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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1908)
A Political By WELDON chapter vi. Gideon Hope had said h hnd two ob jects to attain: to roach thp man controll ing the patents on "the Kano-Itinier metal process," to revolutionize a -political situation. There was a third motive lie had in view, but he did not state it to Michael Delehanty, or to th? Amalgamated nies senger : the crowning desire of his life was to secure some positive proof that Percy Kane was the murderer of his brother. He had profound faith in the exist ence, somewhere, somehow, of an incrim inating clew. Sometime it would come to light. Rut if there was no such evidence, no witness, Hope determined to resort to any means to finally urge the millionaire schemer to a confession. His Hope's was the task to reduce this man to poverty, to subvert every am bition and joy of his life. lint to follow that other trail, to bring nctuallv home to Kane his crime that had been left for the deft hand of a wom an Claire Treniaine. Two days after the peculiar error which hail'"ili;uiseil" Gideon Hope most effect nail. v. a beautiful young girl sat at a richly carved desk in the private office of the new iron magnate of the Kanawha district. It was a luxurious apartment, supplied vith every model modern accessory known to progressive business. Handsome deco rations covered the walls, soft velve: hiss were scattered about the polished hardwood floors. The ornate in leather, oak and bronze supplied each corner and niche, and rich electric light chandeliers supplied the place with constant illumina tion. Claire Tremaine had been in the em ploy of the company for three mouths. T'nder Gideon Hope's tutelage she had been trained, steeled, for the part she was to play. Kane had never seen her during his dealings with her father, for the motherless girl had been away at school over three years, spending her vacation at the home of an aunt in Maryland, where her father went to visit her. So she had few acquaintances when he came home finally to reign as queen of the fair palace her father had erected for what he believed would In? a rare, happy future. Here at Stanton there seemed no probability of ever meeting any old seminary friend. Still she had considerably altered her appearance. Rut this had not detracted from her beauty; the assumption of the character of a poor young girl compelled to earn her daily bread it had rather heightened graces and loveliness that had at once won her a position as copy clerk, a pro motion to the stenographer desk, and finally that of especial private secretary to Percy Kane himself. Claire was alone in the private office. Her eyes were sadly fixed upon the busy scene of labor without. In memory she went back over the past few weeks. Her lip trembled, her bosom rose and fell with varied stirring emotions. Then a sudden determination nerved tier, and she drove from soul and face the flitting tenderer sentiments that had intruded. She drew a letter from a drawer to irhich she alone had the key. She open ed and read it over. "Dear Mr. Hope: I have for you the information you desired of the metal pro cess patentee. "Of the other information I have found nothing. If he has in his possession any document or record incriminating him, or even linking him with the Consolidated Silver Company, he carefully conceals the tame in some place elsewhere. "I am nt my post. I serve, I wait, as you desire, but I must see you. The or deal is too severe! Something has hap Iened. He but I will not write what I must tell you. "You must take me away from here something has happened, as I tell you, and I must see you !" She arose quickly, bestowing the letter It her belt. A man entered the room massive, overfed, overdressed one of the "big four" who had engineered the deal that made a rascally quartette censors of the metal markets of the world. He had the grace to remove from his mouth the cigar he was smoking as he asked : "Kane in?" "No, sir." She shivered at the leering, sensuous glance of this man, a figure-head at the champagne supper directors' meeting, a being who would have been a fixture in some tannery or digging sewers but for bis usefulness to Kane. lie passed out. She caught his chuck ling remark to the clerk in the next room as he went out of sight: "If it wasn't for Kane, I'd take some jiains'to cultivate Miss Ilockford my self!" Claire stood erect, flushing, smarting to the soul contact with these men sul lied every womanly instinct. "I can not endure it!" she said. Just then the telephone bell in an adjoining closet rang. She went to the instru ment. Claire forgot everything except the business of the moment as she received he message coming over the wires. It was a long-distance announcement from I'ittsburg. and it told of the con summation of one of the largest foreign contracts ever awarded an American firm, but consequent upon the immediate presence of Mr. Kane in New York. It was so important that Claire knew she must lose no time in getting her employer to the 'phone to answer in per son. She hastened into the outer office and addressed the inquiry clerk : "Where is Mr. Kane?" "He has just gone over with the super intendent beyond the casting shed, to see lout the erection of a new hoisting crane," was the response. Claire glanced about the offic. She V endetta J. COBB i was conscientious to the point that, though here for an ulterior purpose, she was loyal to the exigencies of the business regime of the institution. One or two of the mill messenger boys were in sight, but they might dally; Mr. Kane might not understand from them how imperative was the necessity of the moment. "I will go and tell him myself," decid ed Claire, She ran back to the 'phone, ordered the wire held, and passed quickly out of the quarters into the open air. She had to pass down a cindered road between two long shops, round the cast ing shop, and thus reach the sKt where she knew her employ or to be. It was over a quarter of a mile away by this route, so she hurried along the deserted roair so rapidly that she did not notice a lieu re steal from a shelter shed and pur sue her path. This was Gideon Hope, awaiting an opportunity for a brief necessary word with her. Since his whole facial presentment had been changed by that dip in the acid trough, be had ventured more boldly in and out among shops and workmen. Claire sped on. full of her mission. As she reached the middle of the long casting shop, she fancied she descried a way of encompassing her purpose with due econ omy of time and distance. Rroad doors cut the exact center of the structure on two sides. She could look across and through the width of the place. Ry covering three hundred feet, cross ing the gutters and troughs in soft black molding sand, the set "pig iron" beds, she could come speedily to the other side, and at once discover Kane. Her dainty feet disturbed the even, numerous rows of indentations sunk to receive the molten iron, but not sufficient ly to destroy their utility, and she hur ried along in the semi-gloom of the cov ered shed until about half way across the structure. Then a grewsome, a hurried, sound checked her : then a flare, sudden, blind ing, shot across both far ends of the building. It seemed as if the jargon, the foul some blaze of hell itself had let loose! Claire stood appalled. The overwhelm ing, the terrible, the soul-curdling had happened all in a moment! This had occurred : At either end, on a signal, because the time had come for the usual operation, the two immense blast furnaces had been openened up. Instantly their gushed forth tons of molten metal, cascades, a torrent of it! Quick as lightning, swift, lurid steam, it splotched into the central gutter, and spread. Out, in filling a score of feeder arter ies, distributing veins, channels, in one throbbing, setient minute the long, speeding rivulets of red hot metal dash ed down, along, across. Claire was environed shut in ! Only now, in the vivid illumination, did the workers on the end platforms discover the human victim penned in. Rut now no hand could stay the de stroying stream; cow no saving arm could reach her. "She's lost!" "It's reached her !' "No, not yet, but " A roar of many voices went up a groan of hope It was, half cheer of hope. Clftlre had sunk to her knees. She thought her doom had come, and was praying. With closed eyes she felt the hot. scorching breath fly nearer, closer. The spell-lwund workers were glaring at one sudden, heroic figure. A man had abruptly appeared at the side doorway Claire had recently entered. It was Gideon Hope. In an Instant he saw the frightful peril of the woman whose life had become so strongly bound up with his own. A spring, and he was on the planking spanning the upper arches of the grimy structure. A keen run and he was nearly over her head. There was a rattle. He had sprung to the side of a derrick, released its gearing. Its booked chain dropped, tangled, di rectly over the head of the fire-environed Claire. It rattled, swung, vibrated. Those peer ing through spitting sparke of flame and foamy fits of steam witnessed him slide the chain like some apt sailor. "Cling to me !" Hoarsely, breathlessly, Hope shouted the word, lifting Claire as he spoke. Her dress had caught ablaze. He dash ed out the flaming cloth. Her eyes opened in wild hope in wild er surprise. "You !" she cried in a love of joy, and unhesitatingly clasped her arms about his neck for to cling there was her only safety. A Btrange, weird emotion played across Gideon Hope's strong soul. "You know me !" he ufctered. "Anywhere !" He lifted hand over hand they got safe above the blistering heat, the spite ful sparks of fire, shooting up like disap pointed serpents. He was forced to rest the weight, the tension was horrible. Their eyes met. A startling, thrilling rapture filled him. Almost could he wish to cling there a moment thus, with that sweet face so near to his own, and drop deliriously to the lurking death beneath obliteration of a broken life after one rapture-laden moment of ecstasy ! Rut he struggled anew. They reached the platform safe. She still clung to him. lie had saved her life. A shout aroused both. A white-faced man, followed by others, was dashing down the planking towards them. It was Percy Kane. "H is coming!" said Claire, "I must tell vol something." "Tcsr He was unnerved, in strange emetion nnd trusted not to words. "That man! lie he has asked " Her gaze dropped. Then she continued faintly : "He has nuked me to be his wife." Gideon Hope started as though stung. Then the old sternnes came to, his hard, iron face. "You have found no clews no papers? Nothing of his past?" "Nothing," she said, weakly, A void of agony was in the man's heart. Rut Kane was nearing them, He thought of his purpose, of his mur dered brother. His soul grew sick within him, his face was ashen, but justice urged, As though pronouncing bis own doom, in a harsh, hollow tone, Gideon Hop said decisively : "You must marry this man !" CI I APT Kit VII. White as marble, the president of the greatest iron and steel combine on earth, staggered back from the ticker standing in one corner of bis private office, .and gasped a wild, frantic word "Incredible !" Around him was the busy hum of in dustry, the air clouded with constant steam and smoke, the jar of giant ham mers, the whirr and whistle of wheel and valve. At one corner of this vast industrial city was his own nest of luxury, one of a suite of offices magnificent enough for a prince; there he stood. A man sud denly transfixed, the white paper strip playing out from the ticker dropped from his grasp, a queer rattle sounded in his throat, and then he felt something give way, and the plate glass windows danced dazzled, and he fell in a senseless heap across the rich velvet tufted rug. It was two months after the thrilling events that bed culminated in the strange peril of beautiful Claire Tremaine in her stranger rescue by the man who was at once her master and her minion. Little had the powerful confederation of millenaries, who directed and misdi rected the doings of the great metal trust, recked of the insidious power that, in visible but potent, was slowly undermin ing the bold, strong work of years they knew not. for the feared not. And now a blow nad fallen one ! And they dreamed not its source, not even its import. For some minutes the great magnate lay stretched, a lump of clay. Then the door opened. Jauntily smoking n cigar, Percy Kane entered the apartment. His eye was bright, his step firm. There was joy in his face a new emotion that somewhat toned down the hard, sordid lines of his selfishness and avarice. He checked himself in surprise and then in dismay, and, rooted, stood staring blank ly at the prostrate form at his feet. "Worthington, man ! what is this?" he exclaimed. A cold sneer began to play over his lip as the natural thought came to him that the president had tarried too long at the elegant private buffet in the interior re ception room. Just now, however, the figure stirred. There was a moan, then a weird, convulsive shudder. The sufferer sat up, his hand voidly, confusedly brushing bts brow. "Something snapped !" he maundered. "Snapped?" chalh nged Kane, with ir ritation. "Yes !" "Where?" "In my head ! I was I was " Laboriously the president struggled to his feet. He fa!tced toward the nearest (hair. Then ns he sank into it his white fae grew still whiter. A sharp cry es caped his lii3, and ae pointed a trembling finger at tli5 snake-like strip of ribbon, unwinding unwinding, from the ticker, remorseless as some ghoul of fate telling off the fortunes madew unmade, at the stroke of the pendulum on the stock ex change of New York City, five hundred miles away. "Look !" he shivered "and read !" "Oh! you mean " began Kane cool ly, passing toward the telegraph instru ment then a sudden excitement made him go quicker, for he began to estimate the source of his confrere's emotion. He snatched up the snake-like coil deft, practiced finger and eve ran along the narrow strip indented with harsh-dots and dashes. "The deuce !" he muttered, and his fine white teeth clenched and met through the Havana. "Destruction!" he almost shouted after a second lightning-like scan of the rib bon, and the cigar dropped from between his lips, and a gray color began to creep from the brow downward over his star tled, bis appalled face. (To be continued.) nolilan Indiana. The Indian women of Roll via are usually superior to their lords in actual intelligence; also in age, as a rule. They earn the larger Kim re of their mutual "living" and take the lead in most thing. As recognized betid of the bouse the Bolivian Indian wife is much more likely to thrash her comparatively timid spouse than lie is to ill use her. In the markets, when produce lias to be disposed of, she can drive a far bet ter bargain than be could; she can car ry as heavy burdens, endure as much privation and physical toil, labor, chew as much cocoa and drink as much strong drink. Little or no money passes among the Bolivian Indians, their mediums of ex change being whatever they may raise or the labor of their hands. They will eat when not hungry, drink when not thirsty, sleep when not sleepy, any where and any time when opportunity offers, "against the time of need," ns they say. The majority are in a state of semi intoxication from babyhood to the grave, alcohol being used on every pretext, freely as their means will al low, on occasions of births, deaths and feast days the last named being re markably frequent. Boston Globe. He Ilaa to nay. "You know," said the soulful youth, "music Is the food of love " "Nonsense!" replied the practical fellow, "my love prefers lobster salad, terrapin and other expensive fodder." Philadelphia Presa SULTAN'S FIRST APPEARANCE IN PUBLIC. ViVvYVN H M &eVf 7 j , - I i- - v"v , iihi'ftva&s ,y......g.......-.V. T. . ABDUL 1IAMID, SULTAN OF TUB KEY. Perhaps the most astonishing recent change in Turkey Is that which la represented by the spectacle of the Sultan taking a drive. Until the threat ened advance of two army corps uixm Stamboul forced Abdul Ilamld to revive the constitution of 1ST0 the commander of the faithful never had dared to show himself outside the precincts of Ylldiz kiosk, except for the Friday drive to the Selamtk in the Ilamldleh mosque, which is practically within the grounds of the palace. Ry thus showing himself freely to his people Abdul Ilamld has done a good stroke of business for himself, because the Turk is a patient beast of burden, absolutely loyal to his padlshah, and only asking not to be. ridden to death by corrupt pashas and palace favorites. Hence the public appearances of the Sultan have been the occasion of a series of out bursts of perfectly sincere loyalty. jvention Ry a recently patented movable mold, a well organized force of laborers can lay 2 feet of cement sidewalk per min ute. A practically permanent paint, a rich brown In color, is made by grind ing the bones of mummies with bitu men. Although iron ore is found in almost every State and territory in the Union, it is mined profitably in only twenty nine. A Pittsburg firm Is making a special ty of glass grave "stones," which show portraits of the deceased blown in the front. Contracts have been awarded for al most 10,000 tons of dynamite for use on the Panama canal within the next twelve months. The Island of Formosa exported 4.121,500 pounds of camphor last year, of which 1,033,300 pounds came to the United States. A patent has been granted to an at tachment to a rocking chair to operate a fan to cool the occupant while sway ing to and fro. The United States produced 5,004 long tons of manganese last year, worth $24,7(53, more than any previous year except 1002 and 1900. Over $225,000 has been subscribed to the Koch endowment to be applied to a crusade against tuberculosis, under the direction of Dr. Koch. A company is being formed at St. Louis with $2,000,000 capital to oper ate a line of steel barges between that city and New Orleans. , A Philadelphia foundry makes a spe cialty of breaking up old steel cannon and remeltlng the metal for more than half a hundred purposes. A compressed air buffer lias been patented for locomotives which, it Is claimed, will prevent a serious wreck in the event of a colllslon: Wax obtained by boiling crude ozo cerite, obtained from the bituminous shales of central Toland and Hungary, is used for candles by the peasants. The result of observations of double stars made from 183!) to 1907 at the observatory at Cambridge, England, soon will be published in book form. More than 100,000,000 lobsters were propagated and set free by the fish commission last year, with the result that the price was cut almost in half. A Russian Inventor has brought to the United States a motor boat which he claims will make a speed of thirty one miles an hour with a 12 horse power engine. More rapid changes In animal and rogetable life, says Science, are taking place In New Zealand than almost any where else in the world. The native Polynesian race is disappearing before the European; the native wild animals amount to little in contest with Im Iorted species, many of which now run wild; the Btreams are full of. Ameri can and European trout, whl"h attain an enormous size; and even tjie forests are to be replaced by planting foreign J trees as the native ones disappear. Eleven million larches, oaks, spruces, Douglas flrs and eucalypts have already been planted, and vast numbers of seed lings are coming In all the time. The reason for replacing the native trees with species from the United States, Europe and Australia Is that those of New Zealand are too slow of growth although some of them produce excel lent timber. The Implantations thrive everywhere. The older countries having beeL stripped of their forests. In many cases to the danger-point, search Is now be ing made for valuable woods in newer lands. Among these is Brazil, which Is known to possess enormous wealth of this kind. Already the great Bra zilian forests are beginning to feed the sawmills which are rapidly being erect ed. It has been remarked that not withstanding the vast Increase in the use of metal all over the world, the demand for wood is still growing. Many of the forests of Brazil are yet so far from the railroads that they remain In comparative safety, but others are feeling the ax. An increasing quantity of timber finds its way from the In terior to Kio de Janeiro, where It Is used for packing-boxes, match manu facture, and many other purposes, and a note of alarm Is sounded by those who have learned what it mentis to strip a country of Its forest resources without providing for their renewal. POINTING THE BONE. Queer Snperat ttlon of (he Native Iilnck of Analrnlln. The native blacks of Australia an. steeped in superstition. A black fellow will on no account go near the spot where another black has been burled. He has a deep rooted aversion to one particular bird the wagtail because, lie says, "him all day talk, talk along a white feller, tellum all about black feller," and no opportunity is lost of killing these little birds. Many tribes "bury" their dead b sticking them up into the forks of trees and there leaving them till the flesh has either dropped or been taken, leav ing the bones clean. These bones are then taken down, the larger ones hurled and the smallest handed round as keep sakes to those nearly related to the de ceased. Should one black fellow wish the death of a rival or enemy he points the bone at him. This means that he takes one of his late relation's bones from his dllly bag and points it, in the presence of witnesses, at the man he wishes to get rid of, all the time pour ing forth threats and curses. Strange as it may seem, the one pointed at will often languish and even tually die, perhaps In a month, perhaps in a year, for no sooner is the bone pointed than he makes up his mind to die, and there is no saving him. Lon don Standard. Different Opinion. "I Bee a man intends to let a rattle snake bite him and depend on prayer for a cure. I call that faith." "I call it cruelty to animals unless somebody's going to pray for the snake after It's bitten such a fool as that" Philadelphia Ledger. If women are talking machines, men who sow wlkl oats should be classed at ewlng mauhlnea. TRUMPET CALLS. itam'a Horn Bound n Warning Not to. t lie Unredeemed. There Is no to morrow in God's calendar. The worst of all failures Is to suc ceed hi doing wrong. In killing snakes It Is belter to cut off an Inch of head than a foot of tall. Covet ousnoss is the moth, r of many sins. Even (he devil will behave himself . when chained. God honors the man who is not afraid of a hard place. Putting ball bearings on the church doors is a poor way to 1)11 the pews. Denouncing sin with a club In (he hand Is not the way Jesus did It. The man God calls, has to make n move of some kind. He can't stand still. A boy generally gets his best from his mother and his worst from his father. The book of Jonah wits written to show that God is In favor of foreign missions,' The man who leads a prayer-meeting should neither exhaust his subject nor his congregation. The preacher who does not get much out of the Bible for himself will get less for his people. There Is something about a real man that makes him shun a way that is carpeted with velvet. HOW ABOUT YOUR DOG? JJj 5 " rV J8VJ Some facts which every lover of dogs should know are printed in Our Four- footed Friends. The writer of the ar ticle U'lleves that nine dogs out of ten which their owners have to get rid of ire simply the victims of careless or unkind treatment. Overfeeding and lack of exercise are the cause of ills In the canine race as well as among human beings. Nothing is so certain to make a dog sullen or cross as chaining him up. He suffers so much from confinement that it inevitably changes his disposi tion. It is not only a wrong and a cruel way to treat a dog, but it Is fool ish, for a chained dog can be of no service to his owner excepting to bark. A tramp or burglar knows the dog cannot reach him to harm him. A chained dog Is likely to bark at a friend as well as at a foe, or at a dog running by or a passing team. The family gets used to his barking, and no one is likely to get up In the night and Investigate every time the chained dog barks; A dog that Is well treated and has his freedom stays about the place and guards it. Of course there are excep tions "tramp dogs," we call them; but the family wanting a watch dog can find one that will discriminate between friend and foe, and strike terror to the heart of evil-doers by the very fact that he is loose. I have heard it said, and I believe It to be true, that burglars dread a little house dog Inside the house more than a dog outside the house, as they havo ways of quieting the latter. A dog that sleeps Inside the barn is a greater safeguard to the barn than one out side and chained up. If a dog is kept outside to guard place he should not be chained, but should have a goodsi.ed, comfortablu dog house, facing south, raised at least six inches from the ground, ns other wise the floor will be cold and damp. and cause rheumatism. There should le a bed of loose straw or excelsior, hanged frequently enough lo keep it lean and dry, and always a dish full of fresh, clean water. A .dog is a living, sensitive creature. not a machine, yet ho frequently gets less careful attention than the machi nery men use. It is seldom a boy or even a man will take as good care of his dog as he does of his bicycle or his lutomoblle. A chained dog is wretched, and n& one has a right to cause any creature constant suffering, even to serve whit one may call a useful purpose. lieu inning lOnrlj. Papa," said little Hollo, whose fath er was sharing himself, "didn't you tell me once that a man was a benefactor who made two blades of grass grow '(here only one grew In-fore 't" Yes, my son." Then a man who makes safety razors is a iK'iiefactor, Isn't he?" "Why so?" asked his father. "Because he makes ten blades grovr where there wasn't any In-fore," an swered little Bollo. Alvlra," groaned the sad father. that lKy is going to 1k a humorist." nitterlf Dlanppolnled. Inquisitive If, as you say, you knew diis man to be a rake, why did you In vite him to your house? I Ion pock Heavens, man, I never dreamed he would elope with my daughter; I thought lie would carry off my wife. La Hire. No, Indeed. "Jinx Is going to Honduras to en list In the army of that gorernmenL' "He's a soldier of fortune, eh?" "No, he's a soldier of no fortune! If he had a fortune he would stay ere." Houston Tost