoped by Rome that Germany wmld Its most treasured - manuscripts, ara '"" vi -.wu come to tne assistance or tha noftiff. nousea in tne Vatican and hl. -eters. the date and hour but Bismarck dashed those hopes th ths Tet even the contemplation of thesa antardlnflr afrainst , n M,i,u i. . l. . w . -. In. t-l.ka.ai . . . .... .n.t , . . i .v. ... K , E.T- d gi uijuu nun luo icyi viiai-. ll II., no . , . a v wvswiir, 1 Will w llivru a 11 1 ' The amount of aware that anv such Question existed" satisfy ths soul of any man who ln his n.lh ,- iRoftnnX. tw.h,e.n an- 'state exceeds cates of the system. these. On the third finger was executed whether' Of .... ".- ." u"u ico "j uia- in ine . v"r. ui iuow, an lnneritance a itrra-s Tin witn a aauare aettina. nine mv in soyernrnent "traniier hlood, the under $10,008 Is exempted from taxa- The design Itself wss really ery spud slse, must bear "in SvanI f. vl8 neTly 18 er cent tloa: In the other case of a husband, 4 artistic, the lines being free and grace- of its . closing, thus " rranoe, under the Crorresslva lineal issue, lineal aneMtnr ulnni.il - e.il .nil n ttmA ham tftnA u anm.nn. intMn-r atala es-sa. - Jnta must Day a tax of 114. exceeds 110 ooannP' an torltn mutually acknowledged child. $1,000; who knew his business, for ft waa re- eggs it up ln boxes and annually ex- as ths question of tha papal claims te childhood trotted barefooted over tha J0 must pay a t . .10'Voa'' pays Over 20 Der brothers. Sisters and their ne-.renr1.nc markahlv nl.ln nnrted la anormoua and constantly trnv. nnmlnlnn n.- Pnn. " T tfall.n Kill. mA a.aa tA . m . " 11 passes W a OUtaat WlIS or WldOW Of a son or hu.hud Taa woman haraalf wu aa Italian, a Ina enormous and constantly grow- dominion over Roma ' Italian hills, and now lives forbidden U io aViii died. ilu x is pontirr. ana waut svsn in tha gtraata of Roma,