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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY, -JOURNAL. I'ORTLAND. MONDAY EVENING. APRIL 13, 1S03. mm ESURIEtt CITY .Duke de fjonbat Finds Ori ;;cntal Ppmrcii In' Greek ArchipeliffO vier. ini ty'Biiildinffs Brought to light ly Scarcners. . BjAh Marqui Do Castellan. , (miu rtm uur win.) .,- , 'rari-. April U-Pf J?1 attraction of th 'nti. ,l k! . mil ar tb public meetta tb. fob s' aeloglcal achooU .'wUMtt ' .11 tb rat nation - Th. t-co last leo ' tur'e glva at th French school war .specially tatererrtlni ' ; A Oreek -named Ixbros point out that On-ek. wag th ' official. langsag f th sultan, whll Monslsr Jlollaux. tha distinguished, di rector of th French oofbl.ltertaln4 hi audlenc with aocount of th r-( search now bIn mad M jrls. thank, to th r";!0.1! American. IX. referred to th Duke I &Tuit. wh ta, I bliv. , your only, ' A'm.'Uthfc.t th. Dui T Utj has discovered In tb Oreelc archipelago S .nrt ef orlenU.1 Pompeii of great) riches and extraordinary intr-t. 'fbj.J raearehea wr originally begun by tb. French school .t Athens la 1ST; and LL ,J ft hnildlnaa had been hronght to the light of day. Many Im portant Inscription, were found; dwil caUona, list of household got in, trades mg'i bills dstlng back as -far ae th. ..Tenth century before Cnrlat. In the ancient temple man valnatol article. J,"1'' found and what I. mor curious TTill record, written on .ton. proving that the tempi. virtually a pawn shop, where money was lent at JO per cent on all articles of f ed .val ue. This interest wa not usurious, but It ahould b addwi that at th end of five years unredeemed pledge. pecam the property of the temrle. - - Under the direction of Monger Homl the researches have been continued, and the theatre, th. Necropolis, tne port or the buried dty.'have bonn completely reconstituted.,- And thl good work 1. whollv du. to th. Duke D Loubat, who nas riven noi vaij ,7 inZTl well hi. per.onal supervision to It. Tht. American du. 1. a v.rltabl. Mecaenu. Th. French are often aeouuM of 1m. morality. Their books, .specially their novel., their paintings and the photo graph displayed In th. kiosk, their plavs and theatre hav all come in for unmerited and merited criticism. And o w. may hop. that th. world will ap- " plaud the nobl. act of th .Duke D Wontebello. who has demanded that th. shes of hi. great ancestor, the Mar shal Lannes, shall not b. contaminated by those of th. foulest writer of filthy fiction I refer to Zola. I am aorry to say that n will not succeed In pre venting this contamination. Well, -at least, the Duke Je Montebello ha. rained the approv-1 of all thow who love moral cleanliness, and be has proved to the world that France Is not so. gangrened as our enemies belUrva. Our government Is rotten wltn gan ,.' grene; but not th. patlon. If popular opinion were oonsulted on this, mattter ' ot Installing In our pantheon of - th. lllustrton. dead the bmly of Zola, who spent a lifetime purveying Indeoent lit erature, the answer, I am sura, would b. an anRry, ".Put him where you please, but not whar. ajeup th. great men of France.' ' - V ' . ' At th. Italian embassy tha othar night Iheard a t.uchlng anecdote, the uncon. clous heroin, of which was the; llttl. PrtncAM Talande. -of Italy. Bhe la year. old. and for th. f lr.t time .be ha. tnad. us. ot her royal position. Thar, was a poor old woman, to. widow of a non-commissioned officer who had been trying for many months to secure a pension. Finally sha wrote a pathetlq letter and addressed It to "Her Royal Highness, th. Prtnoess o la nils or Ba voy, at th. QulmaL Roma. . Th. let ter was riven to the king. He read I , M..filf mrA than atf1 in This fftum berlaln; "But .this letter is addressed lo th. Princess Royal pray glv It to ; . her." ; Tha chamberlain went to the nur- , s.ry, and found th. princess curled up In her little bed. fast asieen. witn a f f grave bow be placed th. letter tn her ' cnuriDy list ana went dsch io im King. ' ' "Well, what did Jh. princess say?" ; tne kins; osKea. "Nothlnsr at all. ire." ' . "Very good," said th. king. "Silence gives consent see that th. old woman ; has her pension. ;-v '- i i- r .' ' ' ''I f AMERICAN ENTERPRISE ED IP! RUSSIA DISCREDIT Pear of Competition Moycs Press to Publish Eiagffcrat ' ed Statements Concernins: Boats Bnilt . in United ' , ? ! ' -States-Lcivls iibns Contracts . .' r ; By Malcolm Clark. ' ' ;. - fl'Dltrd Ptwia ImmI Wire.) ' n.rlln. AprU 13. Tho way in which th. allffhtest rumor la matnlfled to fll. credit Amertoaa nt.rprls. and utilised to prevent Americana from aauiaf n tna Eurocean ' nwirketa , 1 atrlkingly shown by tha alaboraW oxaicgeraUon of ii.inmact a. : to th. furnishing or bouts by an American for Russia. Tha paper In ftu.sUon eeka always t. dis credit tb. Ru.sian tureauoracy, and in this case trlod to give th. Impression .. nn irut iiuk had bought use less boats from Jwls Nixon la order to cover th. payment of a huu. commis sion to himself, --. i But la Uit. lnstanoo th.y hav. over reached thomeelves, Nlou waa aaksd . k.iii.i vunli when other bidders feared to meet th. rigid requirements. S. iniui. hla bid by cauls, and whli. th. viaioulty, not to menuon th. dangr X k. M h would do. would hav. brought diamay to tbo heart of or dinary men. he went ahead ajd built boats JLa leaa Ume and of greater efTl cunoy than anjf torpwio-Uats over hulit- , When he said k. could do better than was asked th. admiralty said they t eared he would have to cut down his material to suoU an extant as to mak. th. hull. weak. .... His an.wer to mis w Kum.im. "I'll send on across tha Atlantic ,- " . leads Boat Orsf Ocean, ' aA whiia ratherlnr th. material for th. fleet he bulifone and sent br across .h.. Ati.ntia in mld-wlnter in l0a, one of th. stormlust winters in many years. When th. United Btatwi navy depart ment want a fleet'of destroyers of II times th. displacement across the At lintlo they went over in tha ouloWst tlm. of tb. year, ahorUnlng the runs oy io?nf aroJ from th. West Indie, and took oilier to convey them, coaling en route. .Th. Gregory wnt l.6o miles under her own power, and on "'val alter lifting out soma .stra weignts was put on an official trial and -edad . her reaulrementa. W a. tn.r. Jvtr such testt Th. writer haa been ?old that there wa only a leaky seam or butt to b found afvr her remarkable "Th. tlm. 'riven after th.J material at Sevaatopol was only sis weeks for the first boat, th. rest to fol low at Interval, of one week. . . Angles twleted and distorted, plates benL fittings injured, not a casting flt tio the hull, blocks to be arranged. m?n to b. organised and 67.000 riv.i. to drive on each boat. th, xet in uva weeks and five , days .tne firit hoat was launched and in six weeks was out In th. Black ea. fully rrmed. "nnTg her trials, and the rest Zt the fleet war. AnUhed ?tntt fTeVnd SU?S3 St'o Vin. and .0-inch Tow Tn'titn made on official trials weu ow inknsf snowed 2,000 miles endouranoe " - - commission of Russian naval pffloars. The boat., too, had to l abl. to .land transport by rail All 10 war. put on epeojaily bu.lt cars and sent across th. whol. of Russia, from th. JJlack sea to the srulf of t'liilnnd. Th.re they were again put Into th. water and aubjeoied to further Jnsiieotlon and trials by cemmlsslon of II officers, hiUfd P. Admiral Is'evlnnky. v- , Tha boats were th. object of .th. greatest Interest. Admiral Brllef, the minister of marina, went vt a trial trip, personally worked the engine, and pub fi..i ..nra a.h. i Ma aatlafantton and con aratuuifed Mr. Klxon on th. result, of ins work. Admiral AvaUn. Who was minister of marine when th. contract was signed, sleo want for a run on a vessel and aaJd that th. vossels-far sur passed his expectations. - 1 hey wer. (alii un as a defense sauadron for tha Oulf of Finland. . 1, Lewis Mttfll hU .viaenuy bov tated to-, contest th. foreign market, i. products of hla factory and shipyard are all over th. world, and last year ha tsnut over UOO.OOO worth of engines to Australia and New Zealand against UngUsh competition, aided by. Colonial scriinlnauon in lavor ot win As a mattor of fact, NUon did not get several millions of roubles for th. fleet as stated,. but took thorn at a price for which they could not bo duplicated at the pres.nt time. - H. ha. stated publicly that7no Russian- doer asked or waa given a com mission. .....-..' ' At th. completion Of in. tnais n. was , iha cur. with honor rarsiy accorded oven ambassadors, being taken to Tsarskor-H810 on a special iraim m by an. Imperial coitch, lunchd at th. ialftr And Buen t half an hour with the emperor absolutely alone in his private Wa know that tna coats ran umna in severest service from th. lesson of th. rwsxrr. and th. mciai report ot aeir season's crusade. -.. Under tthe. queff enlistment regula tions the efews of engine-ronma are apt to o peasants who never heard of a ga.oltn. motor, but so far there hav. ben no reports of disasters. Thera are vng-ue rtimdrs that some of tb. engines of th. fleet have been sold to private owner, and. if thl. is so, some reason, must be given to cover their sale, if aver officially reported. Kvary owner of a standard engine, the kind w Nixon foundry furnished for those boats, is an over-reaay- aavocais of their excellence. The first admiral of Austria has one la hi. barge, the n Russian minister of marine naa one in hla launch and President Roosevelt s launches on the Sylph hav. similar en gines. The Austrian navy has just or dered four large engines. . Japan has them In her new submarines, and al most every nation 1. ordering them for yachts, working and war vessels. . A cltisen of a European country who brings capital -home from a foreign country is honored, as he should bcnd evn detended If necessary. The man, ho waver from America ,who doe. th. same, and who wins by virtue of th. retinement of his product, ' Is dangerous and must be attacked, and so masterly is their campaign that they oven suc ceed la enlisting the aid of American papers. . But I am sur. the American people have faith in the designer of tha Oregon. .. .' ,; rim 1 II Si WW ! i Building Termlta, J. It. Calkin s, erect dwelling. David son, between O. R. & N. track and Fast Irving. 11,500; J. T. Nelson, erect dwell ing, Multnomah, . between Shaver and Mason. 11.200; R. A. Kuhns. erect dwell ing, Webster, between Alblna and Mis sissippi, 11,600; E. fl. Karlson, erect : dweilihg, UaAt Ollsan. between Twenty . third and Twenty-fourth. $3,000. - 500,000-Acre Land Grant In lower California. If you are looking for a home, land and Independence, in the finest climate on earth, where f 2,000 an acre net Is produced, attend th. meet ing of th. La Proaperidad Cooperative Colony association la Alisky hall,' Third and Morrison, every Tuesday night at 6 o'clock. : -vr ;' . .:, Easter cards, finest in tha city. Postal Shop. 124 Fifth street Th. SOUL VALUE 10 BE PRESE RUED Dr! Young Tells of tnion of v Christianity and Uti 1 zenship.; . ChrlaUan attaenship wa th. aub- tha termon of Rev. Benjamin Tonng. DC U. t Taylor . Street church. lart night, - Takln for hi. -text "Righteousness exalteth a nation (Proverb. iv:a. Vx. Young apoko In part as follows: , "Indolenoo on tha part of those Who profasa tha Chrtatlan nam., ha ome timea brought tfto church into contempt The, oxlgencieB of , modern me forcod cMn great "ZbV foS.T wr-olunonTf BomeT of our problems, an uncurisua" oAnVoufr nX.mMWhUhtln;an 2Hl!7 ,Z Vnrai order in the worlil To a-et away from It will be dangerous unA mav be fatal. A citiaen of heaveru Im y?t a cftiien f .arth, interste3 in every advance atep.made by truth MUu,r Vuffrage is aaored,' and I must oaVtt wUhfspeot to oGjer.. God i in Vnticai ,r. '""J2 not of a dreamy. Idealist rather 1 than aa-tha declaration, of tha Han of tlod. The Christian must stand out vigorously against una. in tne peetruction or per sonality there la generated that whloh is dangerous to national life. Each man must oount for one. The dignity of tne jnpiviauai must o. presarvu a an hasards, ' "As a Christian cltisen I must be on the alert acalnst the ravage of -th. rum traffic. It 1. the fo. of good gov ernment. It is th. greate.t factor for corruption in American lire, it is in. octopus whose hideous tentacle poison and crush on every hand. Th. enemy of government, the foe of th. church, the breeder of crime and debauchery, it Is the anomalous horror of modern civ ilization. Its entrenchment in society Is hard on optimistic rhetoric. The snap of its lash is beard often over the press and above political assemblies. It is fat and flourishing, well organized, selfish and unscrupulous. It controls some leg islative lobbies and Is respectfuuv heard In all. In the highest legislative coun cils of the nation its- dictatorial voice is , "Of course, w. resolve periodically. but tna liquor trarno continues, our resolutions will have to be followed un by some straight talking and some vig orous toll and soma ready sacrifice be fore any great inroad Is made in this ...... V. .. neiusn Business." a Cms A MAKING PROGItESS. II. MM IS III III i! Hi I II 111 i J I N Mr. , . ' ....... . z' Ua U , J U U Li Ll3 t , . - Ladd Contradicts False Rumor ' th. operation of tooral Uw in soc ."'""iii.iooi ifn x am responsl n ":r- of suffrare cltlienshlD cannot be severed trom the prlnXle Of righteousness. Because 1 nrav the Lord prayer I am to exhibit S active inures t in all the sphere of ?. anralonrTaU Une of effort by ill1-rTlha of the kingdom may bo advanced on earth. At all times, in fTeVcountr" governed by the peopk pi rifrr.npn on the part of tl n a tl he educated or the more morally intelligent memb:s of the oomrnunlty is a source f dangoV aW dtrtm4nt to'the nation. This cut shows the latest cut in .' CoUars and , Ties, as , .. well as one of our blocks for : tahe light-weight Derby. No, excuse 'for buying an ' unbecoming hat if you come.,' here, for in our collection of spring shapes' is a'model for every f ace vcn yours. f L'LOTE-IfHGCO 1CC-1C3 Third Street " . ptaA threor-Yhat purple. 1 . ' a YAttur nartlsan. To bO' long to a party iV very good. .People oueht to know wher. we stand, but th Xii lartlsanahip .which eees noth ing 'but vU in other is to be depre cated I must come to conclusions without the aid of -bra-j bands and Torchlight procession, and t? Ism, ever tememw it: ri to th. church I honor and the God I 10 must be Interested in.th. jrtght so lution of the problems which rdlunlctpal "fe present, to me- I am not g olng to present juatlstics to xhfow light on cpn aitloha. but, there are questions arising nppreciat. tUejlorlu. privilege, of the repuDiic. ana " V.Zl.t- . " ...oihiiifv to the highest ' ' There -are the unchurched .masses of the city to be reached. Somehow the Christian ideal must touciuthese Uvea. As a Christian citizen ray voice must be ise3 1 -against the anonymousness of modern industrial U;2 Tb crushing. of personality 1 one of 4he , terrible facts V. "rrni. -tT.trv In the Raman empirei When personality was lost in ihe maasT reUKfon preached -the dignity f" the unit , ThAJvalu which Jesus nlm-Wft MIDOtt the SOUI. W8S One .L...!.,) nnntrlbutlons to social pfogres the world hasfver known. This soul vain, as - taught bv th.Master made our civUhration possiuie. wougron spoak for the value of very man. The - workman In many Instances 1 spoken of is a 'hand.'-'.H. 1. treated a. a things He la tbourht. of a t of indufitrial machinery. :,. Manhood . Is lost in the material. In" th hum .of the Implement his voice is .drowned, jtn. jldea fulo la.jUaated, jp piod, Missionary ' Tells of War Against Opium Traffic Miss Kate Ogborn, a. missionary who recently returned from Chin where ah haa been working under the direction of. tha Women' Foreign Missionary so ciety, was the principal speaker at the morning, telling of the great prdgress in the land the people of which Miss Qr born thinks will rule tho .whole world within a law yer. Miss Ogborn said In part; . . - 'The war between Japan and China, and the 'boxer, uprising, have- done much to awaken the great nation. It was the young emperor, who, though a boy, pro posed radical changes In tho empire. "I wa in central China during the boxer uprising, but together with an other high official, John-Iltto refused to obey the edict of the o wager Em press that -all foreigners be-- extermi nated, for be saw that It would bring about the disruption of i the enipira. Perhaps he did not see that it would mean the greatest upheaval among the nations that . the world has s ever ; wit- "It in now against the law to bind the feet of women Or rlrl in China. The opium dens in the old part of the city of Shanghai have been , closed. . But 1 am ashamed to say that when:: the re quest was made of the foreign portion of the city, lu which there - are 1600 dens, to assist th. officials by eloslns mese notes ot vice,1 me ijninese..were met with the answer." "Wf want the revenue." The only promise made wa that in ten years they would be dlv continued. Officials who continue the use oi opium cajinoi noia tneir posi tlons. A If the United Btate would tak up tie : question, of, . intemperance. s v inna jiaa taaen it up, she need not suf fer as she is doing. "What China becomes rests ' largoly with u. n4 what China; becomes the world become -Such a great force awakened and set in motion, cannot ex ist without exerting upon all nations of. the world a tremendous Influence. . Congressman "W. X. 3!lli So. 14 Has lived in this district 25 yestrs, and even hi enemies, if he ha any, have never accused hln of dishonesty.' 1 frrrvHE rumor circulating to the effect; ; that lots iii Ladd's Addition, were be- s ing sold only under a ninety-nirie-year lease is entirely, untrue. Thfere is' not and never Has been the slightest foundation for the report; ' ;: ; V . , i : .i t , L ' T fc t . . ...I.'-,-.1 We have never in the past entertained such a scheme, nor will we consider any proposition to Please lots in Ladds Addition. . A full Warranty Deed, as well as a com-- plete abstract, is given to the purchaser of every lot , '. ) 4 X ' " 'k ; Lots can be purase'd : on the install ment plan, with easy payments and inter est at six -per cent , , j s M ''' ' ' . -' " -.- .1 a-v : -M .. '. - 'i .".'(' ' "j ..;. . ,t'iv'it' t -.,.;',) ... " Every deed will convey an absolute title, with noiestriqtions or reservations, except- : ing only those Building Restrictions required to insure the best class of buildings. - ESTATE of W.'S. LADD OWNERS OP LADD'S ADDITIQN ; ............ ., ; . ! . . I (f I 6Li A " II I Wmmmm r.W.Torglcr.'Salcs Agent, 106 Sherlock Bldg., PorUand, Or. 5 PEESOAL. MM MM In-spite i-of the fact - that yesterday whs-the first perfect Sunday , of 'th. spring and that, the highway and .by ways tof -miles 'around Portland Were filled . 1ths holiday-makers, th.-. city tatrca ail piay "Very possibly theatres all played to capacity house. blr that sunshine wnion oalled many out of the city to th bill F.' M.- Swift, Portland, Oregon, la Tork City ! A"t0 John eteidl, astonk dealer of North Bend, is at th Portland. ; N, C. Kvan of Hood Klvar Is at the Imperial. , -E. W. JfeComas, a Pendleton -whoat dealer. Is -at the Imneriai i ... . . 7 . .L, It Bingham of Eugon,' state aea atcr, is at the Imperial. Thoma i.Vegars. and family f Norfti Band, r at the Oregon. :. ' Conrressman w.- B. Xia-i-H. 1. : ; Uel Osegoa. by reeiectlo biau uiA :won(li . hrontrht out ? others to the Faint of venturing .. to th playhouses. tfsnU in th polnt;of view To om. people a trip ta Seaside is as moment ous as. a voyage to Ku rope Is to' other. It wan the "Saasldo variety who, felt 4he call of the sprtng'r yesterday- and an pwored it: bv sallying forth to witness lave, life and death as interpreted, more 0 r less entertainingly : . by th -1 playir ir4 ..It . . ... ....... . '. "I : if'h-i' At tne Marctuaiw -,t two ,5 large nouses heard the pretty -strain', of 'Tell Me. Pretty Maiden" and "In .the- Shadw of thi Sheltering J'alrna,'! still fresh after all.thase years of decent huriaL , At the Baker the excellent stock -company played the melodramatic ''Tha eternal City," -while rural ? drama . under th nam "A Hoosier Daisy" . delighted th Star natrons.. ' If Mr. Healer of th San Franoiaeo opra company had any doubts as to the advisability of resurrecting ''Florodora, lhay ver effectually dispelled after seeing; hi two big audiences leave the Marquam emlling and happy.' ' There is enough dainty music in "Florddora" to delight the heart of anyone and it waa sung very well yesterday.- Mr, Webb, as fanny .as ever, . waa most entertain ing a . Anthony- TweCdlepunch, and Frank Brdwnlow sang acceptably all the good old songs , that fall to -the lot of Frank AbercoedM of the opera. Orace Waisnr. whose voice, if hot strong, is f sweet and fresh, waa acceptable a Do inraa - - ..v.- - ...... .- . 1 - . -. -. : Daphn Pollard and ' Gene Ormonde, both - entertaining in their way, wer cast a Angela and Valleda, respective? ly. Mr. Bertrand was good as Cyrus Gilfain, and Mr, weiner , as captain Donegal Allln aU, "Florodora" will be worth aeeing again thl week, if for nothing more than to aea the sextet and compare it with the on you saw when Nan Patterson or com other national celebrity wa singing in it. 'Florodora" is of considerable intrlnslo value' as a producer of j-emlnlscenoes. t..t p. For those who preferred action,. .with the accent on th act-ther was that unholy combination of Hall Cain and Pietro Mascagni, two past master in the art of melodrama. 'The Eternal ritv." ft was tha mind of. aeniua that conceived covering Catne'a melodramatic frold with Mascagni meioaramatic gna ng of music , ;Vhen one fail to incite to the rroDer Doint of enthusiasm the other can confidently bo relied upon to, dO; SO.' j' -.':..':, ' " ' ,...;. V' But laying aside the question or au that th fact remain that 'The Eter nal City" wa well given by the Baker company. ' The -people wer well -cast and the play waa given a most elaborate mounting. It 1 a rather ctupendoua thing for -a stock company to under take, hut Mr. Dill haa shown himself equal to pretty nearly anything in the lino of etag Bettings and large and reaT sonably well-trained companies! Mis Louis Kent played Donna Roma Vo- ionnathere A a i typical , Hall Cain nam for you-and played It welL 1 Mr. Alison wa in hla usual good fonna David Rossi, tha- agitator - sand;- th; mouthing ; hera- Mr. Woman played Baron Donelli well, and th other mem-; ber of th company were very well cast in the' foolishly extravagant way that Cain demands. ;: . t In lieu 0 the real blossom Which made out of door a delight, many pre ferred "A Hoosier Dalsy.'' which th French stock company gav in a pleas ing, manner at the Star. It tells about the Daisy who : is a v'cheeyild", f th poorhouse, and whose fathef, unjustly accused of murder in the Ilret; degree when it really should only have been manslaughter, adopts ; the unique and thoroughly delightful expedient of turn ing tramp. Btrange to say.? he return at just the right moment to save th "cheeyud'' Daisy from being plucked by ruthless hand. , - ' M Thos favorites' of the Star company, Kathleen Taylor, Leah La Fore, Charles Conner and Charles Burnltton, all did their" best-and pleasfd mightily. Miss Davis played-the "chceylld," and D. M. Henderson th villainous village hypo crite. Th play was pronounced a suc cess by th Star audience and -.wUl probably be a money-maker all week, A . epecial meeting of tha Brooklyn Republican oluB wilb held tomorrow nto-hf at R77U Mllwaukie' street All of the candidates for the various office tn h filled at th June election hav been invited to attend and will b given an opportunity to speak- 1 OLD LOVERS CAN?T WED; 1 GUARDIAN OBDURATE ' LanoaaW. Pa, April ' With. hr trousseau all ready, Mr. Sarah St Claire, 80 year old, Mflnd In tb law a bar ti her.marriag with her. irlhood 1ovr A fvr day ago ah went to Kokomo, In diana, to wed Dr, Alexander 0. Freeman, 77 year old. . Mr. St Clair hoped that th wddlnf ; would , occur immediately, but ah found th : proapectlv bride groom in charg of a guardian,, who re fused ; to allow Mm' to marry. ' There upon, wedding clothes and all, Mrs, St. Clair appealed to th court for help, Mrs1. St Claire 1 at Kokomo, declaring that ha -will t wait days, even -months, until .th obstacle are removed. ': Year ago they war -engaged, , says Mrs. St. Claire. Then, after a quarrel. Freeman disappeared. It wa year be fore they met again, and, widow- and widower they still loved. : - . ; r CASTORIA loi Infaati and Childrea. :m " . Th3 Kin i Ycj Kara Always Ecut Bsars tlui . Elgoatort ol " - .',".,.