F A L L S C IT Y N R W S r- I i The Mysterious i Sun Spot It Contained an Im por- \\ tant Message. Adr#r*!»inf Kate« Display, 13 e*nt* aa luch; By RICHARD MARKLY ; ; lutlneu Nolle#«. 6 otntt a ltn#; Por 8ala. Rant, •«change Want ana Taj Entartalnment No Hoe«. 5 eta. a Una. Card o! Thanks 60 eta; Laga ■otleaa legal rata« On tha South Carotin« coaat stand* Copy for naw ad«, and changes ahoul«l ba «am one of thosr Imposing colonial ei.lt flow lo Tha Nava not latar than NVednaadar for which that state Is famous. It Official N« was built during the times when the southern settler», requiring 1»borer* to I ssued E very S aturday M orning work on their tobacco plantation», were lm|>ortlng large cargoes of African ue- ftroes. who were held »» »laves, it Is of brick, with large pillars In front, and. considering Its age. 1» In a re AND markable state of preservation. This la because a recent owner has put It F O R S A L E In repair. Like other houses of Its kind dating back to the seventeenth century. It Good farm for sale cheap for was built out of the proceeds of ne­ cash. Will exchange. Phone 77. groes captured In Africa and sold us •laves In America But the slave trade and lrs twin brother, piracy, were Better insure that auto now. not In that day deprecated us they are, Don't cost much. See N.N.Christy or, rather, would be. today. He who built the bouse referred to became oue N. Main St. of the most prominent men of his time. Richard Granville was not his name, FOR RENT—5-acre tract, all in but In bringing out the antecedents of fruit, good 8-room house and out­ his descendants it Is a far safer name buildings. Apply to Mrs. Mary to use than his own. He began life as a sailor, visiting every country where Miller, Falls City, Oregon. there was trading to be done, and a few of his older slaves, who were FOR S A L E -A No. 2 Sharpies house servants and thus enabled the Cream Separator. Address Box more readily to become conversuut with his secrets, handed down a tradi­ 139, Falls City. Ore. tion that their muster started his for­ tune In piracy. FOR SALE—Seven acres, un­ Be this as It may. up to the middle improved, at the foot of Parry St. of the last century hla descendants did not deny that much of his money bad Terms. Make best offer. R. H. been made In the slave trade. In Ills Clark, 225 East 55th St. N. Port­ old age hla conscience troubled him, and those who were nearest him said land, Oregon. that he desired to make some repara­ Use engraved calling cards and tion for his misdeeds. He had a statue of himself made of bronze and set it stationery. Call and see sample up on a pedestal In a bay window of cards and get prices. his library. The left hand rests on an anchor, and the right holds a sextant— not a mock sextant; a real oue. though not of brass, but of the same material as the statue. He left orders that no headstone should mark bis grave, and it was supposed that he Intended the Free Methodist statue as a substitute for one. At any rate, no one now knows where he Is Sunday School 10 a. m. burled. Preaching service 11 a. m. Different generations of his descend- Song and praise service 7:30 ants discussed the statue aud wonder­ followed by preaching at 8.00. ed at the whim which Jed their progen­ itor to erect i t One thing about it ex­ Mid-week prayer meeting 7:30 p.m cited special attention. Every morn­ Everyone cordially invited to ing the sun, shining In upon It, strikes the eyepiece of the sextant aud, pass­ attend these services. ing through the tube, casts a solar Edgar N. Long, Pastor. image on the opposite wall. The tra^k of this round spot of light changes with the season, traversing a slightly CHRISTIAN CHURCH different path each day. There is an­ Divine Services each Lord's Day other thing that puzzled the ow ners of the Granville estate. The only In- Bible School 10 a. m. scrlptlon on the statue, or, rather, Its pedestal. Is the date of Richard Gran­ Divine worship 11 a. m. ville's birth. And not only is the date Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m. given, but the hour and minute. Evening Service 7:30 p. m. Of all topics connected with the The public is invited to be with statue probably the giving of this mi­ nute Information was most discussed us in these services. No one who saw It could remember F. Claude Stephens, Minister. having seen any memorial giving either the hoar and minute of a birth or the hour and minute of a death. But one M E- CHURGH generation after another passod away, and no plausible reason for either the Sunday School 10.00 statue or its singular Inscription was Morning Worship 11. suggested. During the civil war Elwood Gran­ Enworth League 6:30. ville, the owner of the estate at that Evening Service 7:30 time, fought for the maintenance of Bibe study and prayer meeeting the system In the Introduction of which his progenitor took eo Important a part. Friday 8, p. m. Colonel Granville was a religious man You are most cordially invited and one of those who traced authority for slavery from the Bible. After the to attend these services. war h t returned to his plantation and A. F. Hanson. Pastor. began to run It anew under the system that had been born during the struggle. A few papers that bad belonged to the original Granville were banded down through his descendants. They had been preserved time and again by different persons, but appeared to con­ tain nothing to throw sny light on the puzzles connected with the writer or receiver. One day Colonel Granville, while amusing himself with these doc­ uments, read a letter from the founder of his house to a clergyman, In which the former said that he would like to leave at his death a fund for the bene­ fit of the negro race In America, but the time would not come for perhaps one or two centuries when such a be­ quest could be utilized. Probably the statement had been read a hundred times by Richard Gran vine's descendants without, making any marked Impression. But Colonel Gran- Title read It at a time when the negro slave had been just emancipated and called. I d all the Ignorance induced by his condition, to citizenship. The meaning of the statement, “The time would not come for perhaps one or two centuries,” was plain to him. More than one century had passed and brought the changed conditions. This led Colonel Granville, who was eager to help the negro, now that he bad be­ come a freeman, onward and upward, to think of the benefits that would ac crue from such a bequest as was men­ tioned In the letter. Then suddenly two connected Ideas entered Colonel Granville's brain. The W AN TED Af The Churches I "■ 11 S A T U R D A Y , N O V K M B K R », 1917 i first was; Might not the writer havp oeoretly tarried out hts Inteutlou. leav­ ing a fund for the purpose that wouM turu up a century or two after hla death? Aud might not the statue have something to do with Ita looatlouJ Though he did not know It. be bad made a mental leap bridging a eeutury since hla ancestor's death. He deter mined to make a study of the statue aud everything that pertained to It. Every morning he devoted au hour to sitting before the bronze, looking at it aud thinking about it. l'orhapa be funded that by thus meutoUy dwelllug upon It through some spiritual process the secret would lx) Imparted to him The Inscription engaged his ntteutlon. but be could make uothtng of It. And yet there must hare been an object lu puttlug It there alone, and especially with the hour and minute of birth. Oue meriting Colouel G r a n v i l l e wa* ..sitting, as usual, studylug the statue The sun start was crawling slowly over the wall as It had been travellug year In and year out for ItX) years. The colouel was watching it as he bad of­ ten watched It before. A third new Idea came to him. Might not this sun spot have some meaning? There seem to be two kinds of Ideas In the hurnau brain, those that are original or parent Ideas ami those that are offspring The present case la an Illustration. The conception that tho sun spot might have some meaning was In a measure original (though ev­ erything. after all. Is but a link lu an eternal chain!, and If suggested anoth­ er Idea—vU, Might not there be a con­ nection between the sun spot and the date of birth on the statue? Colonel Granville sprang from his chair. He was confident that he bad made an Important discovery. XVhat that discovery would lead to was an­ other matter. He had little expecta­ tion that It would work out his first conceptions which had come from the letter he had read, but be hoped it might solve the mystery of the statue and the date Inscribed upon It. He was not long In Inferring that on the day. hour and minute recorded on the statue the sun spot would rest on a part of the wall which would give some Information or Injunction Intend­ ed by the man who had erected the statue. The Inscription gave the year, which could be of no Importance since the sun traverses the same apparent path annually; the day, June 17; the hour, 10 o'clock, aud the minute, the twen­ ty-fifth. In other words, If this were the true explanation, on June 17, at twenty-five minutes after 10 o'clock, the tosltlon of the sun spot would mean something. It could not refer to 10 o'clock at night for an obvious rea­ son. It was early In April when Colonel Granville bit upon this possible ex­ planation. Nearly two months of wait­ ing would be necessary before the spot would reach a position ccrresi>ondlug with the date. The eclonel, too Impa­ tient to defer Investigation for what seemed to him so long a period, was eager to get a computer to come and calculate where the spot would be on the given day. But he knew of no one at hand who would be able to make the calculation. Besides, he had no desire to suffer the obloquy such an act would cast upon him, for when he stopped to think he was forced to ad­ mit that no more chimerical Idea could enter the bralu of man. So he was obliged to wait and while waiting planned an excuse for what he proposed to do. He determined to make a hole In the wall where the sun spot rested on the 17th of June at twenty-five minutes past 10 in the morning, and he proposed to tell the household that be was looking for a convenient location for n chimney he was thinking of building Every day after that the colonel watched the movement of the spot with keen Inter­ est, and at the end of a month he could calculate pretty nearly where It would fall on the 17th of June. How­ ever, he waited till the date came round. Now, on the 17th of June the sun stands very high, practically at the highest point during the year. Con­ sequently the spot was at the lowest point. In fact, It rested on the floor. The colonel bored a hole In the floor­ ing, Inclining It from the sextant to the point of the spot's contact, and, In­ serting a tube, noted a place in the cellar where the line of vision pro­ longed would strike. Then one night when the household was asleep he went into the cellar with a lantern, a pick and a spade and began to dig He had cut through the cement bot­ tom of the cellar and dug down exact­ ly ten feet when be struck masonry. It was not very well put together, and he 60 on loosened the upper stones, coming to an open space. In this was an iron box or safe, such as was used many years ago. A blow of the pick knocked off the cover, and there lay a mass of gold coins. On the coins lay a paper, which Colonel Granville road. His Idea derived from the letter writ, ten by his ancestor was correct. Here was a chest containing a mixture of English, Spanish and other gold pieces, with a will bequeathing the treasure to found an Institution for the ameliora­ tion of the negro race. Colonel Granville replaced the earth over the treasure and left it to think out the problem before him. 8uch a bequest coming from the original tes­ tator would be absorbed In legal te< b- nicalltles. Besides, Granville would not like the notoriety attached to bring­ ing out so many old coins—coins that be knew came from the price of slaves and probably the loot of piracy. He resolved to say nothing about this strange request, but to dispose of It piecemeal and erect In his own name the Institution for which it was intend­ ed. This Intention he carried out, and many a negro la now being educated with the money derived from tha sale of hla ancestors. W ea r-E ver— SPECIAL OFFER GOOD UNTIL NOV. I Oth ONLY A lu m in u m T w a q u n r t Saucepan an d C over Cosmopolitan, R e gu la r Price $1.35 NEARST’S GOOD HOUSEKEEPING U H ) W mmry day For ONLY ANtf ONE OF THE THREE TWO YEARS $2.00 Subscriptions taken for all other matlazinea, at and »he coupon U pieeentod on or beforo g,JV. 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