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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1909)
Professional Directory of Wallowa County The ystery 'M"S,$iS''SS,$4S?'M'S'4M I THOS M. DILL II? R. I. LOXG COUNTY SURVEYOR 4 H. E. MERRYMAN I SURVEYOR AND ENGINEER f U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor, Mining and Metallurgical Engi J ueer. Enterprise. Oregon. t ATTORNEY-AT-LAW e Yellow ? Office first door south of New Civil. Hydraulic and Irrigation uiifci.ie jiing. Enterprise, Ore. oom I Fraternal Dldg., Euterprisa, Ore. f 1 f M of Th By GASTON LKROUX rfc CHAPTER VII. In Which Rouletabllle Sets Out on an Expedition Under the Bed. lOULFTABILLE. havlug pushed open the door of the yellow room, puused ou the threshold. The chamber was dark. Dad- Uy Jacques was about to open the blinds when Rouletabllle stopped him. "Did not the tragedy take place in complete darkness V" be asked. "No, young man; I don't think so. Mademoiselle always had a night light on her table, and I lit it every even ing before she went to bed. 1 was a sort of chambermaid, you ' must un derstand, when the evening cutne. The real chambermaid did not come here much before the morning. Made moiselle worked late far into the night." "Where did the table with the night light stand far from the bed?" "Some way from the bed." "Can you light the burner now?" "The lamp Is broken and the oil that was In It was spilled when the table was upset. All the rest of the things in the room remain Just ob they were. I have only to open the blinds for you to see." "Wait." Rouletabllle went back into the lab oratory, closed the shutters of the two windows and the door of the ves tibule. When we were in complete darkness he lit a wax vesta and asked Daddy Jacques to move to the middle of the chamber with It to the place where the night light was burning that night. Daddy Jacques, who was In his stockings he usually left his sabots in the vestibule entered the yellow room with his bit of a vesta vaguely distinguished objects thrown on the floor, a bed in one cor ner and in front of us to the left the gleam of a looking glass hanging on the wall near to the bed. "That will do. You may now open tne blinds," said Rouletabl"". "Don't come any fartk Daddy Jacques begged. "You muy make marks with your boots, and nothing must be deranged. It's an idea of the magistrate's, though he has nothing more to do here." And he pushed open the shutter. The pale daylight entered from with out, throwing a sinister light on the saffron colored walls. The floor for though the laboratory and the vesti bule were tiled the yellow room had a flooring of wood was covered with a eingle yellow mat which was large enough to cover nearly the whole room, under the bed and under the dressing table, the only piece of furni ture that remained upright. The cen ter round table, the night table and two chairs had been overturned. These did not prevent a large stain of blood being visible on the mat, made, as Daddy Jacques Informed us, by the blood which had flowed from tho wound on Mile. Stangerson's forehead. Besides these stains drops of blood bad fallen in all directions, In line with the visible traces of the foot . steps, large and black, of the murder er. Everything led to the presumption that these drops of blood had fallen from the wound of the man who had for a moment placed his red hand on the wall. There were other traces of the same hand on the wall, but much less distinct. "See-see this blood on the wall!" I could not help exclaiming. "The man who pressed his hand so heavily upon It la the darkness must certainly have thought that he was pushing at a door. That's why he pressed on It so hard, leaving on the yellow paper the terri ble evidence. I don't think there are many bands In the world of that sort It is big and strong, and the Angers are nearly all one as long as the other. The thumb Is wanting, and we have only the mark of the palm, but If we follow the trace of the hand," I con tinued, "we see that after leaving Its Imprint on the wall the touch sought the door, found it and .then felt for the lock." "No doubt," Interrupted Rouletabllle, chuckling, "only there Is no blood either on the lock or on the bolt" What does that prove?" I rejoined, with a good sense of which I was proud.': "He might have opened the lock with hla left hand, which would have been quite natural, his right band being wounded.' "He didn't open It at all," Daddy Jacques again exclaimed. "We are not fools, and there were four of us when we burst ooen the door." "What a queer hand I Look what a fmwr hand It Is!" I said. "It la a very natural hand," said Rouletabllle, "of which the shape has been deformed by its having siippea on the wall. The man dried his hand on the wall. He must be a man about five feet eight In height" "How do you come at thatf "By the height of the marks on the wall." My friend next occupied himself with the mark of the bullet In the wall. It was a round hole. "This ball was fired straight, not fmm ahova. and consequently not from below." Rouletabllle went back to the door and carefully examined the lock and the bolt, satisfying himself that the door had certainly been burst open from the outside, and, further, that the key had been found in the lock on the Inside of the chamber. He finally satisfied himself that with the key In the lock the door could -not possibly be opened from without with another key. Having made sure of all these details, he let fall these words, "That's better!". Then, sitting down on the ground, he hastily took off his boots and in his socks went into the room. The first thing he did was to exam ine minutely the overturned furniture. AVe watched him In silence. "Young fellow, you are giving your self a great deal of trouble," said Dad dy Jacques ironically. Rouletabllle raised his head and said: "You have spoken the simple truth, Daddy Jacques. Your mistress did not have her hair in bands that even ing. I was a donkey to have believed she did." Then, with the suppleness of a ser pent he slipped under the bed. Pres ently we heard him ask: "At what time, M. Jacques, did M. and Mile. Stangerson arrive at the laborotory?" "At 6 o'clock." The voice of Rouletabllle continued:' "Yes, he's been under here, that's certain. In fact there was nowhere else where be could have hidden him self. Here, too, are the marks of his hobnails. When you entered, all four of you, did you look under the bed?" "At once. We drew It right out of its place." "And between the mattresses?" "There was only one on the bed, and on that mademoiselle was placed, and we m. Stangerson and the concierge lm-over- mediately carried It Into the labora tory. Under the mattress there was nothing but the metal netting, which could not conceal anything or any body. Remember, monsieur, that there were four of us, and we couldn't fall to see everything, the chamber Is so small and scantily furnished, and all was locked behind In the pavilion." I ventured on a hypothesis: "Perhaps he got away with the mat tressIn the mattress! Anything Is possible in the face of such a mystery. I In their distress of mind M. Stanger- ! son and the concierge may not have noticed they were, bearing a double weight, especially If the concierge were an accomplice. I throw out this i hypothesis for what It Is worth, but It explains many things and particularly the fact thnt neither the laboratory nor the vestibule bears any traces of the footmarks found In the room. If . In carrying mademoiselle on the mat- j tress from the laboratory they rested ' for a moment there might have been ' an opportunity for the man in It to escape." "And then?" asked Rouletabllle, de liberately lnughlng under the bed. I felt rather vexed and replied: "I don't know, but anything appear! possible." "The examining magistrate bad the en me idea, monsieur." said Daddy Jacques, "and he carefully examined the mattrpss. He was obliged to lauga it the Idea, monsieur, as your frleiu t doing now, for whoever henrd of I mattress having a double bottom?" My friend alone (seemed able to tn lit ) 'telligently. He called out from un- x the bed: "The mat here has been moved out f place, Who did It?" AVe did, monslour," explained Dad dy Jacques. "When we could not find the assassin we ' asked ourselves whether there was not some hole In the floor." "There Is not" replied Rouletabllle. I "Is there a cellar?" "No, there's no cellnr. But thnt has not stopped our searching and has not prevented the examining magistrate and his registrar from studying the floor plank by plank, as If there bad been a cellar under It." The reporter then reappeared. His eyes were sparkling and his nostrils quivered. He remained on his hands and knees. Thus he made bis way to the four corners of the room, so to speak, sniffing and going around ev erythingeverything that we could see, which was not much, and every thing that we could not see, which must have been Infinite. The toilet table was a simple table standing on four legs. There was nothing about it by which it could possibly be changed Into a temporary biding place. There was not a closet or cupboard. Mile. Stangerson kept her wardrobe at the chateau. Rouletabllle literally passed his nose and hands along the walls, constructed of solid brickwork. When be bad finished with the walls and passed his agile fingers over every portion of the yellow puper covering them he reached to the celling, which he was able to touch by mounting on a chair placed on the toilet table, and by moving this Ingeniously constructed stage from place to place he examined ev ery foot of it When he bad finished his scrutiny of the celling, where he carefully examined the hole made by the second bullet, he approached the COPYRIGHT. 1908, BY BRENTANO'S I window and ouce more examined the iron bars and blinds, all of which were solid and intact. At last he gave a grunt of satisfaction and declared, "Now 1 am at ease!" "Well, do you believe that the poor dear young lady was shut up when she was being murdered when she cried out for help?" walled Daddy Jacques. "Yes," said the young reporter, dry ing his forehead; "the yellow room was as tightly shut as au iron safe." "The Bete du Bon Dleu," muttered Daddy Jacques "the Bete du Bon Dieu herself, if she had committed the crime, could not have escaped. Lis ten! Do you hear it? Hush!" Daddy Jacques made us a sign to keep quiet and, stretching his arm to ward the wall nearest the forest lis tened to something which we could not hear. "it's answering," he snld at length. "I must kill it. It is too wicked, but it's the Bete du Bon Dleu, and every night It goes to pray on the tomb of St. Genevieve, and nobody dares to touch her for fear that Mother An genoux should cast an evil spell on them." "How big Is the Bete du Bon Dleu?" "Nearly as big as a small retriever a monster, I tell you. Ah, I have asked myself more than once whether It was not she that took our poor made moiselle by the throat with her claws. But the Bete du Bon Dleu does not wear hobnailed boots, nor fire revolv ers, nor has she a hand like that!" ex claimed Daddy Jacques, again point ing out to us the red murk on the wall. "Besides, we should have seen her as well as we would have seen a man." "Evidently," I said. "Before we had seen this yellow room I had also asked myself whether the cat of Mother An geuoux" "You also!" cried Rouletubllle. "Didn't you?" I asked. "Not for a moment. After reading the article In the Matin I knew that a cat bad nothing to do with the mat ter. But I swear now that a frightful tragedy has beeu enacted here. You say nothing about the Basque cap or the handkerchief found here, Daddy Jacques." "Of course the magistrate has taken them," the old man answered hesi tatingly. "I haven't seen either the handker chief or the cap, yet I can tell you how they are made," the reporter said to him gravely. "Oh, you are very clever," said Dad dy Jacques, coughing and embar rassed. "The handkerchief Is a large one, blue with red stripes, and the cap Is an old Basque cap, like the one you aro wearing now." "You are a wizard!" said Daddy Jacques, trying to laugh and not quite succeeding. "How do you know that the handkerchief Is blue with red stripes?" "Because if it had not been blue with red stripes it would not have been found at all." Without giving any further atten tion to Daddy Jacques my friend took a piece of paper from his pocket and, taking out a pair of scissors, bent over the footprints. Placing the pa per over oue of them, he began to cut. In a short time he had made a perfect pattern, which he banded to me, begging mo not to lose It. He then returned to the window and, pointing to the figure of Fred eric Larsan, who had not quitted the side of the lake, asked Daddy Jacques whether the detective had, like him self, been working in the yellow room "No," replied Robert Darzac, who since Rouletabllle had banded him the piece of scorched pnpor had not ut tered a word. "He pretends that he does not need to examine the yellow room. He says that the murderer made tils escape from It tn quite a nat ural way nnd that he will this evening explain how he did It." As he listened to what M. Darne bad to say Rouletabllle turned pale. "Has Frederic Larsan found out the truth, which I con only guess at?" he murmured. "He Is very clever very clever and I admire him. Yet I have discovered many things." "Moral or material?" I asked. "Several moral, one material. This. for example." And rapidly he drew from his waist coat pocket a piece of paper In which he had placed a light colored hair from a woman's bead. to bb coimnuro. 8YNOP3IS. CHAPTER I A mysterious at ttmpt la made at midnight to mur der Mile. Stangerson, daughter and assistant of. Prof. Stangerson, who U at work on his theory of the dlssoci a' Ion of matter in a pavilion near his chateau. Pistol shots and the young ! woman's cries for help are heard behind the lock el and bolted door of her chamber, the yellow room. The cries are answered by Professor Stan no: and Daddy Jacques, an aged servant. Aided by the concierges, Bernler and his wife, they break open I BURLEIGH & BOYD : ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW ; Practice In all State Courts and Interior Department. Careful at- teution to all business. S v I D. W. SIIEAHAN LAWYER ENTERPRISE f I Practice in State and Federal f I Courts and Interior Department. C. T. HOCKETT, M. D. I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offlofi unstairs In Bank Build- '!' lug. Ind. Home phone in office ,' " and residence. $ the door and find Mile. Stangerson woonlng and half strangled, with a wound in her temple, but find no trace of her assailant. The only possible outlet from the yellow room the do)r. The weird cry of the tete du bon Dieu," a cat belonging to -Mother Angenoux, a recluse, is heard Just before Mile. Stangerson's rien. II Joseph Rouletabllle, a re porter-detective, is Introduced to the eader by M. Salnclalr, the narrator of the story. Rouletabllle declares he revolver was fired by Mile. Stan gerson, wounding her assailant In he hand. Salnclalr Is to use his rlendshlp with M. Darzac, Mile. Stan person's lover, to Introduce Rouleta- llle into the chateau. Ill Rouleta Mile induces M. de Marquet, the ex amining magistrate, and M. de Ma lelne, his registrar, to talk about the case. The only posisDie point or gress from the pavilion for the murderer has been the window of the pavilion's vestibule, near which blood stains have been found. The win dow, however, was found latched af ter the assassin's escape. A bullet hole Is found In the celling of the yellow room. fV. Shortly before the attack the announcement of the ingagement of Mile. Stangerson anc M. Darzac had bean made. V Roc ietabllle and Sinclair are informe by Frederic Larsan, a famous detec tlve working on the case, that the concierges have been arrested. Meet ing M, Darzac, Rouletabllle utters t mystic sentence, "The presbyter, has lost nothing of its charm nor iht garden its brightness," which seems to terrify Darzac. VI The arrest ol the concierges Is due to the fac that they were seemingly near tin he pavilion when the crime was com mltted. Their denial of guilt is doubt ed. Rouletabllle and Darzac become friendly. A mutton bone such as 1h used by French assassins, has been .'ound I t Mile. Stangerson's room anc Rouletabllle finds In oue of the profesosr's retorts a partly burnet, paper bearing the strange sontenct about the presbytery. IT seems likely that a conspicuous place In the an nals of legal proceed ing will be given the case of the Buck Stove and Range company of St. IO'.ils against Fauiucl (Juni pers and rher o.'Ii elaUof tlie?-nierlcnii Federation ff Lnlinr. a Ions time has a jons mitc:ell. tourt ()1.(k.r ,,r(jdU(.e( such a profound Bonsall;n throughout the country as that of Jud':e Daniel Thew Wrls;!it of the supreme court of the District of Columbia In sentencing to Imprisonment the president, vice president and secretary of the Amer ican Federation of Labor. These three posts are held respectively by Samuel Gompers, John Mitchell and Frank Morrison, all men of high reputation as citizens and widely known and es teemed In the world of labor. Sentence was Impound on the three labor men in consequence of their al leged contempt of court In violating the order enjoining them from placing on the "unfair" or "We don't patron ize" list of the. American I'ederatloa- The Gompers S tv Labor - 4 Case. lAiy Samuel Gum per. T&tn . It TROY TIDINGS. Troy, Jan. 23 Troy Is still on the map. We have had snow, plenty of It, ice too, mail very little wishes for a county bridge innumerable, j Troy was the center of excite-1 mont: Telephone meeting; bridge building discussed for further orders. Most of the settlers are very anx ious about a bridge. Some few have refused to sign the petition and when it Is against a man's interest to sign a petition he is excusable, well maybe he can't write. Read the advertisements. iCHAS. A. AULT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON byteriim Church. Office in Her- fA & land liuikling. Enierpries. 1st the corporation which occupies the position of plaintiff in the proceedings. The appeal was taken from Judge Wright's court to the court of appeals JUDOE DAMKIi TUBW WItlOHT. of the District of Columbia, and the labor leaders were released ou bonds. Judge Wright was appointed to his present post by President Roosevelt In 11)03. He was born In Cincinnati in 1804 and comes of a family of lawyers ind Jurists. After graduating from high school and the Cincinnati Law ichool he begun tho practice of law ind held several minor public posts. Ho was chosen a judge of the court of :-ommou pleas of Hamilton county, O., In 1893. Dining his practice before the bar he made several lights for the protection of labor Interests. Mr. Gompers, who was sentenced by Judge Wriylit to a term of one year in lall, will be lifty-nlne years of ago ou the 27th of January and has been con nected with efforts to organize work ing people since his fifteenth year. He was born ln England and Is a cigar maker by trade. In fact, ho can roll 11 pretty good cigar now. He was one of ' the founders of the Federation of Ln- ; bor and witli an Intermission of one year has been its president Blin'e 1SS2. Mr. Mitchell, who was sentenced to nine months' imprisonment, retired but recently as president of the United Mine Workers of America ou account of ill health. He has always been counted n close friend of Presldeut Roosevelt, and It was supposed that the latter would desire especially to modify the action of the court In his case If tho opportunity presented and ho could consistently do so. But Mr. Roosevelt has stated that as the mat ter stands the caso Is not before hltn In any ollkial way and Is not likely to be. Mr. Mitchell, who was at the head of the United Mine Workers for nearly a decade, has been regarded as a labor leader of n conservative type. Born in Illinois In 1S70, he worked In coal ml!ie:i before he was n dozen years old and joined the Knights of Labor when he was fift-e'i. lie ob tained finite a fair education through nl'Iit study and reading, studied law nnd has written on economic (iiestions. Frank Mi.nison, secretary of the American Federation of Labor, was cenleiii ed by Judge Wright to a term of six. months. Mr. Morrison is forty one years old and was for years one of the most active members of Chica go Typographical union. No. 10. He represented the printers in the Chi cago Federation of Labor and in 189(1 whs a delegate to t li v International FI1ANK MOItlUMON. union convention at Colorado Springs, which chose hi in as one of its dele gates to the Federation of Ijibor. He was elected secretary of tho latter body at the succeeding meeting. Men can get their overcoats, suits and underwear nicely mended by one who understands the business. In quire at the Woman's Exchange, iSamrns building. VS'-WP 2 'J t W. C. KETCHUM DENTIST ENTERPRISE l'.I.c Borland Building. Independent Phone. Home V33H,,3"S"3'C"SM,S"!''33,'S"3"!3"5,'S"S' I COLON R EBERHARD ? ? ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR '4 Practices In nil Courts and In. terlor Dept. Aotary Public, ind. Homo pho.ie. Jos;ph. SS"3"3$3''3HS"3"S"3' i"3M5-C"3'lS"3"3"s,,3H3,3K3,SH!' E. T. ANDERSON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUH2ECN Calls attended to day or night. 11 oin e pnone. unierprise, ure. THE KING OF ITALY. He Knows l-icw .o Act In Fs:s of Earthquakes and Eruptions. King Victor Emmanuel of Italy Is very popular with his subjects, and Ills popularity Is In part due to tho way In which he e::crts himself whenever there Is any prat calamity like that of the recent earthquake tn Sicily and Cnlahrln. During the last eriptlnn of Vesuvius, when GOO people were sup posed to have Uwt their live?, he was very energetic ln devising weans for the public safety or for succoring the victims of the disaster. Tho king even went into places of dimmer himself in his eagerness to see tbot everything possible was being done in b"'.ial? of his afflicted sub jects. At the time of the recent earth quake shocks the Italian monarch was bunting In n district near Naples. He at once Issued orders that preparations be made for a trip to Culubrla, which Is ln southern Italy kinu tictoh km and with Sicily MAKrru forms the center of I'm earthquake district. Between fie eftrihiunke fit 1905 in this district. wUfh fstTOj-r,l thirty towns and cost about 3,000 lives, Rnd tho eruption of Vesuvius In the spring of 100(1, the southern portion ef King Victor Emmanuel's realm has ln recent years been very much 111 treated by tho forces of nature. THE STEINHEIL CASE. M Stoinheil and the House In Parts In Which Ha Lived. The strange case of Mme. Stoinheil continues to excite the Interest of rnrls. The woman who had so many Intrigues with famous men of France M. STKlUIIKIb AND nolTHII HK I.IVK1) IN. has retained to in unusual degree In a person of her age hnr remarkable beauty, aud her daughter U nlxo s handsome woman. This fact Is not lost upon the French public, suscepti ble as It Is to the ronuiutlc features of a en nu. The bouse lu which U. Stelnhell lived and In which he wns murdered has naturally figured n good deal lu the proceedings. The T rlslans have studied carefully the de scriptions n the newspapers of the location of his apartments, of those of hU wife and her mother. Mme. Jupys, numbered In the cut 1, 2 and 8 respectively. Stomach Trouble Cured. If you have any trouble with y ir stomach you slio ild take Chainlior laln's Stomach and Liver Tab'c. Mr. J. P. Kioto of Edlnu, Mo., si i "I have used a great many diffid ent medicines for stomach tro ' t. but find Chamberlain's Stomach a: I Liver Tablets mora benoflclal than any other romeiy I ever used " For sale by lluraatigh & Muvfiolu. ft s!-'