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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1908)
A Political WELDON CHAPTER XVI. The big fellow strained and struggled rainly. Then he bent his head, mastiff like. Bellowing with wrath, he sank his teeth into one imprisoning hand. They almost met. In frenzy at the pain, Hope released his other hand. The fellow seized It with both of his own, holding on still with his teeth. Hope was queerly baffled as to the exercise of any free strength. This was the opiKirtunity of the man in among the trees he came flying from his covert. A blunt-edged piece of iron was his weapon. He had full scope Hope was not only hampered, but had not even seen him approach. One, two, three the blows came In rapid succession. The skull bones seemed to crack. At each blow Hope staggered, sank, his head plunging forward then he was on his knees, and, dragging his first assailant along with him, he struck the ground a huddled, senseless heap. The big fellow tore himself loose, arose erect, ground his teeth at the prostrate Hope and kicked him with his foot. "No need of that, partner!" glibly pro claimed his confrere. "I guess I've done more than bargained." "Killed?" exclaimed the other, with a start. "He looks it," was coolly retorted. Then tilt! speaker stooped and examined the gap ing wounds in the back of Hope's head. '"No," he announced, "he's got it good and strong, but he's breathing all right. Keep watch." He began to ransack Hope's pockets, while the other ran his eyes constantly up and down the lane. Suddenly he littered an exclamation of decided emphasis and disappointment. "Xo !" he said, with fierce fury, arising to his feet. "He hasn't got the stuff?" "No cut-in-two bank bills, as said "By Kane!" "No names !" "Where are they, then?" "Maybe at his home hey?" "That's got to be found out, you know." "It has, surely." "You see to it." "Yes." "And be quick." "As lightning." They dragged Hope in among the trees, half burying him in a hollow blown full of dead leaves. The giant stood watching him and the road, while his companion disappeared. He was gone a full hour. The big fel low was uneasy enough before he re turned. "Well?" he challenged, eagerly, the mo ment his comrade came within hailing dis tance. "No good !" growled the other, scowling- ly. "You searched " "Everywhere." "And found?" ' "Not a trace." "Then the stuff's planted!" "Of course." "What we going to do?" "You tell!" The big fellow stood stupidly rubbing his chin. His associate pulled away the leaves and examined Hope once more. Finally he came up closer to his compan ion : "See here," he said, "you listen to me !" "I'm listening." "There's no use dallying over this. Kane told us what to do " "Yes get those cut-in-two bills." "That's it. Now then, this man is laid np, and maybe for a spell." "What then?" "We must get him to some place doubly ecu re." "What do yon mean by that?" "Where we can mend him up " "Ah !" "And hold him till he tells where he's planted that stuff." "Ay !" "I know such a place," the speaker chuckled elfisbly. "You get a cab, and drive it yourself, and hurry back here, and we'll soon have this gentleman where we can learn his secret at leisure." "If he tells it?" "He will," confidently proclaimed the other. "He will, or he'll never see sun light again !" CHAPTER XVII. Two, four, six, eight ! two, four, six ! Over and over, and over again, Gideon Hope counted the paces, till utterance had grown to a maddening mumbling mono tone always the same result along, across a grated door, a blank, sealed wall. Then, too. ever the same dim prospect; the heavy oaken door beyond one of thick est iron bars, a diamond hole letting In light from some far source down a nar row, desolate hallway. This was his third day In this den, this prison that is, his third conscious day and he knew no more concerning his real whereabouts and environment now than when his senses had first roused to the fact he was a captive. Hope bad a dim memory of the double assault in the lane, and later, after studi ous reflection, a vague suspicion as to the motive of the same. The condition of his clothing showed that the ass'iult iuvolfed meditated rob bery. Yet his personal valuables were in tact, and the grim conviction bore upon his mind that the severed bank notes must have been the booty sought for. Then he readily surmised that Percy Kane must be at the back of this new stroke of villainy. He was equal to it. Such a man had trusty tools at command. The stroke was a royal od. Besides, bis own fyiMy demanded that Hope be put out of the way. "Out of the way" he was! as surely and iwcurely'as though entombed in some castle fastness. It was a grim prison in which Hone found himself, and full of mysterr i Vendetta By J. COBB Twice a day a wooden-faced man of sixty shambled down the corridor, brought food and water, retired. Twice a day : for those three wearying days Hope had endeavored to draw the man Into conver ' sation, to learn where he was, and why there, J Feigned or sincere, apparent stupidity : of glance and demeanor was his mute uni form response the attendant would not, or could not, hear or speak. On the morning of the fourth day, as this man left the breakfast tray, Hope noticed that it bore three unfamiliar ar ticles ; first, a folded note ; second, a blank sheet of paper ; third, a lead pencil, sharpened to a fine point. Eagerly he opened the folded missive. It was unsigned, and the writing was rudo and unfamiliar. "Thus it ran: "You have 24 hours to do as directed or die. On this blank sheet write a plain and correct statement of where you have hidden those 250 half-thousand-dollar notes. If we find them, you go free. If we don't it's all up with you !" Now the issue was perfectly plain to the captive. His eye flashed vindictively as he realized that he held the enemy at defiance in one particular ; that of the great essential of money. But this emotion died down and his heart sank dull and spiritless within him . as he thought of Claire. What mattered . aught else, now that he had doomed her to become legally bound to a monster whose presence must be poison to her gentle, innocent nature ! So Hope raved, wept, grew moody and desperate to madness by turns, as the slow hours dragged themselves along so another day passed. To the menacing note only too well understood he vouch safed no thought or care. The attendant waited for him a moment or two when he came with the food that evening, as if allowing a chance to send an answer, but the prisoner only eyed him with lurid, rageful glance, and when he was gone threw himself on the hard, bare bench that was his bed, and lay stolid, and yet acutely suffering, merged in awful thought concerning Kane, torturing self-condemnation when Claire's sad, reproachful face haunted his mind, He could fancy Kane playing his wait ing game. The man cared nothing for reputation, the crimes of the past were to him only useful stepping stones of ex perience for the future. He was safe from exposure, while he, Hope, was out of Che way. His scheme was patent : to wring from his captive the secret of the hiding place of the severed treasury notes. If this failed, he would certainly trag ically remove him from his path. With time given, he could adopt some specious plot to secure at least a few thousands from the Trust wreck. He had Claire, had he not? What more could he wish taking ber to some distant part, and be ginning a new course of swindling. This finale well nigh drove Gideon Hope mad. Suddenly he raised his head and listen ed. There was a slight clatter in the cor ridor. Some one was moving about there. Then he heard the words : "He's asleep. It's late and we'll give him anohher day to change his mind. Then the red-hot torture irons, if he won't give up the secret of that money reasonably." Footsteps retreated. Grimly Hope re flected over this new phase of the case. He was certainly in a critical situation, and in bad hands. Once more he sank to the bench, and once again a foreign sound attracted his notice. It proceeded from one end of the heavy wooden partition evidently separat ing the apartment he was in from the one adjoining. He moved about. The noise, resembling sawing, ceased. Amid his deep misery Hope forgot all about it, and final ly sank into a sudden sleep. He awoke with a queer sensation, and opened his eyes with a vivid start. His cell held an occupant other than himself. At first, discerning trenchery and attack, Hope raised both hands, fists clenhced. But he dropped them,- as In the light of faint daybreak he more closely observed the figure standing a foot away from his couch and regarding him fixedly. It was that of a man about his own J age, though very wan and wild-eyed. His attire was disarranged, and he had his head bound up In a cloth, as though in jured there. But his pose was friendly. "Who are you? How did you get in here?" questioned Hope, quickly, spring ing to his feet and staring vaguely at the intruder. "Not by the door," answered a hollow, fluttering voice. "Then how " began Hope in pro found wonderment. Then succeeded in tense curiosity, for the intruder had point ed toward the partition. A square about two feet in size had been cut from the heavy timbers and lay upon the floor, amid a litter of sawdust. The disturbing sound of the night previous was now ex plained. CHAPTER XVIII. Hope was burning with eager desire to interrogate his visitor, to learn of his en vironment, of the world without, but glancing at a watch he carried, the latter said hurriedly : "We must not risk talking now. The attendant will soon be here. Set the pieces of board in place as soon as I crawl back through the hole yonder, and brush the sawdust out of sight." "But later?" "As soon as the attendant has retired I will return," promised the other. He moved about feebly. Hope noticed, as be reclosed the sawed-tbrough boards. Tie strange occurrence had roused him oat of his apathy. He anxiously awaited the arrival of the attendant with the morning meal. No sooner had the man retired than tbe occupant of the next apartment pushed out the boards and crept into Hope's presence again. He panted weakly from the exercise, and aat down on the bench to recover hi breath. Then ha said: "How long have you been here?" "A week more or less." "And why?" qucriud the man, Bean' ning Hope critically. "You don't appear that is " He stumbled in his speech, and stopped dead short. "Go on !" urged Hope. "Mad, you were going to say?" "Yes." "Then this place " "Is a mad house, a private Insane asy lum. Didn't you know that?". "I half suspected It," answered Hope. "I was, however, brought here while un conscious." "Then you never was queer?" "Not that I know of." The other shook his head dubiously. "Thoy are ' a pretty hard set, on gen eral principles, then," he; continued "ready to do almost anything for money, I fancy. But your plight Is different from mine. I was brought here really a raving maniac." "You seem rational enough now," sug gested Hope, quietly. "Oh, yes I It was a terrific Injury on the head, in a railroad accident, and sub sequently fever and delirium, that Induced an unskilled surgeon and a careless friend to trust me to the tender mercies of these human harpies here. I was in their hos pital room, as they call it, for a week. Then I got sensible enough to be trouble some. They shut me in this terrible pris on, a place dreary enough to drive a man really mad the violent ward!" "But if you have recovered your rea son " began Hope. "They will release me when my friend makes his monthly visit, of course." "Soon?" "Pay after to-morrow." "That is not long to wait," remarked Hope, mentally calculating how he could utilize this patient's liberty to bring about his own. He was amazed as his companion sprang sharply to his feet, an absorbing wildness in his face and manner. "Long?" he repeated, shrilly "man! If I am not outside these walls, a free man, by another midnight, if a mission I have to perform is not executed before the next day at dawn, I am a lost man, and I shall batter my brain out against these walls, cruel and unrelenting as the stony-hearted monsters who treat my heartbroken pleadings as the ravings of a wild maniac !" Hope regarded his companion strange ly. The man's very soul was in voice and face. There could be no doubt of his urgent rational sincerity. "I do not understand you," murmured nope. "Let me calm myself let me be calm!" panted the other, placing a shaking hand over his heart. "It is so necessary ! You see, I am still physically weak. That is why, wheln I found the saw, doubtlessly secreted by some' former victim, I cut my way first to this cell, suspecting its occu pancy for I need help, and if I give you your liberty you must swear to help me." (To be continued.) Labor-saving Style. Mr. Perkins did not often comment on his wife's dress or make suggestions, but one day he looked at her so long and thoughtfully that she Inquired if ttierp wns anvthine he did not like about her new gown. "No, my dear," said Mr. Perkins, hastily "certainly not. I was only thinking. That waist of yours seems to be so elaborate, with the lace and all. Why not have a simpler mode of dress?" "Why not, Indeed?" said Mrs. Per kins, sweetly. "I suppose youve seen one that lust pleased you. What was it like?" "It was white," said her husband; "all white and perfectly plain, my dear, not a particle of lace or ruffling or what I think I have heard you call tucks nothing of the sort. All there was, my dear, was a simple littie braid In flower natterns of some sort. It covered the entire waist. "I sat beside the lady for half an hour in the car. .and I can assure you it was quite neat and attractive. Sim mons and I spoke of it on the way up from the train. He said he should mention it to his wife." "Your poor, ignorant creatures !" said Mrs. Perkins, tenderly. "The days and days It must have taken to make that neat, simple, plain little waist !' Caught on the Rebound. "John, dear," said Mrs. Sklnipem, as she poured the coffee at the breakfast table, "if I remember rightly, you have often said you disliked to see a woman constantly getting herself Into print." "That's right," rejoined Skiniiem. "You consider It Indelicate uud uu womanly, don't you?" "I certainly do." "And you don't think a sensible man would allow his wife to do anything like that?" "Most assuredly not." "Well, John, I'm glad you have such radical views on the subject, because they Justify me in asking you for a new silk dress." "W what?" "You heard what I said, John. For the last five years I've had nothing but bargain-counter calico, and I'm tired of getting Into print." Aud what could poor John do? II at her Sprlng-jr. Restaurant Proprietor Meat ia on the jump these days, sir. Patron Well, I should say so. Restaurant Proprietor Yes. thosb porterhouse steaks you have been or derlng have Jumped 3 cents in three days. Patron Yes, and the last one yon served me was so tough ft Jumped three feet from the table before I could cut It Plaaalble. Mrs. Giles (reading) A scientist dow comes forward with the theory that Jonah was "wallowed by an earth quake Instead of by' a whale. Giles Well, that la a plausible the ory. Instead of a fish It waa a Assure SUagre In Steer Feeding. The use of silage in feeding steers while fattening Is growing In favor steadily, and especially where lands are high priced and when feeding suiifs generally are high. Thero lias been n good deal of prejudice against silnge mnong extensive feeders, but as they nre induced to try it so do they become converted to its use. In feeding experiments conducted at the Mif-sourl Station in J:)0d-7 with steers weighing about 800 pou-id-) each a: tho beginning, those fed sllaga ate less dry matter than tboso fed whole stover or shredded stove-, and gained If. weight, while the dry stover lots lost. The same sort of results were also secured from feeding siloed stover ci. in pa red fith air-dried material. Professor Plumb, of the Ohio Agrl cultural College, has this to say on Hie subject : "If silage is fed under coer, ar.d to cattle rot wallowing hi mud or ook.v manure, then good results will gen erally come from Its use. However. hay or other dry roughage should also fed. Silage fed twiw a day and hay once should give good results. When cattle are being finished fr shipment, then the. amount of silage fed should be reduced and tho dry roughage Increased, this to- prevent much shrinkage in shipping. However, In what Is known as rational feeding, but l?ttle shrinkage Is apt to occur f-oin the use of the silage. .In ex perl monts with steers fed different rations at the Virginia Station, thos fed si lage showed no appreciable shrinkage In the market over those fed exclusive ly dry feed." Crib Without a Shovel. This grain storage house Is de signed to allow for handling the crop without unnecessary lifting. Grain is hauled In the upper drive and poured from the wagons Into the bins, and is then removed by be ing drained from the bins Into the wagons In the SECTION OF THE CKIB lower driveway. If built upon a hill side the Job of making the fills will not be serious. Even on level ground this can be done without a great ex penditure of labor with the use of a road scraper. The entire building must be raised upon piers about 4 ft. high, so that the bottom of the bins Is not much lower than the bottom of the wagon box, allowing the entire contents of the blna to be drained Into the wagons without lifting. Farm and Home. ruberculoala In Cattle of England. Consul Joseph O. Stephens of Ply mouth, advises that the English auth orities are making known through th medium of the press the disagreeable facts relative to tuberculosis In cows and phthisis In human beings In that section of England. The relation of the two Is said to be a scientific fact. In many districts of Devon 25 per cent of the cows have tuberculosis. The average number of deaths from con sumption among the people of the sin gle County of Devon alone exceeds 300 per annum. In one charity organiza tion 80 per cent of tho children are suffering from this dread disease. The Horae that Pulla on Ilia Bit. It Is claimed by one who has tried it that a driving horse that pulls on the bit can be cured by fastening a small ring on each side of tho bridle and as near the brow band as possible. Pass the lines through bit rings nnd snap them into the rings at the brow band. This, with a common jointed bit, will enable a child to hold a "pull er" or hard-mouthed horse with ease under almost all circumstances. It can be used on a fast horse In double team or on both, as desired. It Is cheap and easily applied and it won't make the mouth aore. Hovr Seeda Are Scattered. Dr. Howard, secretary of the Amer ican Society for the Advancement of Science, writing of the manner In which seeds are carried to great dis tances by birds, recites an experiment of Darwin which had a curious result Adhering to the leg of a wounded part ridge, Darwin found a ball of earth. weighing six and a half ounces. From tbe seeds contained in this ball be raised thirty-two plants, belonging to Ave distinct species. To Keen the Cellar Dry. In many farmhouses the cellar Is not cemented, so that when heavy rains come In the spring water la apt to make trouble. There la Just one way to keep auch a cellar dry, and that la by putting In a cement floor, and thor ough drainage for the outside of the walls. Better cement It now- II Bin I int BiH n T1 TWO-STOBY GRANABT. (low to Italan n Horn A fanner near Goliad had a novel experience. A few years ago he built a small barn, and In tho construction used green willow posts at the corners and along tho sides. For some time nothing unusual was noticed, but after a year he saw that where he had laid the floor near the ground it was three feet above soil. He discovered that the willow posts, Instead of being dead, were alive, had taken root and were growing-. In their upward movement" they had carried the barn along. Last spring the barn was on stilts 9 feet high, and he put In a new floor and surrounded the posts with siding, thereby making a two-story affair. There Is now a space of 9 Inches be tween the floor and the ground, and the owner expects to have a three-story barn in the course of time. Goliad. (Texas) Guard. Value of Potatoea aa Food. According to statistics obtained, It appears that potatoes constitute about 13 per cent of the total food con sumed by the average family. They are essentially starchy and eaten alone would furnish a very one-sided badly COMPOSITION OF THE POTATO. A, fat: b, crude fibre and other carbohydlat ls exclusive of starch ; c, protein j d, ash. balanced diet that would prove un wholesome to most people. As Indi cated In the Illustration the edible por tion, is made up of 78.3 per cent water, 18.4 per cent carbohydrates (principal ly starch), 2.2 per cent protein, 0.1 per cent fat, and 1 per cent ash or mineral matter. These figures represent gen eral averages from which there are wide variations In Individual speci mens. When potatoes are eaten with meat, eggs, or fish, which are essenti ally nitrogenous foods, a well-balanced diet Is obtained. Salt fur rain, A supply of salt available whenever the cow wants It Is necessary to main tain a high milk yield. Salt stimulates the aipetite and assists digestion and assimilation, which increase the flow of the fluids of the body. Salting feeds for dairy cows once a week Is not suf ficient. It is a good plan to keep rock salt under shelter where the cows can get It at will and then feed loose salt once a week in such quantities as the cows will eat. Loose salt may be used exclusively If It can be sheltered from rain. Do not mix salt with feed, for frequently cows get more salt than they need, which will reduce the flow of milk. Cows having salt kept before them at all times In separate compart ments will not eat too much. The Poultry Ilonae, Now is a good time to disinfect the poultry house, so as to keep the lice from getting a mastery over you. Any kind of liquid lice killer Is good to spray the house with, being sure to spray the roosts and nest boxes as well. If a cheaper disinfectant ia re- qoired, a whitewash can be made of 1 line nnd water, with some crude car bolic acid In It This proves a very good deodorizer and disinfectant, and large quantity of It can be used without hurting the pocketbook too se verely. Wound on Treea. No artificial medium can be applied to the surface of a tree wound which will Induce it to heal more quickly. The activity of the healing process de pends upon the character and position and the time of the year when the wound Is made, rather than upon pro tective coverings, but where a large surface of heart wood Is exposed It is advisable to protect It from decay by a coat of white lead or other satisfac tory covering. Milk for Calvea. The calf finds In fresh milk while it is still warm with the animal heat of the cow, it Is said, a constituent value not found In the milk after it Is allowed to get cold. The chemist cannot define It, and It cannot be restored again by warming the milk. If every calf could be fed Its milk sweet, nnd while it still retained Its animal heat, there would no doubt lie fewer cat-hammed steers going to the block. The Sweet Potato Delt. The northern limit for sweet potato culture is roughly indicated by a line drawn from the border line of Massa chusetts and Connecticut on the east coast westward to the northeast corner of Colorado, but the area where it is profitable commercially would be con siderably south of this, except in the Mississippi valley, where It extends well Into Iowa, Illinois and Indiana. The Potato, Recently, in Hartz, Germany, a monument was found bearing this In scription: "Here, in the year 1747, the first trials were made with the cul tivation of the potato." By the way, when Frederick II. introduced the po tato into his domain his subjects did not like It; they refused to be both ered with it, and the emperor had to force them to cultivate It la Trlac Chlekeaa. When marketing chickens do not tie several of them together. They get the string twisted around their legs and tt cuts them. Take the chickens to town In a coop, or some other humane way. They are In absolute torture when sev eral are tied together. THE WEEKLY 1519 The Spaniards under Cortez en tered the strong and iwpulous cltv of Cholula. , 1029 John Wintihrop chosen colonial goverror of Massachusetts. 1728 City of Copenhagen, Denmark, nearly destroyed by fire. 1741 David Garriek, the celebrated ac tor, made his first appearance in London. 1774 Brig Peggy Stewart and its cargo of tea destroyed by tho patriots at Annapolis, Md. 177." The Continental Congress adopted the Pine Tree flag. 1781 Cornwnllis surrendered to the French and American army at York town. 1801 Swiss immigrants established a settlement at Greensburg, Pa. 1812 United States frigate President captured tho richly laden British packet Swallow. .. .Napoleon began his memorable and disastrous retreat from Moscow. .. .The United States sloop-of-war Wasp cnirtured the British brig Frolic. .. .Polotsk retak en by the Russians. 1S14 Americans repulsed the British at battle of Lyon's Creek. 1815 Napoleon Bonaparte arrived at the island of St. Helena. 1820 Spain ratified treaty ceding Flor ida to the United States. 1842--CompIetion of the Croton water works celebrated in New York. 1810 First public application of ether, to deaden pain in surgical opera tions, made at Massachusetts gen eral hospital In Boston. 1850 First nntional convention of the Woman's Suffrage party met in Wor cester, Mass. 1854 The bombardment of Sevastopol began.... The Ostend manifesto, rec ommending the purchase of Cuba by the United States, was issued. 1855 Grand Trunk railway opened to Brockville, Ontario. 1859 John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry. 1800 The Prince of Wales visited Bos ton. 1803 Gen. Grant appointed to the com mand of the departments of the Ten nessee, Cumberland aud Ohio... Bat tle of Bristoe Station, Virginia. 1800 Twenty-five hundred houses de stroyed by fire in the French quarter of Quebec. 1808 The Oregon Legislature withdrew its assent to the fourteenth consti tutional amendment. 1874 Congress of American women met in Chicago Dedication of the Lincoln monument at Springfield, Illinois. 1878 Lord Dufferln laid the foundation stone of Dufferin Terrace at Quebec. 1881 Centenary of the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown celebrated. 1,884 Republicans carried the State and congressional elections in Ohio. 1891 Phillips Brooks consecrated bishop of Massachusetts. 1894 A memorial to Sir John A. Mac ... douajd unveiled in Toronto. 1S95 Milwaukee celebrated the semi centennial of its incorporation. 1890 The dispute over the Catholic school. in Manitoba was. settled by compromise. 1899 Gen. Ji mines elected president of the Dominican republic. 1900 Lord and Lady Minto completed a tour of western Canada to the Pa- cLfic. 1905 Lutheran council in Milwaukee adopted resolution favoring interna' tional arbitration. 1900 The W. C. T. U.'s world's con gress assembled in Boston. 1907 The first regular wireless dispatch for commercial purposes was sent over the Atlantic ocean. .. .Philip pine Assembly 0nned by Secretary Taft....The Hague peace conference closed. TRADE AND INDUSTRY. The pearl button industry is at a stand still in Muscatine, Ia., because 500 blank cutters walked out of the automatic cut ting and finishing plant, the third largest weet water pearl button factory in the world. A dispute over wages is the cause. The American Smelting and Refining Company has issued its annual report for the year ending April 30 lat, which shows a decrease in earnings, compared with the previous year, of $3,840,770. President Daniel Guggenheim, in his re port to the stockholders, said that the de cline in business had not impaired the company's surplus which amounts to $13, 408.219. The Wisconsin (Bell) Telephone Com pany has absorbed the Western Wiscon sin Telephone Company, which had 1,500 subscribers and exchanges in Arcadia, Gaiesville, Trempealeau, Fountain City, Blair, Ettrick, Whitehall and Indepen dence, Wis. Frost and then warm sun rays de stroyed 20,000 bushels of ripe tomatoes ia the fields on Muscatine island, causing a loss of $10,000 In one day. The toma toes had been in a frozen state for three days and were being gathered by all the help available. Thirty minutes after tha sun shone the crop was a total lota.