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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1909)
Professional Directory of Wallowa County The Ysierv or THOS. M. DILL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW R. I. LONG COUNTY SURVEYOR t H. E. MERRYMAN SURVEYOR AND ENGINEER I T U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor, j. Mining and Metallurgical Engl- T neer Enterprise. Oregon. 5 Yellow Room ? Office first door south of New g j t Civil, Hvdraulic and Irrigation t 5 Fraternal Uldg., Enterprlsa, Ore. ! t,ufci.iejrmg. Enterprise, Ore. ? M By GASTON LEROUX & CHAPTER III. "A Man His Paated Like a Shadow Through the Blinda." d i wp . h , , and I were on the platform of zT"riT "v-4.... ..... luc i.taub which was to take us to Epluay-sur Orge. On the platform we found M. de Marquet and his registrar, who repre sented the Judicial court of Corbell. M. de Marquet had spent the night in Paris, assisting In the final rehearsal at the Scala of a little play of which he was the unknown author, signing himself simply "Castlgat Rldendo." M. Marquet was beginning to be a "noble old gentleman." Generally ho was extremely polite and full of gay humor and In all his life bad had but one passion that of dramatic art Because of the mystery which shrouded it the case of the yellow room was certain to fascinate so the atrical a mind. At the moment of meeting him I beard M. de Marquet say to the regis trar with a sigh: "I hope, my dear M. Malelne, this builder with his pickax will not de stroy so fine a mystery." "Have no fear," replied M. Malelne. "His pickax may demolish the pavilion perhaps, but It will leave our case In tact. I have sounded the walls and examined the ceiling and floor, and I know all about it 1 am not to be de ceived." Having thus reassured his chief, M. Malelne, with a discreet moement of the bead, drew M. de Marquet's atten tion to us. The face of that gentle man clouded, and as he saw Roule tabUle approaching, hat In hand, he sprang into one of the empty carriages. saying half aloud to his registrar as be did so, "Above all, no Journalists!" M. Malelne replied in the same tone, "I understand," and then tried to pre vent ' RouletabUle from entering the same compartment with the examining magistrate. "Excuse me, gentlemen, this com partment Is reserved." "I am a Journalist, monsieur, engag ed on the Epoque," said my young friend, with a great show of gesture and politeness, "and I have a word or two to say to M. de Marquet." "Monsieur Is very much engaged with the inquiry he has In hand." "An! His Inquiry, pray believe me, la absolutely a matter of Indifference to me. I am no scavenger of odds and ends," he went on, with infinite contempt In his lower Up; "I am a the atrical reporter, and this evening I hall have to give a little account of the play at the Scala." "Get in, sir, please," said the regis trar. RouletabUle was already in the com partment I went In after him and seated myself by his side. The regis trar followed and closed the carriage door. M. de Marquet looked at him. "Ah, sir," RouletabUle began, "you must not be angry with M. Malelne. It is not with M. de Marquet that I de sire to have the honor of speaking, but with M. -Castlgat Rldendo.' Permit me to congratulate you personally, as well as the writer for the Epoque." And RouletabUle, having first Introduced me, Introduced himself. M. de Marquet, with a nervous ges ture, caressed his beard into a point "The work of the dramatic author may Interfere," he said, after a slight hesitation, "with that of the magis trate, aspeclally In a province where one's labor are little more than rou tine." . "Oh, you may rely on my discretion!" cried RouletabUle. The train was lu motion. "We have started!" said the examin ing magistrate, surprised at seeing us etUl (n the carriage. "Yes. monsieur, truth has started,' said RouletabUle, smiling amiably, "on Its way to the Chateau du Glandler. A fine case. M. de Marquet, a fine casei "An obscure, incredible, unfathom able. Inexplicable affair, and there la only one thing I fear, M. Rouietawne. that the Journalists wiU be trying to exnlaln It" Mv friend felt this a rap on his knuckles. "Yes," he said simply, "that Is to be feared. They meddle In everything. As for my interest monsieur, I only re ferred to It by mere chance the mere chance of finding myself In the Bame train with you and in the same com nartment of the same carriage." "Where are you going, then?" asked M. de Marauet "To the Chateau du Glandler." re plied RouletabUle. without turning "You'll not itet In, M. RouletabUle!" "Will you prevent me?" said my friend, already prepared to ugut. "Not I! I like the press and Jour nalists too weU to be In any way fito agreeable to them, but M. Stanger son has given orders for his door to be closed against everybody, and it is well suarded. Not a Journalist was able to pass through the gate of the Glandler yesterday." M. de Marquet compressed his lips COPYRIGHT. 1908. BY BRENTANO'S and seemed ready to relapse into j oueuee. ne oniy remxea a nine wuen iiuuieiuume do louger ieit him in lguorunce of the fact that wo were going to the Glandler for the purpose of shaking hands with an "old i and intimate friend." M. Robert Dar- ZaC7a maD Whm. RouletabUle had perhaps seen once In his life. "p. i?..t.i,e ?s rtjpuiLei, iuis urcuuiui nuuir may do his death he Is so deeply In love with Mile. Stangerson. It Is to be hoped that Mile. Stangerson's life will be saved." "Let us hope so. Her father told me yesterday that If she does not recover It will not be long before be Joins her In the grave. What an Incalculable loss to science his death would be!" "The wound on her temple Is serious, Is it not?" "Evidently, but by a wonderful chance It has not proved mortal. The blow was given with great force." "Then It wns not with the revolver she was wounded," said RouletabUle, glancing at me in triumph. M. de Marquet appeared greatly em barrassed. "I didn't say anything, I don't want to say anything, I will not say any. thing," he said. And he turned toward his registrar as If he no longer knew us. But RouletabUle was not to be so easily shaken off. He moved nearer to the examining magistrate and, draw ing a copy of the Matin from his pock et, he showed It to him and said: "There Is one thing, monsieur, which I may Inquire of you without commit ting an Indiscretion. You have, of course, seen the account given lu the Matin? It Is absurd. Is It not?" "Not in the slightest, monsieur." "What! The yellow room has but one barred window, the bars of which have not been moved, and only one door, which had to be broken open, and the assassin was not found!" "That's so, monsieur; that's so. That's how the matter stands." RouletabUle said no more, but dune- ed into thought A quarter of an hour ' thus passed. Coming back to himself again, he said, addressing the magistrate: "How did Mile. Stangerson wear her hair on that evening?" I don't know," replied M. de Mar quet. "That's a very Important point," said RouletabUle. "Her hair was done up in bands, wasn't It? I feel sure that on that evening, the evening of the crime, she had her hair arranged In bands." "Then you are mistaken, M. Roule tabUle," replied the magistrate. "Mile. Stangerson that evening had her hair drawn up In a knot on the top of her head, her usual way of arranging It, her forehead comoletely uncovered. 1 can assure you, tor we nave carefully examined the wound. There was no blood on the hair, and the arrangement of It has not been disturbed since the crime was committed." "You are sure? You are sure that on the night of the crime she had not her huir in bauds?" 'Quite sure," the magistrate contin ued, smiling, "because I remember the doctor saying to me while be was ex amining the wound: 'It Is a great pity Mile. Stangerson was in the habit of drawing her hair back from her fore head. If she had worn it In bands the blow she received on the temple would have been weakened.' It seems strange to me that you should attach so much Importance to this point." "Oh, if she had not her hair In bands I give It up," said RouletabUle, with a despairing gesture. "And was the wound on her temple a bad one?" he asked presently. "Torrlble." "With what weapon was It made? "That Is a secret of the Investiga tion." "Have you found the weapon what ever It was?" The magistrate did not answer. "And the wound in the throat?" Here the examining magistrate read ily confirmed the decision of the doc tor that, if the murderer had pressed her throat a few seconds longer, Mile. Stangerson would have died of stran gulation, "The affair as reported In the Matin," said RouletabUle eagerly, "seems to me more and more Inexplicable. Can you tell me, monsieur, how many openings there are in the pavilion? I mean doors and windows." "There are five," replied Monsieur fle Marquet after having coughed once or twice, but no longer resisting the desire he felt to talk of the whole of the Incredible mystery of the affair he was Investigating. "There are five, of which the door of the vestibule Is the only entrance to the pavilion a door always automatically closed, which cannot be opened, either from the out er or Inside, except with the two spe cial keys which are never out of the possession of either Daddy Jacques or M. Stangerson. Mile. Stangerson had no need for me, since Daddy Jacques lodged In the pavilion and be cause, during the daytime, she never left her father. When tbey, all four, rushed Into the yellow room, after breaking open the door of the labors- tory, the door in the vestibule re- malned closed as usual and of the two Ueys for opening it Daddy Jacques bad one In his pocket and M. Stangerson the other. As to the windows of the pavilion, thero are four, the one win dow of the yellow room and those of the laboratory looking out on to the Country, the window in the vestibule looking Into the nark " " that ww that he ed from the pavilion!" cried Rouleta bllle. "How do you know that?" "How? Oh, the thing Is simple enough! As soon as he found he could not escape by the door of the pavilion his only way out was by the window In the vestibule, unless he could pass through a grated window. The win dow of the yellow room is secured by iron bars, because it looks out upon the open country; the two windows of the laboratory have to be protected In like manner for the same reason. As the murderer got away I conceive that he found a window that was not bar redthat of the vestibule, which opens on to the park that is to say, Into the interior of the estate. There's not much magic In all that." "Yes," said M. de Marquet, "but what you have not guessed Is that this single window in the vestibule, though It has no Iron bars, has solid Iron blinds. Now, these Iron blinds have remained fastened by their Iron latch, and yet we have proof that the murderer made his escape from the pavilion by that window! Traces of blood on the Inside wall and on the blinds as well as on the floor, and footmarks, of which I have taken the measurements, attest the fact that the murderer made his escape that way. But, then, how did he do It, seeing that the blinds remain ed fastened on the inside? He passed through them like a shadow. But what Is more bewildering than all. Is that It Is Impossible to form any Idea as to how the murderer got out of the yellow room or how he got across the laboratory to reach the veBtibule!" "Could that window have been closed and refastened after the flight of the assassin?" asked RouletabUle. "That Is what occurred to me for a moment, but It would Imply an accom plice or accomplices, nnd I don't see" After a short silence he added: "Ah, If Mile. Stangerson were only well enough today to allow of her being questioned!" RouletabUle,. following up his thought, asked: "And tho attic? There must be some opening to that?" "Yes; there Is a window or, rather, skylight In It, which, as It looks out toward the country, M. Stangerson has had barred, like the rest of the windows. These bars, as In the other windows, have remained Intact, and the blinds, which naturally open In ward, have not been unfastened. For the rest, we have not discovered any thing to lead us to suspect that the murderer had passed through the at tic." "It seems clear to you, then, mon sieur, tbrtt the murderer escaped no body knows how by the window in the vestibule?" "Everything goes to prove It." "I think so, too," confessed Rouleta bUle gravely. After a brief silence he continued: "If you have not found any traces of the murderer In the attic, such as the dirty footmarks similar to those i'ti the floor of the yellow room, you must come to the conclusion that it was not he who stole Daddy Jacques' revolver." "There are no footmarks In the attic other than those of Daddy Jacques himself," said the magistrate with a significant turn of his bead. Then, after an apparent decision, be added, "Daddy Jacques was with M. Stanger son in the laboratory, and It was lucky for him he was." "Then what part did his revolver play In the tragedy? It seems very clear that this weapon did less barm to Mile. Stangerson than It did to the murderer." The magistrate made no reply to this question, which doubtless embar rassed him. "M. Stangerson," he said, "tells us that the two bullets have been found In the yellow room, one embedded In the wall stained with tho Impression of a red hand a man's large hand and the other in the cell ing." "Oh. oh. In the ceiling!" muttered RouletabUle. "In the celling! That's very curious! In the celling!" He puffed awhile in silence at his pipe, enveloping himself In the smoke. When we reached Epluay-sur-Orge I had to tap him on the shoulder to arouse him from bis dream and come out on to the platform of the station. There the magistrate and his regis trar bowed to us and, by rapidly get ting Into a cab that was awaiting them, made us understand that they had seen enough of us. "How long will it take to walk to the Chateau du Glandler?" Rouleta bUle asked one of the railway porters. "An hour and a half or an hour and three-quarters easy walking," the man replied. RouletabUle looked op at the sky . and. no doubt finding its appearance satisfactory, took my arm and said: "Come on! I need a walk. It was a I BURLEIGH & BOYD ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW j Practice In all State Courts and 1 Interior Department. Careful at- tent ion to all business. ? 4 D. W. SHEAHAN LAWYER ENTERPRISE J t Practice in State and Federal f Courts and Interior Department. I C. T. HOCKETT. M. D. t PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON f Office" upstairs in Bank Build- Ing. Ind. Home phone In office X miff reniflptipa X and residence bit of luck our fulling in with tint examining magistrate and his registrar, eh? What did I tell you about that revolver?" His head was bent down, he hud his? bands in his pockets, and he was whistling. After awhile I heard him murmur: "Poor woman!" "Is It Mile. Stangerson you arc pity ing?" "Yes. She's a noble woman and worthy of bclT.x pitied a woman of a great, a very great, character, 1 Imagine I imagine." "You know her, then?" "Not at all. I have never seen her but once." "Why, then, do you say that she Is a woman of great character?" "Because she bravely faced the mur derer, because she courageously de fended herself, nnd, above all, because of the bullet In the celling." to dk continued.) THROUGH TO MEXICO CITY Harrlinan's Extensions in Mexico Will Make Unbroken 3500-Mile Trip. Chicago, Jan. 11. Within a very short time it will be possible to travel In a Pullman sleeper without change from Portland to Seattle to Mexico City through Sacramento, San Fran cisco, Los Angeles, Mazatlan and Guadalajara, a distance of 3500 miles. This remarkable Journey will be made possible by the extensive railroad construction which E. 11. Harriman is rapidly prosecuting to a completion in Old Mexico. When the main line of this work Is completed, Mr. Harriman will have the longest north and south railroad In the entire world. Its important greatly enhanced by the semi-official announcement that he is to con struct a road from a point east of El Paso through the new oil fields of the state of Chihuahua, and then on to a connection with this north and south line on the west coast Tho new north and south line through Old Mexico Joins the Southern Pa cific at Tucson, Arizona, and within a short time, probably less than a month, through sleeping-car service will be established between that city and Mazatlan, a distance of 900 miles. LABOR HEN, GATHER Cases of Leaders Before Federation Council in Washington Washington, Jan. 11 One of the most important assemblages In the history of union labor In the United States is the meeting today of the executive council of the American Federation of Labor, called to con sider the sentencing of three leaders of union men to jail for contempt of court. Just what action the federation will take in the cases of Samuel (Jum pers, its president; Frank Morrison, its secretary, and John Mitchell, its second vice-president, is not definite ly known. It Is safe to say, however, that a vigorous protest will be made against the Impostlon of the jail sen tence pronounced by Judge Wright of the District of Columbia supimo court. Fines Harvester Trust Topeka, Kan., Jan. 11 The Kan sas supreme court, in decision hand ed down Saturday, affirmed the ver dict and fine of the district court for Shawnee county against the In'erna tlonal Harvester Company. The com pany must pay a fine of $12, GOO on 42 counts, each count being a viola tion of the criminal section of the Kansas anti-trust laws. ADMIRAL SPERRY AT NAPLES Commander of Atlantic Fl-H Ar. rives in Itullan Harbor. Naples, Jan. 11 The United States battleship Connecticut arrived here Saturday. Her sister ships of the special squadron sent to the relief of the earthquake sufferers, the Ver mont, -Kansas and Minnesota, accom-, RESULT OF MILL MEETING. From Flora Journal. At the meating of the stockholders of the Flora Milling Co., Monday af ternoon, the following officers were elected: F. S. Johnson, president; L. Austin, manager; W. H. Baker, treasurer; T. M. GUmore, secretary; J. Doran, director. The Milling com pany so far in erecting the mill have been to the expense of $9000. The building is number one and the ma chinery is as good as new. The ar rangement In building could not be better. Everything Is lovely and in a week will be making flour. CIIAS. A. AULT I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON I Residence 1 block east of Pres- J byterian Church. Office in Ber- land Building. Enterpries. panted the Connecticut to Messina, but did not come to Naples. They proceeded to Villefranche, where they arrived today. Owing to the fact that the whole country Is In mourning, no salutes were fired. The sailors manned the sides of the Con necticut and the flags were dipped. Ambassador Griscom was on board. The Italian port officers visited the Connecticut to pay their respects to Rear-Admiral Sperry and express ap preciation for American, sympathy and aid. Tuft Puts lild on Secrets. Augusta, Ga.,., Jan. 10. Beyond the reiteration of the announcement that P. C. Knox will be secretary of state and Frank H. Hitchcock, postmaster-general, President-elect Taft has determined that no other cabinet appointments shall be made known until March 4. To make this deter mination effective, he will deny all cabinet rumors, predictions or an nouncements from any source or quarters whatever. In the statement attention was directed to the an nouncement of the Knox appointment made on the day Mr. Knox arrived In Augusta, and to the statement by the Associated Press from Hot Springs, Va., of the selection of Mr. Hitchcock aB postmaster - general both of which were pronounced cor rect by Mr. Taft. Pantor Gets Thief's Coat. Seattle, Jan. 10. Rev. William LaMott's Comedy Co. One of the best sho ,vs of its size traveling. Once seen never forgotten. We play under a guarantee if not satisfied your money refunded. This is a CLEAN, REFINED Vaudeville Show Consisting of Acrobats, Contortionists, Barrel Jumping, Singing, Dancing, Black Face and Irish Comedy. We cater strictly to ladies and gentlemen and our show has the' same merits Change of Program Nightly EVERYTHING NEW THIS YEAR ENTERPRISE OPERA HOUSE Monday and Tuesday Nights January 18 and 19 Admission: 25 cts., 35 cts. and 50 cts. i 1'IIONK HOME 115 J. D. WALCK Real Estate Dealer Mitchell Hotel Block W. C. KETCHUM I DENTIST - ENTERPRISE X i.ie L'erland Building. Home 4 Independent Phone. u. f COLON R. EBERHARD t ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR t J Practices In all Courts and In- i terlor Dept. Notary Public. T Ind. Home phoae. Joseph. I t E. T. ANDERSON. M. D. f PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON I CalU attended to day or night. ,Io:ne phone. Enterprise, U:e. Park, of the Asbury Methodist Epis copal church, chased a burglar from his residence last night, fell during the chase and badly sprained his knee. Then he had to call for help from the members of his congrega tion, assembled In the church nearby. The churph was quickly emptied and the men took up the chase. Spurred on by the belief that the burglar was running away with his only overcoat, Rev. Mr. Park at tempted to get up three times after he had fallen. Through his persist ent efforts Mr. Park forced the burg lar to drop the coat. When the garment was taken into the minister's house it was found to be the property of the burglar and not the pastor. 12-Yenr-Old Boy Speaks From Pulpit New York, Jan. 11 Michael Ruc cl, a boy of 12 years, is perhaps the youngest preacher In the city. He delivered a sermon IaB-t night In an East Side Catholic church, taking for his text, "Behold, I Bring You Tid ings of Great Joy." The child com posed the sermon himself and was well received. "You know, dear," cooed a young married woman, "you promised to let me have nil the plu money 1 wanted." "Yea, love, and you shall have It." "Oh, you dear thing! Well, 1 saw a plu today, with diamonds and pearls In It, and I do want It so!" London Ex- Jl'CSS. MM NOTARY run LTC JOSEPH. OREGCT