7 .',
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THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 12, 1903.
ACIIILL ISLAflD
. t - 'it
rrn tttt Tn ttti
EI OF E
SPLIT Ol'ER
Mivx..'?vit 4. .v'.;, -v,t f' J,-r; -
.af .' ,S., V1 "..
xm-rn ....
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l
' S. Il
M H ' rl
U U JQj JJj
i ' i" j r , i - i . ' ' " . a . i . . i i ii i - . i
WML-
Continuance v; of .; 'Colonist
iU;ate From' East to ' Ore-
onTWsNtcarjStm'in
; 'Toubt May Bey Eaised
Five Dollars. ; v . ;
4. ;
(Within th ntxt few day It -will b
decided Whether the Paclflo coast is to
have colonlt rate thl , year , over ail
the transcontinental -' railroad. . and If
the Harrlman Unea wlU Uke Individual
action and maintain ' the old colonist
ratf fl& from- Missouri river point
and 111 from , Chicago. It l benevea
the Harrlman management wlU stand
eat on It vote at the recent Transcon
tlnental association meeting; and put
in thtf x& rates regardless of the action
of other. lines. r: : - ;
-'Upon the sUnd finally to be taken
' by the Union Paclflo sysum will depend
he bringing In of a large influx of set-
tlere to Oregon this year. The colonist
seasons last year brought rich returns
for the boosters' olubs of the state, and
nearly every community received con
' slderabl numbers of bomeseeker In
response to their publicity work and
the advertising done 'by the Oregon-Pe-
velopment league and railroads la th
states or ins miuai west ...
' ,. .. Ths low ratea were a oowerful induce
ment to eastern people to come to Ore
' ,'gon ana see in country or ocaie jer-
1 tnanently. Advertising done by the or-
; ganlsatlon used these rates as a basts
of their argument to homeseekers, and
after the literature on Oregon was read
'by the average easterner he found - It
hard to resist the temptation to Uke a
trip from Missouri territory to tne i-a.
clfle coast when the fare was but $26.
A higher rate would not have brought
the results attained last year, when
upwards of ls.000 people came through
the Huntington gateway on colonist
tickets.
Tots Aralnst ILow Bats.
. Whea the question of continuing the
low rates for the 'spring and fall col
onist seasons of 1808 came up at the
- recent meeting or tne Transcontinental
Passenger association tne northern
lines,, the Santa Fa and eastern rail
roads voted against the low rates, h;
s Harrlman lines sre said to have stood
, alone In favor of the low rates, and
: went on record by voting to continue
them.
When it was found that the vote was
against the rates, the Harrlman lines
served notice that they would take In
dividual action and again put In the old
rates. , ,
A new question .has now been raised
' that of all lines putting in colonist
rates, but making them l higher from
all eastern territory. A vote on this
"question is now being taken. It la yet
to be discovered whether the Harrlman
lines will rigidly adhere to their first
purpose, or whether they will be
brought into line by the other roads
should the latter vote to put in a ISO
rate from Missouri river territory and
$28 from Chicago.
Local officials of ths O. K. & N. and
.."Southern Pacific companies are non
committal. When asked to say what he
thought of the outlook. General Manager
J. P. O'Brien said: -
Objects to Criticism.
The agitation to 'compel our compa
nies to run their- trains strictly on
schedule has not done the colonist rate
for Oregon any good. It would be im-
possible for me to say what view our
, people in the east win tana or tne ques
tion when a final decision is to be
made. We have been trylng-the very
best we know how to handle the home-
; seeker movement and put our trains
tnrougn on lime during nm iaai our.
Whnn it is remembered that this col-
ionlst movement, which is the cheapest
kind of travel, lasted tnrougn aoout nve
months or the year, it can oetter do un
derstood what we have to contend, with,
. "It should be borne in mind, in crltl-
' ctstng our train service that a schedule
that hna been worked out for a seven
; car train becomes almost useless when
it is necessary to attempt to run an
11 or 13 car train on It all the way from
' Omaha to Portland and meet all the
various connections en route.
"The Union Pacific company, when
tne nomeseeker rate was zirst put in,
had planned to handle the cheap travel
only on two or three days of ths week.
. and run special trains on those aays to
taxe care or tne nomeseeaers.
" "It wss soon found to be lmnractlca
bl to ask colonists who were on the
way to wait-one or two or three days
; at Omaha for. a homeseeker train, and
the result was that the colonist travel
was given the same privilege on every
train, mis travel, was very neavy last
year. The railroads did the best they
'could to handle It and get everybody to
. vregon tnai wan tea to come."
LLAFARB
MAKE 8Y MARKET
Landlords of East Mayo Ee-
; eponsiDieor Hunger 01
i s ; insn iiteiugees. -
r- '!.' vu .
By Sir .Robert Crosier , Long. Special
.. Correspondent la ' Ireland .for , the
Hearst New Senrloe.'- A ,:
Dugort, Achill Island. County Mayo,
Jan. 10. -"Achill Island U a blot oa civ
ilisation." I remarked to ih owner of
the Dugort hotel as ws drove yesterday
toward wind-swept Docaugh village, un
der the shadows of , Croagbayn and
Sllevemore mountains. -
"It seems worse than It IsA. Tie re
plied. "You must not compare It with
England. - . '
"I do not compare It with England,"
I answered. 'I compared It with the
hungry, huddled, landless . vlllsges of
Russian, and I find that Achill is a
hundred times worse."
... I have been all over Achill, and I am
convinced that I was right. Achill is
a blot upon civilisation. And the worst
of It is, Achill Is no worse than SO other
remote oustrict in western i reinn a.
Achill island nss 7.U0U inhabitant.
and, though everywhere else Ireland's
population owinaiea, nere it increases.
Jn Achill island there Is not one square
rard of really cultlvatable land. Half
s mountain, with dry bogs stretching
almost to their stone-strewn, mist-
crowned summits: the other half la the
worst type or Irish bog-wet waste, un
redeemable. There are not trees on the
nuia. no oiras in tns neatn. bo sorinra
of water in the valleys... A never-weary
ing gal tears across this brown, arid I
waste; ana storm, ram and the en
croachlna sea wan unrelentinr war on
the efforts of men to force food from
tne soaaen grouna.
lUndlords BespoBslU.
Ths parent of the Achill folk took
he
refuge here when the landlords depeo
isast
is ll
m In
Almost In sight of Sllevemore mountain
pled
uaina ari
or uis isnaioras tnr tnirnt u mtk
porting In comfort the 7,000 of Ac hill.
Eat Mayo'
re today d
landlord they mlirht be au
fertile Dlains.
oday deserts and were It not
stretch miles of tlllabla land vhiril
naraiy a numaa, root has trod for 601
Acnui sows in ner bogs potatoes and
ryo. jn Aimnuo oiasis reap mem.,
Sometimes a little Is soared and thia
and America feed the people. This year
America nas -sent jees and tne Atlantic
blasts have taken more. The summer's
never-ending rain killed the potatoes.
There is no shelter and a single violent
storm Is enough to destroy a half year's
labor. The DOtatoes sarad wara th
sits or maroies; hair or them were bad.
even tne yeiiow "aisease-resistins" do.
tato Introduced by the Ensllah ana can.
tain succumbed to a single storm.
I talked for hours to tha naonla of
neei ana ijocaugn, ana compared what
they told me. Even abatinr ho imp mini
for the Inevitable exaggerations of un
intermitted misery, I must oonclude
mat most or the old ceonla of Achill
are threatened this winter with slow
death from starvation. The old die I
nrst.
XJye oa Small Potatoes.
The averara Achill farm eonalata of I
four or five acres of nominally "ra-
ciaimea- but actually irreclaimable bog.
mis oog, even arter - endless labor in
draining, must be tilled with the spade,
for no plough horse can cross it Aa
acre and a quarter set with potatoes
yields in a good year, perhaps three
tons of the worst of all possible foods.
The rest of the farm grows what la
re, out or r lattery. .
easant haa usually a pony,
a few sheen, which starve, fa
manage to live on the hillsides, where
stray blades of grass spring up In a
wide1 desert of heath and juniper. They
The
must pay for this graslng on every head
stocit. lie eats cnieriv
eked out with wheaten bread and "soda
IlATI
Sales Pass $4,000 Mark-
It Market to Be Made a
jj , Permanency.
'I (Spedal Dtapatok t The Tesraal.)
j , Pendleton, OtH Jan. 11. with the unl
hlning as bright as on spring day
Pendleton' first , marker' day was
decided success. . Hundred of people
of Umatilla county and buyer from all
part of the northwest were here. Four
thousand and thirty dollars and fifty
cents worth of cattle, horses, poultry
hides, . farming" implements, etc., were
som. uniy itoo wortn or sturr was left
over for the next sale, which will be
held early in February.' Market dava
will be a regular thing In Pendleton in
future, as the first sale has been more
man tne anticipated succeea. ,
SAINT'S ECCENTEICITIES
Famous Hindu ,Faklr Who Spoka
S!';"-";-, Strange. Language.
'''From tha Calcutta Statesman.!
Tha famouM fakir. Bowa Monl Bahlh
(tne silent saint), during his ions- 6
I years sojourn, at - Mirpur ' never uttert
a single word which could be under
stood by any one around him. What
I wondrous tongue he . spoke no man
knows; '-i' v ' (: --.-i f'
I Every day hundreds of pious people,
'rxn and women, flocked around him to
pay homage and. adoration. Since his
boyhood. It is said.. be had lived stark
nasea, . resolutely disdained even a loin
cloth. ' He abode if a publio lane which
was alwaya full or busy people, yet he
moved as he listed in his sacred nudity,
neither ashamed nor causing shame.
His age 'was well over 100 years. The
nalnt . never touched - gifts; Indeed he
meekly spurned them. A devout Klkh
priest looked tenderly- after him .and
ive mm morsels of food with his own
hands. ; For days, however, he would . re-
iubb to partake or rood. i
The corpse,-after being taken around
una city, rollowed by horse and palan
Iqulns fitly caparisoned for So grand a
(burden, was burled. The concourse of
mourning people who followed the sol
emn procession mustered quite tO.OOO
trvng.( , . .,.
cake brought, of course, from tha
. n i i i j t i . . - I
uiKiuiniiu, kiiu no unnu tea.
If he is able-bodied he goes to Scot
land every June to dlsr notatoea there.
and after several months of slavery,
brines back. toerbaDs 140. When tha
.crops fall and laat year they failed
ne must pay nis rent, Duy nis riour
and tea and support his old relatives
out oi mis tu.
FEATHERING WEST
i i . ; i fill ii .I : . . . , .
vi km
si 4 7"
Vwr' " ,I ' ; r ' i
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fit ' s c, . '
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i lmmmm mm .
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SMiwsaiMm'oys'aoTiEis
I. I !'
The FIERCE PRICE REDUCTIONS of last week will continue
all this although from present indications the assortment
will soon be broken1 V'
. V.;
Hundreds have taken advantage of the GREAT SAVINGS
offered why not you? REDUCTIONS IN ALL DEPTS.V;
MEN'S BUSINESS SUITS MEN'S HEAVY OVERCOATS
$50.00 SUITS REDUCED TO $35.00
.These Suits are BETTER than any $65.00 Tailor
Suits in Portland.
$40.00 SUITS, REDUCED TO ?27.50
Better than any $50.00 Suit in town.
$S5.00 SUITS' REDUCED TO $25.00
$30.00 SUITS REDUCED TO $20.00
$25.00 SUITS REDUCED TO.. $16.50
BOYS' OVERCOATS
BOYS' $15.00 OVERCOATS j.. $0.85
BOYS' $10.00 OVERCOATS $6.35
BOYS' $8.50 OVERCOATS.... $5.35
BOYS' $5.00 OVERCOATS $3.50
BOYS' $3.95 OVERCOATS., $2.50
BOYS' 50c KNEE PANTS 29
BOYS' 75c KNEE PANTS 49f
GREAT REDUCTIONS ALL OVER OUR
JUVENILE DEPARTMENT
$50.00 OVERCOATS REDUCED TO. ....$35.00
Equal to any $75.00 Tailor Overcoat . r '
$40.00 OVERCOATS REDUCED TO $27.50,
Equal to any $60.00 Tailor Overcoat ' ':J-Y:
$35.00 OVERCOATS REDUCED TO $25.00
$30.00 OVERCOATS REDUCED TO $20.00
$25.00 OVERCOATS REDUCED TO $16.50
BOYS' SCHOOL SWTS
Two-Piece SuitsIn Plain Knee Pants.-
BOYS' $12.50 KNEE PANTS SUITS ....... .$7.50
BOYS' $10.00 KNEE PANTS SUITS ..$6.50
BOYS' $7.50 KNEE PANTS SUITS. ..... .".$5.00
BOYS '$60 KNEE PANTS SUITS..... 7$4.00.
BOYS' $5.00 KNEE PANTS SUITS. .'; . .. .$3.50
LADIES' and MISSES' MAN-TAILORED COATS
LADIES' $25.00 COATS $16.85
LADIES' $20.00 COATS ..$13.85
LADIES' 315 00 COATS.. $10.35
LADIES'-$10.50 COATS ,...$ 7.35
B1LN
MOTHERS will make GREAT SAVINGS by coming here
LEADING
CLOTHIER
LONG
for vin ins RADDING HIT BY
IJlis Week's ConTention Ex
pected to Surpass Any in
History of the Order.
The old gry owl that said "to-wlt,
to-wee" In the top of the sycamore tree
lairt In lt-wlth the g&ng of hooUns
night birds that will foregather In Port
land beginning- Tuesday night The
local lodge of Owls, Portland nest No.
4, Is all prepared to entertain the sev
eral hundred fpnthnrv fnwl. that -
headed this way from some 20 or more
states and from some 220 or more lo
cal nesis
own mmm
-
I Attempt to Even Up With
His Enemies Unseats Him
From Federation Circles.
E. E. ttaddlnff failed In his effort to
convince Judge T. A. McBrlde that the
Astoria convention of the Oregon state
federation of labor had no right to re
fuse him a seat as the representative
Committee meetings to prepare for ' th8 Portland painter's union, and
mu .uepriveu a&uuiiik 01. n pun ui in.
the grand reception, entertainment,
amusement and program during the
four - dava beelnnlne- nnzt W.rin.prtuv
have been held nearly every day for a state labor circles, who ad In effect
pleasure that he hoped to have in fur.
ther getting even with nis enemies in
week past and when the out-of-town
nooters" arrive thev will t in th
camp of the enemy for sure.
There Will be at least two and nrnh.
ably three theatre parties durlnf the
grana nest session, and a .banquet will
e held at one i of the leading hotels
wnenever me "nootmen" find
such frivolity.
une new oinoers elected TueadAv
night are: J. W. Howatson. executive:
c;. j. v-arr, vice-executive; Harry Fried.
lander, vicar: J." T. Upton, secretary:
( reelected): W. c. North, treasurer. r-
elected); Drs. S. C. Slocum and Louis
Buck, nest physicians; I. Brun, throe-
'ear trustee; w. u. uirer, two-year
rusiee, ana ueorg j. (jameron. one-
year trustee.
j ne local ioage win nave 10 dele
gates entitled to vote at the arrand ni
convention, and some of the other
nortnwestern lodges win nave a much
larger vote, and for this reason there
is apt to De a spirited contest when
it comes to the election of grand of-
iicers.
Particularly large delegations are as.
sured from Spokane, Walla Walla. Se
attle, iscoma, jooise, Vancouver ami
Victoria, the latter three cities being
in ma race ror tne nonor ox entertain
ing the second grand neat gathering,
January 1909.
Meetlnea of the convention ara" tn
pe neid in isagies' nan, Second and- Tam
hill atreets, and nobody knows where
the ''fun" sessions will be held. The
reception committee is exnectlnr 1m.
tween 800 and 400 delegates from out
of-town . lodges, and they propose t
give them a touch of high life, for suol
a me Kingaom or uwi. .
;. . "
Squire Who Is. King's Friend.
. From Harper Baiar. ....
The list of; suggested fellow meets of
royalty is an anxious and serious ques
tion for the hostess, for "even-the moat
exalted have their likes and dislikes, and
Inadvertently to Introduce a jarring, ele
ment would spell disaster. Rovaltvs
favor la capricious. - - ' )
Who would have thourht that a nlaln
untitled Yorkshire. squire, with the un
promising name of Sykes. Would be one
of the most Intimate friends of the Brit-
said that he was unfit to sit as a dele
gate In a labor convention.
The mandamus nroceedlnr instituted
by Raddlng against the officials of the
state federation of labor was heard by
Judge McBrlde In the oiflces of Deputy
?' hotels xnsirici Attorney itsgeraia yesteraay
lme for an4. a demurrer to the: writ was sus-
taiifea. inis naa tne eirect or tnrow.
Ing Raddlng out of oourt and left hlra
no alternative but to begin anew the
proceedings. ,
JTo Slgnt to rn Writ.
In ustanlng the demurrer. Judge
McBrlde held that it Is the policy of
the law to interfere a little as possible
with voluntary organisations, that all
mean of redress Inside the organization
should be exhausted before application
Is made to the courts, and that he did
not think- Raddlng had exhausted all
these mean. He also denied Raddlng
the right to file an amended writ, say
ing that tne case was now outside his
jurisdiction and that there are four
judges in Multnomah county to whom
be may apply for relief.
It is not known what further action
Raddlng will Uke in the matter, but It
is not thought that he will drop it, as
he was very angry at the federation
officials for refusing him a seat in the
convention. " . .
It Is altogether probable that Raddlng
would have been permitted ' to quietly
take his .seat as a delegate; In spite
or tne zact mat several labor leaders
naa expressed tne opinion that his con
nection with the attempt to blacken
tyor xane cnaracter rendered mm
unfit td represent a' labor organisation.
lsh royal family, constantly entertaining
tne Dreaent aina- ana aneen. tarinr with
them at Sandringham, and being . gen
erally , on . term of Intimacy such
ajiiKs vary rareiy allow I , - s
, Christopher Syke is a rery notable
instance for as a a-eneral rula KnrUnii'a
king and queen pay visit that are few
and far between, and those only In a
many nouses as may aimoec. De num
bered on the fingers of one .hand.
her Friday to take over the money
and books of the federation from the
retiring secretary, T. M. Leabo, that
official positively refused to quit the
office with the cloud upon his official
career Involved in the resolution adopted
at the convention, wherein it was said
that hi account were in a tangled con
dition. There was some opposition to
exonerating the official, but the trouble
was finally patched up and all the mem
bers of the board signed a report de.
clarlng that tne accounts were correct
and above suspicion.
OBJECT TO BEING
QIVEN MUD WALKS
Much objection Is raised by residents
on Kllllngsworth avenue to the methods
of Contractor Miller & Bower, who
are laying the sidewalks between Pat-
ton, avenue and Union avenue n Kil
lingsworth. It is said tnat tne con
trantnra hiva torn un wooden walks Jr
front of the property on both sides of
ths street in sucn a manner ibi nu
residents have the choice of wading
In mud over their shoe tops or or utu
lain the street car tracks and run
ning the risk of being run over by the
train a.
The contractors have left the walks
In this condition, and. it is saia, seem
to be making no effort to push th
cement work along. Furthermore they
have opened ditches for curbs which are
especially dangerous on ivunngnwurin
avm whara there are no IlKhts. The
opinions expressed at the meeting ' of
the North Albina Improvement associa
tion last week were rar rrora compli
mentary. Some remedies were dis
cussed but no action decided upon. It
will be taken up with the city offi
cials this week.
Tha North Albina organisation has
passed resolutions Indorsing the propos
al that the city own and operate Us
own rock crushers. The club will co
operate with the Northeast Side Im-
irovement association in n project ni
ulldlnar a high bridge across the river
below the steel oriage.
Instrumental In a Plot to overthrow the
aominani taction in tne state lanor red-
e ration. It waa then that the leaders of
the convention determined to exclude
him from its deliberations.
" rrlmd Worked for Ba. ,
Raddlng, however, waa not without re
sources. He had , number of friends
among the delegates, who took ' up his
cause, organises i
a revolt against the
dominant faction and succeeded in oust
ing T. M. Leabo, secretary of the fed
eration, and several other officials.
Charles - Oram, president of the organi
sation. -was marked for-slaughter, but
his friends rallied to hi assistance and
saved him from defeat.
h 'followin- officer were elected
for .me ensuing year: Charles Oram.
resident; .- U H. Wheeler, Harry Hill,
ohn Greenwood and Mrs. I Gee. vice-
presidents, and U S. Cassldy, secretary
.u executive-board of the federation
1 composed. of th above-Officers.--
when ta executive board assembled
How It Ww.
TTrom . Harrier's Weekly.
"Was this man Harrlman an entire
stranger to your .asked tne cross-examining.
counsel of tu witness In a case
recentlytried In an Ohio court
"Wot'a that?" asked the witness, a
wary Irishman, who had been warned to
De cautious ana exact in nis answers.
Tha Auaatlon was araln nut to him.
"Well, no, sor," said the man; 1
could hardly say thot, sor. In fact, he
couldn't be, sor, for he had but one
ar-rm. sor; but he was a partial
stranger, sor. I'd never seen blm be
fur.'p SHANGHAI GOLD FLURRY
Disaster Caused to Many Specula
tlve Chinamen.
Recent China eoast papers tell of a
slump in the money market at Shang
hai that was in a way a small reflex
of the trouble of the last month here.
In the 'Shanghai Instance It was the
wavering price of gold that brought
confusion to many speculative China
men land fortunes ty a very few.
Shanghai has a curious money sys-j
tern. Rather it is tne lack or ail sys
tem that makes the neutral port' the
center of small financial whirlwind al
most every, time that a steamer sail
way. .' 'iJi .
'Being a neutrai town," wnat uninese
money, there is circulates only In the
form of email 'chanra. . Bis Mexican
dollars form the basis .of all transac
tions' in smau sums ana; a omewnai
7k Best
Is
i J
'uar of -life
a Sound Set of
Teeth
j iTnrm
'At the present time, there no excuse for bad teeth,
missing teeth or decayed stumps. Modern dentistry,
corrects all of these defects satisfactorily, quickly, with
out pain, and at a very moder
ate cost.
Timid people will find that
their fear of pain is a bugaboo
if they visit this office and take
advantage of our skill and all
modern appliances that insure perfect results. vV.r;
bur plates fit perfectly and look so natural that it is almost impossible to "detect
them from natural teeth. Crown and Bridge work we have brought" to' the highest
state of perfection. Our Bridges look as well and work as well as the natural teeth.
ra s. ii. wmxan.
GOOD SET OF TEETH
ON RUBBER PLATE...
$5.00
BEST SET OF TEETH
ON RUBBER PLATE.,
$8.00
DR. B. E,. WRIGHT-DEFi!
342 Washington St reet, Corner Seventh ,? ; I ' , ' 1
OFFICE HOURS 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.; 7;30 to 8:30 P. M.; SUNDAYS 9 A. M. to 1 P. It.
PHONE" MAIN 2119 TWELVE YEARS IN PORTLAND',
mythical tael represent tne conver
atnn of bank notes into the money nom
enclature of all China. Each bank is
sues Its own notes; thereare Russian
ruble note. English pounds and German
mark.
Ra itlnu Aoaa the Price Of gold gOV
rn th art-hance that people wanting to
send an order by mail wait almost until
the hour of a steamer sailing to draw
a nnartlr ; nil thlr bank, knowing not
what minute their accounts there mayi
shrink temporarily.
-It was under these conditions that
som of the Chinese money changer in
Shanghai began recently to .gamble on
tb price of goM. Their only stock In
trade waa a notebook and a pencils - -.
Purlng the days of the money trou
ble here and Its reflex effect on the
banks of England and France these. Chi
nese money gamblers went Into the
street in the Coast port, buying and sell
ing hypothetical gbld bars, .depending
upon the scanty news telegram of the
financial situation that sifted around
by way of India and tha coast porta to
make their deals,. , i , ' ;- -.
Many t th Chinamen had never.' seen
gold bullion: not a few had yet to look
upon their first gold coin of any denom
ination or any nation but th madness
spread ana most or tne money changers
of '-Shanghai were Involved in this con
version of fairy gold Into, real taels or
Mexican dollars. v' - r
- .The-crash cam When some of the
saner . Chinamen banded themselves to-
gether and agreed that pending acrnunt
between them . and ther S)-ut..re
should be settled at once and in tnl
money, t As a majority of the dcht-.re
affected were pHnnlless when thv !.-
bou.uuiuk ana oniy a iw isi
h
v a fii
played their cards strongly enou
win - out tne suuupn mil iur
pulled down the whole flimsy stru.
The charactertBtle ploe of C) i
legerdemain ; known- imim? f.ireM .
there as the vanish Ing act t-n.ui t i
practiced. Many of the t
able ! committed sujct'ia. i,re . I
tfielr- children (nt.j sluvry (,r rnt i
the strfit-ts-to lfr. t
pitiful end 'hanK.al' UlU
fanla. ' -