Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1926)
QumsL S2 j SECTION TWO Society-- Classified Edict UoniC3 Paged! to 8 .CLEAN AND VIGOROUS , SEVNTY-SIXIH YEAR , SALEM, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 11, 1926 PRICE FIVE CENTS Medu...6f - Fire Boss of mwe om i ' ' " " ! L I Kilauea Volcano. Awes or 1 ! I 1 T f 1 ' I ProfsorsMix iWitliKed f Visitors to Wdterd Camps Pay - urn iimers sienaing Saddles, Uniting Equipment Read j for DENVER (A PfWhen the tired New Tork trasineas man. the ; lady f rdin Bosl6n; the Professor and the college lads cdmfc but bf the East they want to see the weBt a Hs "'wliaeit and wooliest.' ' , They do. Just like any: tomrlst .eees New. Tork's : Chinatown a la hellynooraie stuff which la responsible for th chills, a mid-die-western :: sehbol-ma'ant feels, creep down ' her spine on Pelf treet, New York, has made the west a more wicked looking place than was etef Hfeanlea of In -ntxmr; days, i. l -7 The "dude?, ranches, this iime of year are scenes of great activity. The cowboys are getting ready f of the inmrner1! flock of "dudes" the ame t who, sUU -pull the- old tags about selling the Brooklyn bridge or the Grand Central sta tion to' the country boys also cal led "suckers. v The ranch, hands are spending rainy days In the. barn patching saddle! and ottdles lor the "dudes' " use. In a month or so cowboys will climb into "chaps", those Wooiy; bag-Hie things that V rw imagined tffeovef the Iegsof AAiny true son of the range, and f " Ilon iwit tn tht fHrn tn itiAet the season's first batch of Tisitors. They even will take a stagecoach to haul (he guests home in. The boss will get a brace of murderous looking pistols out of his -bureau drawer where he placed them' last tall. VXth these slung round his waist houtoks like a cross between s movMrttern hero and villian and .nf . f the "dudes' Immense ly. SkSji ' ;r.w4tsrf-f r When fche guests arrive, some of the cowboys also get out .45a and escort the atageeoach hotne 1 with shouting and shooting, if "Real spirit of the. west", the ouslness man says. knowingly to the lady from Boston. He yells because of the shooting. She does not reply. She wonders whether She 'will erer get back home with s whole scalp 8he has heard they still fight Indians everywhere west t Chicago. j The woman teaeher from Boston Ten dons dlTided skirts as near as her modesty will allow her to Assume what, she believes is the character of a fascinating young Cowgirl. The business man cuts quite a figure in chaps, although they do not hide the tlabblness of lis legs, and his stomach bulges $ver an ammunition belt. The professor has a hard time mixing dignity 4nd" "" beribboned hose glasses' With' 4 red bafidinha knot ted around hts neck. - The college Joyt jifa determined to break erery mustang outlsw on the range to their wills. It's usually a eocklebur under the saddle that makes the "mustang" mean. . All of the Tisitors pay dearly tor the pleasure of ranching It. In return, attired la wide hats, . they get the thrill of . bouncing Itnmntlv hvr tha taflla fn horaei - that dozed by the: corral fence all winter, except when' the cowboys hitched them to harwagdns. The 'dudes' eren hare the Joy 6f get ting thrown ?bucked; off they will brag when they, return home when 4heir horsesV, crimp their muscles' almost " asu5- violently ; a thougBTthey were flicking off flies. Ofttafio Gold Find Brings Scenes 6f; Klondike Days HUDSON, OnC The old melo drama of th' Klondike gold rush Is once more being re-enacted with this Uttle enow-burled 'hamlet as Its latest stage setting. w The reported finding of Kold in the Red Lake district in northern Ontario has aroused Hudson from Its customary winter hibernation end converted it ldto a bustling centre? of tlrlty,i the gathering point M hundreds ot idteaturous ' spirlti lured here by. the hope of nluckln si fortune from the earth. ' f. All o,thd chkracters Sind. prop erties tne r ar.orxn- moTw 4hrUletre td be sefia in real ilf e . here today-the Tdof train, the jack andl the ; pftckerr the snor sboes. the s Ojibway Indians.; the bearded . prosbttors, the dance hall, the hastily constructed stores. the log cabias. shacks,, and -tents Which house the new arrivals. "'Jv J : Hudson Is od. theH0Tthernr tranicontlnehtat line of the Clna- d Ian National Railways some E0 miles eastof Winnipeg and 12 Inlleslo the west of Siotec Loot ut. It is the nearest railway soffit to the Red ; Lake district. Hudson, was Jittle: more vthan rana on the railway Bp a short Dignity Bandanna Knots Dearly for Mustang Bocks; Reception The woman front Boston, the busi ness man, -the professor and the college boys alike get galled and sore muscled for the sake of being "pioneers"..-- ' The business man and the col lege lads may eren draw their guns and blaze away at the blue CoMttl on W S) 'S Haraailer this ktmorons WMkly col umn, wxlttoa by Sots Watt, will ap pear la tli (Mtan mcSn tl te : SinjDAT OXZOOY 8TATES1CAX : "NOW IS THE TIME.. TO KILL SPRING PESTS" SEZ A BULLETIN from O. A. C. I'M WONDERIN is this applies to the flock of magazine agents and door to door peddlers this fine sprlngWeathef is brrngih' out. SEZ A FRIEND: When we were kids it always happened that the kid with the regular, football, the new headgear., hose jfhard and a pair of boiighten football pants was the bummest player In the gang. : And now, today the same thing goes with golf, a knock-out sweater, balloon; knickers, check ered socks a fifty dollar bag. . . . .WJIJXoftwthftv klnd-Dta game" they play. WHEN A MERCHANT suffers a nervous breakdown It doesn't come from the constant bang, bang, bang! of the cash register. ' e SALEM'S SOCIAL activities are not all confined to bridge par ties and pink teas. I noticed the other day that the Cement Work ers were pullin' off a little affair down by the paper mill, Bill Spivis poured. ; THERE'S ONE thing about bald headed. men. .They believe in re ducing the overhead and they al ways come out on top. MANY A dUY who Koes to his boss' with a sure-fire excuse finds that he's sure fired afterwards. I DID A 8MALT favor for one of our local court judges the other day. "Much obliged'' ses the judge. "Come up some time and I'll give you thirty days.". . . .1 ain't goln. "ANXIOUS OSCAR" writes In and .wants to know hew long, a person can. live without - brains. Time will tell brother, time will tell. ; THE : MOST versatile person . I know is the -one who wades out Into the breakers and shouts back thai the water, is warm. He stands there yet he lies. ONE OF LIFE'S nuisances Is the bozo who stops yon on the street and makes you listen to the same story you had a hard time taughJUi at 20 years ago. THERE'S ONE THINO can be said for, the banquet and hot atf luncheon hound . . . .He sure is a glutton for punishment. ' LOOKS LIRE the political star- den is goin to produce its usual crop of hardyjperenhials. 'i a IT'LL SOON BE time for the anglers to be ' deatln out., fish stdrles that will make everybody gasp.-That ls-.'.T.eveTybody4 who believes them. Which means no body. SOME OF THESE guysVwho would "Walk a mile for a Camel' kick like the dickens when wifie asks them to go down to the cor ner and get a bottle of milk for the baby. ; PROHI AGENTS found a case of iikker buried in a. flower .gar- aen.' nut tne iiowers tnat . oioom in the spring tra la! .had nothing to do with the case. ;--..-. ; i THESE- .MEXICAN t matadors ain't got nothln on AmerJean'l&lH ticians when it ; cornea, to steppin infathe"' Sfena and throwln the " AND THAT'S enough. Station Ravings 1WIE0E. IWHIE sin? Rev. E. H. Shanks Writes Another Narrative for Junior Readers Rev. Ernest H. Shanks "How wonderful the stars are tonight," said Beatrice as she sat at her Window looking out. Into the starlit night. "Come here, ue, and look at this .beauty hang-. ng In the western sky' Sue came over to the window and said she thought it was thei most perfect star she had ever, seen, lust then Ann. the eldest of the three -sisters, came into the room. Beatrice called her to see the stars. "It is early yet," said Ann. "Let as go out into, the garden for a few minutes. We can see the heavens better from there, and talk about the stars." The three sisters put on their coats and went outlnto the gar den where they had an unob structed view of , the sky. . It was a clear, calm night, and the stars were unusually brilliant. I "What makes the stars brighter than usual?" asked Sue. ! "It is the condition of the at mosphere,' said Ann. "The "sir is free from dpst particles ' and there is no haze. The stars are always just as bright, but seldom do we find the air conditions so free from dust and moisture as tonight." i The girls stood for. some min utes looking, first in, one direct ion and then in another. Where is . the -North Star Ann?" askedr Sue. f-:.t : 4 , . wThere-lt-la, Sue-ian you, make Dut the Great Dipper f " Ann point ed It out. . ''ThsrKerth Star, or Pole Star It Is sometimes called", is the one there at the upper cor ner. It is called a fixed star and the other stars move around it It Is always there in that same po sition." "Are there other fixed stars, Ann?" asked Bea. "Yes, a great many.. I cannot tell you how many; but thousands and each one is In the center of great systems of stars and plan ets like our own." j "Why are some brighter than others, and some larger?" asked sue. "Some are much farther away. and there is a greet difference in size. Some fixed stars are so far away that it requires millions of years for their light to reach us. You know how fast a flash of light travels, some are many hundred times larger than our own sun. Stars are in groups; that is, cer tain stars always remain in the same position with respect to their own group. Ijp thereto one group The rSl f TTiltr . ' t Published in the Interest of thoso Seeking fun ana accurate survey of VOLUME Lr - , . , .. . f ... week's local development . i. ' . Thia section 6f the, Sunday; newspaper is dedicated to those Jbiisy persobAwh6 are unable to find time to read care fully every copy of the daily , papers. By, spending only a few mo&ents here, yon can be well ihfdiTned on local happen ingsdUririsr the pist week. sKe Viewing, day by day, what happened, we begin with: , ii Monday, April 5 People of Salem, it developed, will Have at least four propositions 6rl Which to vote at tHespeciar election to be held in connection ; with tfie" primaries, Friday, May 21. Three ordinaries passed at City Council meeting call for a special millage levy for. street repairs- a special millage levy for bridges,' and & $30,000 bond issue for the fire department. Beyond .dqugt A t&fe probbsal to make I the 1 city recorder ap pointed by the mayor will also be voted upon. JDoom of Salem street cars was forecast in a proposal placed before the council calling for the gradual retirement of present service and the addition of btis lihes. . The matter was placed in the hands of a committee. The council was urged to grant rmigiion; for. the continuation of the fill for the Liberty 'street bridge ; project, i Haise' more fiber flax was a slogran broadcast by linen officials who foresee shortage. ; V : .Horace Addis, .of Portland, was elected president of the State Fair Board filling the vacancy; caused by the resigna tion of Wayne Stuart, former president: : : Tuesday, April 6 r "World conrmercewiU center aboijt the Pacific" ocean in thenearfuture';f JUirbpb !s" ft -grave'vyard. It is dead; Its people are, dead,? declared Bert E. Haney, former member of the Unitfed States shipping board ih and address before Salem Kiwanians Taesday! hoonr - "Instead of. trading iwith : people who cannot pay, why: n6t : trade , with . the Orient and with South America t ;:If we ;fcave, bj&lenoujgfi ;to take some thihg for ourselves dur future isjnajde,.- he declared f cv si . At a meeting of. the county council of the Marion County Child Health' Deportment, most encouraging reports ; were presented by dd0atcs from' the leading commuhitlcs of the EDGAR EIGHT ' This Jimmy. Lochinvarian thought of John Ingate's died in the moment of its birth. The gleam in his eye faded. No he couldn't do that .... It wasn't, he decided, be cause he lacked the nerve. She had chosen and he must abide. Those faint bells tolled on, and now they sounded more ominous to him. "You mustn't trouble yourself," Eve replied at last. fOh, it will be a pleasure you know that," he responded intense ly. She smiled. "Oi! WILL it?" He was impelled to laugh. "You know what I mean." "You're awfully kind." He sat down and phoned his sister. "Come down immediately. I have something for you to do . . Never mind, hurry down." He didn't want to explain, and he couldn't, anyway, with Eve lis tening. "Women know about these things," he said apologetically, when he put up the receiver. "Oh, I'h afraid you are going to to much trouble." She was ashamed. She did want a .ovely wedding. "Now you are to go home and take a nap. You'll need to be fresh and all that. Run along." He was good humoredly commanding in tone. "These letters " "Never mind about the letters Holiday today." "I wish you wouldn't say any Sabbath School Lesson Arranged, From the Improved Uniform . International by T. 3. TOOZB THE STORY OP CREATION Lesson Text Genesis 1:12-: 25. Golden Text In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Gen. 1:1. t ; Everything but God had a begin ning. God the uncaused cause is the cause of all things. Let this fundamental truth, though beyond the power of the human mind to grasp, be believed and all our problems of philosophy and theol ogy will be solved. I. The Origin of the Universe Gen. 1:1. It was created by God. All things came into being by the will and act of a personal God. Create means to bring into exist ence that which had no previous existence. It. The Regeneration of the Earth 1:3-25. - Between verseB one and two is clearly marked an interval of per- Busy Reader's Newspaper POE NOtmtS thing to the persons around here before it happens. Clay ." "I wen't Shoo! Run along!" She went, touched. How kind and thoughtful he was. ...:She could se how he felt. His eyes, as always, revealed him. She. felt a pang. ... Josephine came into her brother's office frowning. She didn't like to be summoned so summarily as this. "Listen, sis, be a good chap and help me," he explained, in a tone which, remembering how he had acted at the breakfast table, puz zled her. "Eve McLurie is being married today. The poor... girl hasn't anyone to see to. things, and I want it staged properly. It's to be at the Brick church downtown. Now while I run around and see the rector and arrange for music and choir boys, and then have the florist rush up some palms and rubber plants and century plants you see what you can get hold of in the way of a wedding dress. You know her size. Take it out and put it on her. The wedding is to be at 2 o'clock." Josephine was regarding him from over a stiffening jaw. "Come on, be a good fellow and do this for me, and I'll give you that extra thousand you want for the ball, even if I have to hock my auto." "Aren't you afraid your interest will be misunderstood?" Jle gave her a glance of annoy ance. "No one with any sense could misunderstand. , . .Will you (Continued on page 5) haps wide duration. The earth which was created by God ' was subjected to a Judgment. The He brew word "was" might just as well have been translated "be came." Instead, therefore, of the earth having been created a void or chaos, we see that it became so through a cataclysmic judg ment. In Isaiah 45:18, the prophet declares that God did not create the earth a waste, but that He formed it to be inhabited. All that real geology has to say to us har monizes with this view. The so called six days of creation exhibit God's rehabilitation of the earth. The cause for this judgment upon the earth is to be found doubtless in the judgement of Satan, who is called the prince of this world (John 12f31). Observe that God created the wealffk Fund, New York City, on their progress Guy Fitch Phelps, author, debated prohibition with H. H. gon frohibition Referendum fended present laws before a packed church audience. Wednesday, April 7 In connection with the protest of Governor Hartley of Washington against the Stanfield bill providing that . the government restore to the state of Oregon titlto Sand island at the mouth of the Columbia river 'and his, request that the wasmngton delegation vote against thii TJneasure, : Attorney General Van Winkle of Oreeon cited two" tltiftivl ktnttia siti- preme court decisions holding or Oregon. . ;-: ; i Hal Tlibbard Campi .Spanish American War Veterans, announced a harmonica contest in which all boys are eligible to compete on Friday, April 16. also appear on the Armory going-toward the fund to erect velt on Battle Rock. . ilelativea and friends of Goodman of Harney county, Pierce here knd urged that the prisoner be communted scheduled to be hanged in the i ' . At a meeting of the board of directors of the new Ore gon Xinen" Mills", Inc., it was decided to go aheai with pre paration of the site. W. Cv Knighton the architect, was in structed to start on the preparation of plans and , specifica tions! f or all the buildings, to be, constructed. Bids will be called for as soon-as plans are- completed. v ? r;' v . Thursday, ipril S?"?W: " :f - The ' Oregon- Statesman issued its , annual , legume crop sloigan.;.;. , H irylr- There are indications of. big development, in the Santiam mining district in the near future.- A W. Dawes filed in the "EACH LOVES IB KILLED," IS Poet's . Line True, of .Women Also,' New- Castle Rec ords indicate By Central Press. NEW CASTLE, Pa., Jtpril 10. The poet's line, "For each man kills the thing he loves ," was written to include women, too, says Dorothy Pegran, who is, oh trial here, for the confessed mur der of Sergeant Phillip L. Tulley, U. S. marine corps. Tulley was on . recruiting duty. On Jan. IT Dorothy Pegran came from Pittsburgh to live with him. She was accepted by his landlady as the wife of the ma rine. Two days' later, about 1:15 a. m., Tulley staggered Into the bed room Of his landlady and said, "My tjod. get a doctor. My wife has shot me." The police were called, and when they got there they found Tulley and the woman in a pool of blood. After firing three bul lets in her lover, Dorothy turned the gun upon herself and attempt ed suicide. Tulley died seven hours later, while Dorothy's wound was a superficial one. Upon notifying the marine au thorities in Pittsburg it developed that there was a Mrs. Phillip L. Tulley accredited as his wife. The alleged real wife took the bod; away and Tulley was buried in Arlington national cemetery. The woman claiming to be Mrs. Tulley insists that she is the wife of the. dead marine but can pro duce no marriage certificate. Indirectly a 'third woman was the cause of the murder, authori ties believe. A married woman of this city, who has since fled, had become enamored with Tulley and kept phoning him at his rooming house. On the night of Jan. 18 she called him twice, and when he went to meet her Dorothy fol lowed. When he returned about midnight the argument over the third woman started and the mur der ended the argument, police de clare. The accused woman is penniless but friends came to her rescue and engaged three attorneys. "I never loved a man in my life like I did Sergeant Tulley, and when you love a man like I did him, you just can't tell what's liable to happen," Miss Pegran says. "I wouldn't care if they could chloroform me, but I don't want to be eltrocuted. I want to be freed of this charge of murder they have against me, but life isn't ever going to be the same for me after this." the tvtt imnrn I 0 , NUMBER 1 3 praised local workers highly lecturer and former pastor, Stallard manager of the Ofe- Corporation. Mr. t Phelps de that the island Is id the state '..-!,.vv ,, The Salem Boys chorus will program - that night, proceeds a statue of Theodore Roose . i -; " - - Archie Cody, slayer of Sheriff a p p e a ted before Governor the death sentence imposed on .tb Jife imprisonment. Cody is state penitentiary here Friday, Old iWoman Is Another Lavii F16t7 Feared Superstitious Katlvei BeileVr Appearance f Quahit Figurt Periodic Outbreak Thought HONOLULU Pele, godaess 6f fire, who linHawaliad niythology controls itllauei volcano. on this island, ha been seen twice of late, say oeuevers in tne supersuuon. Many aire , the. Hawaiians who think the 'appearahce of the god dess presages a lava flow or efup- tion and is meant as a warning. Kilauea has been; Inactive since late spring of 1924. Before the volcanic outbreaks ot 1907, 1916 and 1919 an unidenti fied old woman, presumably Pele, was supposed to have been abroad and the eruptions due to her in fluence. I An aurdra behind the reappear ance of the fateful goddess has been constructed In the tales now ibeljLg told I by the natives. A Jap anese was. driving Jn the Kona dis trict whe he noticed an . old woman sitting , by the side of the road,: As he passed her the engine lot his machine stopped and he was unable to itart It. A second, third end .fourth automobile came up and likewise stopped. Tie driver of. the fourth car. however, was mote .polite and of fered the elderly creature a lift. She accepted, climbing into the back seat, j Then without difficulty the driver was able to start this engine and he passed the other cars which soon thereafter were able to. move again. A little later the poute driver turnea in nis seat to speak, to , his passenger but the car was embty. Thus do the na tives find I corrobation for the.ro- ported first appearance of pele. ! jThe Hnoiuttf Ady?nisrwas unable to 16cate the driver 6f the car but found that the verification of the goddess' second recent ap pearance consisted in these hap penings as told by natives: About 11 o'clock one morning Mrs. Mary Mamaki, a well known and much respected Hawaiian, was at work back of her house. She heard voices and turning beheld two strangei-s, a very old Hawaiian man- and woman, dressed in the fashion of olden Hawaiian days They, were carrying a basket ot peculiar design. Mrs. Mamaki made them wel come. They asked what she was doing and ishe replied, . "Planting taro for ourselves and Pele for the future." The reply seemed to please her guests who seated them selves on the ground. In the man ner of old Hawaiians. The visitors said they were thirsty and asked for a bottle of water. They drank half of it and put the bottle In their basket. Next they requested tobacco. Their hostess hadj onfy cigarettes. They took two, (smoked halt of each, extinguished them and put the un burned halves in the basket. The guests then showed an interest in the -taro patch, and finally asked for some plants. Several were bffered but they took only two, which also 'went into the basket. King of Mne After Sixty-seven Years ----- " Summit Hill Mine Flames Rage in Area One Mile Lon? and . 1,500 Feet Wide; Started Tonnage Cbnsumed Is 14,000,000 ; . !. I SUMMITj HILL. Pa.. Anril 8. Afithraclte strikes, may come and go but, like Tennyson's, bfook. the Summit Hilt mine fire apparently koes 6h forever. r It has befca, hurting" for 67 years jever sm4e !ebrnary,t1859t"and is the mbsti destructive expensive and famous mine Are Tn the his; tory of mining in the United States. .. .. j -:,M.: . - ; The areat Inrolved is about one mile : long- and 1500 feet wide. More than $3,000,000 have been expended in lighting the fire. The tonnage ot coal consumed by this "king" Of mine fires can only- be guessed, but estimates run as high as 14.000.Q00. - The coa area embrkclng the scene of the fire is oWned by the Lehigh Coal & ' Navigation com pany, founded' in 1820. V v ' Summer Hill Ilea in the Panther Xreek valley. In what is known as the Schuylkill or Lower coal field of the anthracite regions.' - In the years since the fire first was discovered many stof r" been told - of lt origin. ; i true story,' vouched for company, is that it wa' through "hot coals beta with cstesd the caise cf TMceasli Alytlt Thai Eruption Follows Impending f Brs. Mamaki remarked that she ' feared the dry weather would be bad for the tard. The man told her hot to worry; "Pele Is planting tard and there will be lota of rain In Kona.' They shook hands with their hostess and walked down the patch. Mrs. Maniakl's attention waa districted momentarily by a pass ing automobile end when she looked again the- 6oupie had van- lshed. . 1 ' ' - - Heart of Peach: Belt Waits-. Burstrng Buds to CeTebrate roftf VALLEY. Fort Valley. the heart of Georgia peach belt, is awaiting the time of bursting buds and blossoms to stage its' annual spring festival. : j The clouds Of , pink and white bloom, reaching In many sections as far as the eye can see. freduent- ly remain unshaken on the trees for more than a Week. The festi val will be held when the orchards are at their loveliest. ; - The 1 Creek Indiahsr r middle Georgia aborigines sed to dance here against a background of pines, their thanks to . the Great Spirit, giver of maite, health, and good hunting. Nowadays, In Simi lar annual rites, middle Georgia, youth Interprets the coming off spring, mlld winds, and- peach, blooms the back-df op being a horl- . non-wide' expanse f shell pink petals and frlngy peach tree green : -L :. :- .. . 'SMlDorothy Hale; high school girl, far the title role, "The Prodt gal Peach." will re-enact the his tory of the fruit for which Georgia, has become famous. - Trade Figures Disclose . ; . Alaska Good Investment JUNEAU, AlaskaTrade fig ures compiled by John C. McBride, collector of customs for the terri tory, show that Alaska, for. wnlch the United States in 18 S? paid !. 200,000, exported $62,223,735 worth of products in 1925 alone.j The territory closed the year with a favorable trade balance of $29, 024.224. There was an increase! of $1,828,133 In the total yalue of merchandise shipped from and Into Alaska. - - The territory's total commerce was 395,428,246, of which 33, 199,511 was imported and the bat ance exported, i ' ' Gold, silver and copper produc, tlon materially Increased. - " The fish industry showed a sligth decrease, the total being $38,163,8,45. In 1924;. and $37. 609.451 in 1925. The shortage was attributed partly to a email salmon run in the Bristol bay dis trict and to restrictions made by the government for preservation of the industry.. Fires Burns February 1859; Annual fire In the homes of coal consum ers. ' It was common In the days be fore the Civil , war to have , large stoves at the bottom ot the slopes for the comfort of the men. The "bottom man" at old No.; 1 slope -when the fire started - was one ' Daniel Boyle. , Among other things It was his duty to attend to the stove. .One morning he was a lit tle late in arriving and In hurry ing, to get the stove burning gave ft a severe raking, shaking down red hot co'alfr with the ashes. a An empty car w asstandlng near and he shoveled the ashes and hot coals into it. The cara in those days were built entirely of wood. sheet iron bottoms not as yet be ing used. By the time, he finished, one of the drivers hitched his mule to the car and hauled it to ens cl the unused , gangways, lla 1 ai been ordered to. place a car th-re by the foreman the previous day in., accordance with the foreraan'3 Intention. to5J?lace several cea ia that section to . do some repair work ' The . .foreman, however, changed hla mtad, and the c:r, as well as the repalrlr's, wa3 f;.-