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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY jbURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY, '23. 1903. . : v- oTfli 1 i$r n . 1 ; , i i yy ,11 .1" i i jm w iv ill ' i t Kb u -mimrm hu t. iw in an it rnroN tv.r wnrir wnn rim rniHei. uut lie wurivru iiuwhubvh Know now. ior a merp rnr J I I t I I I l 1 C 1 themselves, with his brain as well as his hands and tance. Rut In 1901 his three-act drama. Latholic. and. though aurferlng ugon es . ' ronventlonal idea It Is not th ' 1- I ' I - l i One ' of these, her daughter Elizabeth, the thought of th. foreign yokeunder ' I 4 .ij .1 .- 1 harama h wife of Thomas Fleet. He which his people groaned weighed heav- lie esteem and caused him to be ae- with the calmness that only great souls ''""P cv 5. ' Tk.'I i..Si 'I M l JL A, cMl, was a printer, living In Pudding Lano. ily upon hfm. This melancholy Is com- knowkdged n the greatest writer of can snow 'nc" crossing the gulf. hrt c" every nrtNlia hit M I I I T, yCSv " a place whose name had so savory a mon to Polish and BuFsian youth They Poland during the past century. Beauty " " , ppnXrfor hli 'U 7 ' ,fr taste In the old lady's mouth she in- drow.n It. or try to drown it. In disslpa- of language Dantelan .trength. im- Iowa Is also becoming doubtful The lnntni .nrt nets resrVonsll le for hlm-l k ' stfDf'zi aisled on going to live with him as tlon. Wysntanskl did likewise and roense dramatic effect, a portrayal of main trouble Is Governor Cummins, a K,hB there is In hlV.n I mirror ' nurs. of honor "o his son and heir. To tolled llko (ha proverbial negro as well, the events of every-day fife, blended rank disturber of the Q. O. P. wMch howl T him to himself just as' i mm' m ft " am. m m "W PERSONAL HONOR, HOW: TO DEFEND IT-Somc Deductions From Shakcspcarc'e Drama',' King . Henry IV Br Erneit Von Wlldenbrucb, turnout tlments ar. ho longer ours. Isn't that ' n.rmn iumI - ' . .' COT fitrinf. hon.vtr. that ahanavar I ELI ;tl. no ;; honor "XnblU ft ""S ynw- " - as ik ik wars lumeminv naDMhinv ai how If honor prick m off th present tltn, ! thmt only tbri when I com. ont JIow tVJLJ. h 'JLMLV . WW thenT Can honor Mt to feallnn which U dormant in ua almost I lest No. Or an arm? NO. Or take In the same way aa an electric current! thai rrief of & wound. No Honor eauaes the leg or a rrog to move, ai away tha griar or a wouna. o. xionor thou h u hB Mn d)J(d fof a 1(m fjm,T hath no aklll In urgery, then? No. It r, hardiv ha ma. and almost iimui. What la honor? A word. What la In taneously with Bhakeapeara, other areat that word honorT What Uih, jg. to anothauntry.Sp.ln Up, alrT A trim rackonlnr, Who hath ItT drmmM In whlch tha queatlon tt honor mat aiea o weaneay. vum hs bean touched upon, out tnair aeiisn feel It? No. Doth ha hear Jt? No. ot honor awakena abaolutaly no feeling is u lnsensioifi, nvn i within Ua. ?nt- NUt WhT nDeVr?ot7onhwllf at What do. thla ahowt That tha lnf! N.0-..!- Hf0"0" word honor, aa Shakespeare felt It. la hnn-V .' mi;! -rutVh.on ad .o anda ' ' b n,s hllt u cannot ba ii.0no..-M.m " "cutch,on; nd ,0 Daa dead, but must ba a living powar In our These worda are Falataffa, whom aouia. fthiakeaneare in his drama. King Henry And thla la what it means: Honor IV. makes philosophise about Ttonor. And a felt by men of tha German race Is I after he haa finished the trunfpts ring different from out. and on the field of Shrewabary th have tha Latin two Henrys Henry Monmouth. Pf the conception which nation, to whom It tine mean a conventional Idea; to ua It I of Wales and Henry Percy, called Hot- a matter or sentiment, ana ior ims .ulh .nmhir imth in. reason wa sneak of sense of honor. But aplred with the only thought to win because sentiment la the element upon tne omer in ciuei. mi wmun wwou hwio io .nwi K w nm,r. ...ntH4 I n TnAAIrw tit malra a mlnma Thaaa nA nrlnl. honor Oy Slaying is&T.&sm d,: Trinht:noyo'vMet' sSf'TihT.E ?hb.OU.h.bdUe.- .r7'-.l7.rW litlTpl a, OT'c'ut oTfh-1: hSt".e oonor ,.a flame a fir. mornlhg till night, up stairs and down verltabl? goose, with wide-open mouth, f?'1! Viia?aff Pfella thlt n.,ver f,0M J??1, .SaUt-jf,ir'yAbM2! stairs, and In my lady's chamber, till .howlng that tha-proverbial lrreverenc. n hn.,r 1 f. not bfe to do up"k lIle .1 UL 'rt her son-in-law became sensibly alarmed r sons-in-law la not of a recent origin. n tnat n..nor ..nt. t0v.A0' Wn.'ch permeates our whole being, and w n nui di I nt'f n L nririn. . . . . i v. . . . ... , . t ..iii. v... ..ni,,. uir, i.r.. .l! aiiTii' nas me power ui uuuur w t.iia us that Besides me written jh m,..t hv.f ..:".h. n 7.r iElL2ri UC'".."7.U.VA ahown more powerfully than here, where there ,xl.t. ,nother unwritten law i Ml oi ine divine nre wiicn rriuasa m be quenched?' It Is well for the world that she wis a law unto herself. f upstart aon-ln-law could control her keep her from humming and cooing uer own inn win. , Thomas Fleet history does not aav. We u u, rr ,. A ha'ppy thought occurred to Thomas have every reason to believe, however, other' The former want to have noth- th. two mniat riorinus neroes oi r.na )iti i m..a nhv vniintiv as th.!?.-7 " Mpe"' 01 land, thirsting "for honor, rush at on- wimtist obe tha oo(fe8 We carry' th.. o How the Immortal author bora thla r""V'er'""l"""."".."' ,n.wr . our '""A. or ,,. e W. Vk ,n ln" aame count, n m ni vw moih inherited it Wltn our ucrman uiouu, nt T.Jlt r thl n,rC'. L7 -k-5 but two different kinds of men who ara nd th, inSKft who aentenre. according ul thought of lha ungracious but shrewd ..n.ih.j i,r. i.-ait.r i tti one. - . . Falstaff laughs at the thought that rormer wanis to nsv. ,.,,- h h d j ,d . h)m wnt to th honor caua It cannot but cven the mau , no Kaistaff r ieei. lie priniea una boki buhrs bhu mm enn iuok n jubi n sweeny as ane n to do wl Hallna t l.la nrln'ffnir hmtlaa In Vtl rl - ha1 t Wm all AtVai trlala a. annnii. . . . drngLane: Vv. Vt"a sn of .meth.ng -f "hf7 llfi"" Bh po." hir fTolM tT Wm." The iatT.r rlak ffm'e". "ST f ofloe'dlS'ot hono'r! good about to come to him that his pre- soul in patience and continued her gen- Ufe Jnd limbs because honor to them !m.e" l" !arv Wllrtlcult so to soeak to clous mother-ln-law. w th i her ndWs tl. ministry to the little ones, still 1, worth more than life because it Is f ''JVwJVod iSd master Pwfthottt rocklnga and lullabys, had rut her.elf gathering them lnto her arms and Booth- everything. Hhakespeare, aa the great J V ,0ow2hnl2dvo tha wav w thout In his way? He stopped asking the ir- lng end Haddenlng their heart, after poet.' doeS not judge. The fact which Bi ?ulnlJ Tcommknd ranra.alhla inn.tlar fn rnnt lean and tl.a ihlilnvi nt nlH mm h.j 'all.. akn.. C. ..11. ... .... I. hl. Ik.l ln an SUUlOrliy tO gle me LOIII Ulttllu . v " - - - p. . iuiivii w . 1 1 3 LSI 1. ua iinio in iniq. 1 1 v 1 1 v . 1 1 v . . .. urged her to sing more, and while ne her. not weary or her task, but buay as the soul of Falstaff is ridiculous, but There nave oeen urae m sat In her arm chair or shuffled about ever with it when the tlma cam. for In the aoul of a Henry Is a feeling, an when this task lias been easier. Ihose the room, lost In sweet dreams, he care- her motherly sou! to spread Its wings emotion atronger than everything else, were the times when powerail move- runy wrote aown what ne couia or tne ana riy away to tne great company or The conclusion to be drawn from menis came inio m- ""- not leave me inuivmum wmi or power to form his own mental Ideals, but forced him with all hla nower and streneth to take part for or against these movements. Buch time ! those or me rerormauon auu oi revolutions, or of the great ware hlch whole peoples arose to delena These times were hlch were so pow kened even among the masses the desire to fight for the evolution of mankind. Hut holidays soon pass N THE list f admissions to the Old South church In the year 1698 oc curs the Immortal name of Ellta beth Goose. The maiden name of this venerable lady was Elizabeth Foster. Bhe lived In Charlestow where she was born, until her marriage, when ahe came to Boston, where her thrifty husband, Isaac Goose, had a green pasture ready for her, on what Is now Washington street and Including the land In and about Temple place. rhymes which fell from her lips. children In heaven. . this Is verv Plain to me. Ills notes rapidly accumulated, and Buch la tha true story of Mother But Shakespeare wrote In the slx In a little while he had enough of them Goose. teenth century, and his Ideas and sen- POLAND'S MOST VERSATILE GENIUS-Stran sr. of T r C C 1 XT T 1 T O 1 which wnuiw Lire Dtory or Dtanislas Wyspianski, Poet, Painter, Dculptor rutin trS'il?. w n, ' A erful that they awa w From a Staff Correspondent. ARSAW, ian. li. Death Just laid Its hand upon a re markable man whom compe tent critics have ''declared to For every His health began to fall him. Then with an exhibition of the supernatural has in Cracow began a movement amongst are worked into a play which only a me uoncunians to goi away irom tne master nana couia save rrom meio- nystericai women or their class. Ar- drama, and, in saving It, tists. lioets and sclilntora married mm- feet that keens Its audlen .nt t-. i . v. . . ....,i... i.... . . v. i w . v. i - . . i not look UDW mnt ti,. . ,v.iv, l i .. .v.t. ,.itr j i i .i not arise in lofty flight towards tn be the most versatile genius thc.. ,.nion. th.v helleve are daatlnan ll-eranoe " "Rnla.lM th. Bold " "Cn- "'. but crawls along the grouna Voduce .I f. holiday In a week there arc six week nee snefl bound 1V- Anl 1 week-day feeling does 7,".,:... not look upward, but downward!- does i., . . . uiuw iiiiiuilBj liiry in Bhe wAs his second mate and began Poland hae produced In a century. Ha to liberate Poland. Wvaolanskl waa lmlr tha Great." "Lelewel." "The vveeK-oay reeling is m commun ler,- her maternal life as stepmother to ten dled Bt th( age 0f thirty-eight, before f"f.f'cJnV' attracted by the movement Rwk," and several plays and poems Iherre- understands only children, to which ahe rapidly added six nls work wa, haif done. Poet, painter, jdekr and shrewish Ttongu" itratid '""u:'' . t , waeklay feeling, and woe to the lndl- more. Think of It! Sixteen goslings to uramat,st and sculptor, Stanlslaa Wys- against hi. delicati nature but fefor. dealhnd 'm'a'ni'umSJ hla at?oni wlrtt vlduttl whom ihat fee".n Mt'f'- ... a single goose. No wonder that her D)arskl painted a master-piece at twen- was twenty-five ahe bore him a son. w1?lch said ha must work triumphed" At. iimV whe.? no ltorni of i.tn0URh feelings were too many for her and that p SK P " ,h.J . .nt Other children followed and finally ha ova. th? naln-wacked T dla'eaaed bodv crrl' h.u7 "nU? .Jpw,1, when n.l he poured them out 1 the rhyme ty-fivc. wrote another at twenty-alx. marrled her. ?.v, r,t iSle montfore hb. Btron ' "H10"' "cling helps man to "There, was an old womn who lived In and gave more literature to Uie world - , i1'8 rP"aVhat . lo the nower ove? look "Pard beyond every-day life Into! a ahoe." Tet her family cares seem, on , lh" Iaat decade of his life than tha A fatal disease his enemies ay tha ft!1 " hfa 1,2 "J5i l,Sr-?J aternity. where shall we ook for the; the whole, to have set lightly upon her. ,n tho aat aecaae or nis nre man tne n.m of alll(pa.loni now ma(ie ap. the flnjreri l of his rlfht hand and could power and what pow.r '1a It .which fo? she was no wild goo?e flying north author of "Qou Vadl." In a life-time pearance. The doctors said he could not no longer paint Bui he mad. tha doc- ,n frQm be,'nK ab.orbed b'y ma or south, with' every turn of the sun. His life story Is as strange as his live long, especially as his lungs were r "x hienl' fLJ i..".,.. tfTilil affairs, and which tells him thatf but ahe stayed by her nest through talents were great and varied. Born in alBo attacked. He aid he had much to . ..' . "rr f, iV li .Vi- ''here are things In existence which cold and heat, happv as the day Is long, the old-world town of Cracow, where do before he died 'andbegan to write "dJf";(f, ,"e in hni form Pn!i! you cannot feel with your hands nor' i.Hr,r ir. h. nlnatv.twn v.r iVi Voianrf s i storv Is written on every his first masterpiece, a D ay cal ed .r pu! llcnflon In book form, a couple ' wllh .... .- .,(oh .tui . if. laa of weeks before his death. There Is V." r..:". rL." mmenaiirHnie vniuen: i uowpr t i it . . .n.n o r, A Italfian o Phi fflnt. hsLVA lnld "Tha W.rinw Wnmnn " biih sveii buiv vvu rmiiBi uuvno iiimiv a....w.. - - . . vj " . . . . . . . , . nr 1 years and ahe led and fed her numerous their mark on every house he grew up poor, and painted rlftures. glass-win- "'Oj uo"L V?.i .f..HiT.." ...T." .."..' does exist, and It Is the one of which I flock and tenderly brooded them in tho amongst traditions ana tnings neauu- nows. maaonnaa. pastels, altars and re- -"" L" Lf, fn him 1pm aTin. am apeaklng honor and the sense of little enclosure on Temple place until rui. ine bob or a acuipwr ne ubSn iu mu, ii'mmc worn ns lew people "",,:'," " ' . ;,." V a " honor. . "... .v...... UAnA. T ..l IB ,,n.l...aan I iiuiivi, na A i i, ui.v.nnvn.iu ... KING OF DIAMONDS VERSUS PRINCE OF ADVENTURES . . - - , -r , - sti .1 TT7V1 T1 1 '11 C 11 T I D T3 Jj O . T 1 . 1 Til . Tk.;f TJ T T 1 there arises the nohle tvne of human- Rvlri7.n af fh I rial at hranz von Veltheim. Lihargcd Wltn JOiacKmaii oy oowy ioci, jrromise to xjc jtartiing kjecrer foiiticai r-iots may ue uncovered uy tho proud man, the strong indi-i . - - - vldualltv. A nation Who allows this "You tvoe to din out. md disappear. Is he Is. The consciousness of having within yourself such a sentiment, such a feel ins;, must develop the bent dualities of the human character, and where eurhj a feeling lives in tne numan soui.j L ONDON. Jan. 26. All England Is trip to South Africa and that with Von 1r.llL.ail A whmv. V. at ilawav Milt r n . expectantly awalUhg th, com ng "undoubtedly the coming t'rlal trial of Frani von Veltheim, tha wllJ bs thB cause celebre of tha year, daring soldier of fortune who has Readers may recall a recent article In been called "the prince of ad- tnaa. cor umn, a.un. Uy- enturers." As readers already know, mor- difficult to tell tha 'tale of Solly Von Veltheim is charged by Solly Joel Joel's life. Although so prominent and ' wlth an attempt at blackmailing. Von so rich, little is known of the, man and ..... ... A . his past except by hiB most Intimate - Veltheim was arrested In Paris, extra- ,r,er. To 0e of these I am Indebted . tilted, and after a preliminary hearing a tor much of my Information. few days ago ,waa held for trial at tha Mew Bailey. One Minor Prophet. ' S.lly J?.1 ch,e v of Sou.th Afr,(an Looking through a somewhat eele- inulti-mlllionalres. head of Barnato xjoumhb , brothers, and the De Beers Diamond brated encyclopaedia the other, day I mine a veritable king of diamonds. cam across this passage: "Joel One , -England Is awaiting the coming fight f h 4 mlnor prophets. Nothing Is to a finish between these two strong OI v v ... ., . men with intense interest because of the known of his personality, but it is com- extraordinary and sensational secrets monly accepted that he belonged to hlch the testimony promises to reveal. , . h .. That narairraDh aults Solly At tha preliminary hearing the defense J"0""1- " P ., ,?.' i lld not disclose Its hand no witnesses Joel to a T. The publications devoted . wers called In fact. But there was a t0 the biographies of eminent men, mil hasty drawing aside of the curtain In llon8jres actors and so on condescend the cross-examination questions which i1"'""'". T..v v.., gave an Insight Into what Is to come. to mention Solly a brother Jack but Thus it was revealed that there is a not the great South African multl-mll-mysterioua young girl In tho case. Her llonaire himself. Identity Is hidden under the name of Solomon Barnato Joel was the favor "KiBmet." It Is known that she was Ito nephew of the financial wonder. Bar beautiful and the daughter of one of ney Barnato, who so aatflunded the x the best families in South Africa. It Is world In a brief period by breaking all asserted, too, that she had friendly re- records In the get-rlch-quielf ace. Ha latlons with the Barnato firm and mo- had o much money that its care turned tlves Of hatred against Solly Joel. De- his brain and he Jumped overboard in pita her youth Bhe Is said to have been, mid-ocean off a cape liner Froru nOJIIlCai KPy. in uie uuuuiuiia umca uiuwii m - --7 - -- - - . Von Veltheim .I 1 Johannesburg of murders and sudden who signed tne Diggesi p.n, wi deaths, this gtS was found dead In bed, on record, one for over $86,000,000, is a onthe verv morning she was to have big lump, yet when Barnato struck it so ) at.. irui n.t Vntt t..Vi in Tnhinn.anurir tne Iirst iniog ne Cii.i j ,. killing nt Ti'rti v Ar waa to remember his family. lie brother of Solly. Von f olthelm wa's ac- sent for his favorb . sister's sons Bolo quitted of the charge of murder after a mon. Jack and Wool'. They had all three-minute deliberation of tho Jury. been given the middle "m of. B.a. ! nato. Barney trained them up in tne Ac. --.a T)irta. way they should go and soon made them secret riOX. partners In his colossal firms, Barnato The principal sensation of tho com- Brothers and the Consolidated Invest ing trial, however. Is expected to be yucroiyn)?nff.nBatlonal auiclde of the the revelations concerning a secret plot nead 0f the firm It was Solly Joel who to overthrow the Boer government. A got the Hon s share of the business, former" plot, the well-known Jameson , ( Jj.nWoof Joel was killemo.t of raid. Is said to have been engineered by ,0 today Solly Joel Is a multi-million-the Barnatos and Joel. Solly Joel was aire, living and enjoying life In Eng .t one of the-actual raiders but was a . $ntigr.$.h$ Von member of the reform committee, was veltheim later arrested, jailed and in peril of his p many long years Bolly. and the life.. being saved at the eleventh hour by otncr brethcrs Joel lived In the Trans Barney Barnato. , - g-j but jn no great style, afiolly lived ..Von Veltheim will claim that he was . noornfonteln, at that time the fash amployed by liarney Barnato on a secret lonabJe suburb of Johannesburg. Latr political mUslon at a salary of $5,000 moved to a bigger house on Hos ier month and unlimited expenses and t j ,,, He hag married early in that bis demand on bully Joel for $80,- t.f hen prospects of becoming a 600 Is not blackmail but a business re- mruVm,1Il0nSlre looked allm. Report guest for money properly due Tilm. Von J1"1, mltfc f Ma wlfJ wa8 a barmaid. iSi55 IB.11. V 5.555'. J!S At any rate she Is a good-looking wo- yi vnwuLiiiB iiaau an locnjr iui kitv uravn ri, - tn ClMitVi Atrion Via noted Of hla brother; with sending Von Vel- ?!n'tl h2eJ".t?? i obfen haS I saw thelm an Infernal machine which almost or ba" HfrVttv eventeen'-vV klllftri him anil with jgiiilni tho h daughter in one of the swagger en closures at the last Goodwood races. She still had the eolden hair. fkllled him and with pausing the burning . ip me grouna or ine hotel In which T'JD Veltheim lay helplessly sick. Tha Joel batteries will hurl many ; aftnra aenaatlnna ...In.l al. . a fortune than tha one charge of black- Joel Became Popular. fcnall. In Bolly Joel s affidavit, on ' , . . , , ,., which tha ParlaUn extradition was se- One would think that the Joels would cured, ba , charges Von Veltheim with be right in their element in Johannes- fem..r2nf ZSSk TOUraerer' burg. South African, are wont to call 4 Ther. ar. South Africans In tibndon th8 c,ty Joburg for short. But while J?df'ravC,'Un,L,Iff ikw 3nho dd-re Woolf Joel became popular, was elect- to th. penitentiary. The adventurer ha club and was often see at society memory.- hale and bearty giant eventa. Solly never managed to batter ehyalcally nd .ven aftera 10 -year, sen- down tha sacred portals. While he had fenca Probb;j?ynAy fiends n.d entertained he was not and Thar, are other, again who declare that Is not today a popular man. In Jo JoeJ la a. strenuously oros-cutlng be- burg he was famous as the "whlte--aus. ft. 71ISM th.b 1 Jmk,f boy of tha Tenderloin." In that man an that Von . Veltheim i 4 onlyi district of tha city he was a prtnoe. waiting .hi. opportunity. The, aay They tell strange stories there of ,!birdi liZu 406l iiaA it HMcaaur la Uiut u a sUdi cagi," of y rivals, of i. Bl IWbm&iW'W m ft I III Xvl mmmiL imlim i ' ttjKn: I SKl "CLftllrr OP.!' III r I MM . c 7 . i II 7 I I I r. lAhAK ki.ou iV-Tha III trn vnffrtnt sunners to t)iA rhortiA of purr I t h itmifioont lantPnfP doomed, and no nower in the world won and lost In gambling houses, forever, my boy." can save It. Therefore, the question! Things, In fact, got so lively that Sollv'joel was, and still Is. noted for arises: What may we do to protect It; llanrir liana ti n ,w a nntarl ftanp. In a..n ,1.1.. n .. St.... , i . ...... i i . . . afeaoiilt What arm wa tn rln! .....T-j t . . ...... .i.v.. . . a " IWU lllllian. VIK' IB Uie UUII III" W(-HB r.B.,.i.ra. n.""v.... I.ondon-Roiith African affairs, then the m the centre of his forehead, the other In defense of our honor? editor ot tne jonannetmurg untie. put- the bouquet of roues he always wears When this question is pur in mis; lishod a column headed "A Letter of in his miat. He is probably thc only way it is easy to Bee that it is wrong.,-, auvicc 10 oouy joei. in 11 mere oc- man in the woria who wears a woman s Honor, tne most sicrea ice. inn or tne bouquet for a boutonnlcre. One rose, humi soul, -nnnnt be attacked by any perhaps two buds, is conventional, but oulslder. Only one person enn en- Solly wears five or six full blowu and dHntrer the rpnsc -f honor within, and expensive roses. His curl he carefully tlat Is the person himself. If I'm con cultivates and wears his list on the vlneed that my conscience la clear. It back of his head so that all can see does not mn'ter bow much flOutslder ana admire this hirsute adornment. Kor aliont mid rrv nmilnst me. Vmn v jind the ret of him. he is luHt over flftv will maal them with rnnlamnt unA-A five feet, eight in height, well built but contempt is ilenl. The more a person rot stout, with a typical German He- li nhle to meet with silent coiltompt, brew type of nice, rather forbidding In the more he Is worth as pn individual. aspect His moustache Is very black On the other side. If nobody altacks ana very ncavy. m. If nohor'y savs n word sealnst me, nnd irv own conscie-nce condemns me. fttt Born Gamblers. I am lout. Every day we read In the papers about suicide, , for which noj ah tne joeis are born gamblers, reason can be found. We try to ex- rr i . . . i r- 1 1 . . t n 1 I l,nM I. n.. . nA.11.1. u.. i iirv iiiv e- iw.iiiaj. ouiiy ana j. u. are i'iiin iiir-iu .,-i . iM,BriUir w n v iv two of the hlarirMt rare horaa owner. "'IPKOSlnir the indivl'lusl to have beST . i - i j a j ., ",rk or ' have suddenly heeome In uiri.ucm in i:,nBiaiiu. nun bi uiey san. Hut there is ntlll another expli-li were in South Africa. Solly would at- nation, that the indp-e who Uvea In the lend Ktrlotly to business In the morn- 1,0,11 of "very man 1ms condemned the .... . . mnn to die. lng at nis company s great orrice on rt pvn u t. .r,,p .1.-1 or ran Fox and Loveday streets In Joburg, not be attacked from without, and thst but In the afternoon would drive out to ' needs nrotrtlon against no man. It i.i. -...i i ,..i. .1.. . 1" also true that we see everv dav fu 2 a?i".. " "l rlous end notsonous attacks nralnst II IS II V I ft.... T- a 9 ..a. 1 a.1 .J"'". 'S1.""0" .wa m,ch that honor and sense of hoor 'ThelJ momnfart a " I wh-n South Africa had a memorable drought the papers published cartoons of Solly taking n bath In soda water mid In champagno. A small soda cost forty cents and champagne whs $10 a crack. Later on this extravagance was applauded. It was at the time of the Vrededorp explosion a dozen years ago. Fifty tons ot dynamite, went off and staffs are not dead todnv. Thev are even now far more numerous than Ihel heirs of Henrv Monmouth or Henryl Percy. As lonr s tho world shnl exlt we shqll see the sfrucele between the Falxfnffs mid the Itenrvs The Fnlstnff of tolny hns lost thai wit and humor, hot his gall Is as blt-l forty lives wont out with the entire n" ,!," as .;VBr- Th""H villmre. Sollv heard the new while on movements which from time to tlmeJ ennng?. Mtnin rive minutes he was taking roiii'd the hat for a sufferers' fin,. I Vln nut .1 rhanu. tn ft9rt Ann I , It to sta.t. In an hour tlie fund was movements dire completed nrvi $400,000 had been sub- y0"'. ',04.th',v appear on tho surface, the antl-non erenlstlcal. anti-milltarlstlr. antl-ri- llglous move"ients. are thev realm dli-ected against lnstitii-l are expressions of the! scribed. This act brought President ""J, ,a Jf ,nfi masses against anythlnrf Kruger to Joburg for the first tlm in '" or strong Individ years, and Joel was officially thnnked. uaIit'- I Soon after Woolf Joel was killed Solly came to England, where he Has lived for the last ten years. He has a magnificent town residence In Great ri.J .. .. J r,TT1'"ln Rtnnhnne street. Mavfair. Hnd two roun. .KY.rv J,m' w Wnt to Damascu trv places Mnl-Ten "Erlegh. near Read- "J'" 'r !Ti21,r-: n.Vhafi .t";r', Ink-, and Chlldwickbury. which he fovi. ".5" nt! ?llniate plea siunaen raa- Warning to Trolley Gar Drivers. a. scus s a In the a-ood Hotel d'Orlent: tn which wa pan peen nriven by a (blague of sand boiiKht from the late Sir 1 nle. Despite his wealth he does not ao 1-1. . lil - annroarh .ha n. "riven Circle. Vt i "Sa'a ,n the. camp, we stepped at once most of his time to hla race horses and InmSitS f Arblan N,ht" occaslonallv to his business. He la a t. V. .I?,t .k... ........ ....... familiar figure at all race meetina-s. 8nV there ws. a iSu. .iit," which In England are held dally all the 7ltv hJ ?lfJ rZ "LS year round. His stable has won some u0".,? "'H' Lu'l?eyn?more "2 of the classic events of the British turf, -u.fl"'18-".. one of the biegest of last season's X. , y ' "V "WL ,ia. e'.i being the Gold Cu? at Ascot It is cue- t?olW oar lookld Hka nna of 4l tomary in a big event such as this for Pm?' l0"kf!d ,i'ke. i?,L..I5 a necklace would Oiang the character nfl A e the owber to lead his horse Into tha , .'V,:" vv'?.,e"r.r.H' J."" .R,,.V. rdot2etecrrolird '"Kln'FwSrS1 n Instrument of dUcord 'a, ''ml LtB '.hV.?S?!J2' i?.,.nar.J??w"rd. .hA" chine tranoullly advanced throua-h the none mis nimsen. jjui joei m abtoi crowd A man was run ove- 4L n, r,nt or, A tha fart waa much com. W.V "l"." W.BS .run V.ver f - .-.--"ftna .Mi,. f.oon nan.r. monrns ago; nis. rrienos waited for the v," im ... ,i CRr 10 pome around the next day. pulled gave as his excuse, Mr. Joel was afraid tn. drlvw. frm , h and stVirir . 0f"ol!,JnTe!hsaslnis Tho frYA" ot long through him in Solly Joel has as neighbors In Lon- . truly oriental manner. 1 ... -n?sr ... don a number 6f peers and peeresses, j. h. jooi in urosvenor snuare num bers am on g his neighbors-the Duke of ante tables. Her. they played th. "Portland, tne uuko or esomerset aap; j. maximum on rea ana atucK to th. one Fierpont Morgan. Jr. Both have also color. Red mad. one of th. most re gatherrd around them many South Af- markable runs In history and tho punt- tican muiioraires, ux. inemseives, ot ers oroKU tne oanit st every table Jewish extraction. But for these friends When they returned to town Wo'otf gave the Joel live In solitary grandeur, a big dinner. It was known as th. rney nave not starueo ionaon, os rea oanquet. 'in. Tabieeiotlu; were refl Woolf Joel did; On on. occasion Woolf th. plates, th. decorations, waiters' and a friend went to Monta. -Carlo to garb. wine., av.rvthlnar. - in far. r buck the bank. They tlrejr of Youl.tt. wa. on. oflh. flrat of great freak dln-i ua wanoern bix 0 1111 noma iju.r- i:cr. wnica rrooit gave. vi..