Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About Eugene semi-weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-190? | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1904)
y THF EUG"NF CUARD / rail Conyriiht. ¿•r 1902 CONTINUED. CHAPTER XXV. [INTER set in early and contin ued late, which In the end was a good thing for the year's cut. ____ I The season was capricious, hanging for days at a time at tlie brink of a thaw, only to stiffen again into severe weather. This was try ing on the nerves, for at each of these fulse alarms the six camps fell into a feverish haste to get the Job finished before the breakup. It was really quite extraordinary how much was accom plished under the nagging spur of weather conditions and the cruel Towel ing of Thorpe. The latter had now no thought be yond his work, and that was the thought of a madman. He bad been stern and unyielding enough before, goodness knows, but now he was terri ble. Not for an instant was there a resting spell. The veriest chore boy talked. thought, dreamed, of nothing but saw logs. Men whispered vaguely of a record cut. The difficulties of snow, accident, topography, were swept aside like straws. Little time was wasted and no opportunities. It did not matter how smoothly affairs happened to be running for the mo ment; every advantage, even the small est. was eagerly seized to advance the work. A drop of live degrees during the frequent warm spoils brought out the sprinklers oven in the dead of niglit. At night tlie men fell into tlieir bunks like sand bags, and their conscious thought, if indeed they any at all. was of eagerness for morrow. It was madness, but it the n: o'.ness these men loved. For .. «w to his old religion Thorpe bad added a fanaticism, and over the fanaticism was gradually creeping a film of doubt. To the conscientious energy which a sense of duty supplied was added the tremendous kinetic force of a love turned into other chan nels. And in the wild nights while the other men slept Thorpe's half crazed brain was revolving over and over again the words of the sentence he bad heard from Hilda's lips, "There can be nothing better than love.” His actions, bis mind, his very soul, vehemently denied the proposition. He clung as ever to his high Puritanic idea of man's purpose. But down d« p in a very tiuy, sacred corner of his heart a very small voice sometin s made itself beard when other m« re militant voices were still: “It may I It may be.” The last month of hauling was s'- o one of snow. Each day a little fol By and by the accumulation amoun 1 to much. Iu the woods where the w I could uot get at it it lay deep ami > t above the tops of bushes. Ou eitl r side of the logging roads the snow pi. so high as to form a kind of ramp; When all this water in suspense shorn 1 begin to flow' and to seek its level the water courses of the district t! e logs would have plenty to float th« .1 at least. So late did the cold weather last that, even with the added plowing to do. the alx camps beat all records. On the banks at Camp One were 9,000,000 feet. The totals of all five amounted to 33,000,000. About 10.000,000 of this was on French creek, the remainder on the main bank of the Ossawina- mskee. Besides this, the firm up river. Sadler & Smitb, had put up some 12. 000,000 more. The drive promised to be quite an affair. About the 15th of April attention be came strained. Every day the mount ing sun made heavy attacks on the •now; every night the temperature dropped below the freezing [Klint. The river liegan to show more air boles, oc casional open places. About the cen ter the ice looked worn and soggy. Some one saw a flock of geese high I d the air. Then came rain. One morning early Long Jim Pine came into tlie men’s camp bearing a huge chunk of tallow. This be held ■gainst the hot stove until its surface bad softened, when he began to swab liberal quantities of grease on his ■piked river shoes, which he fished out from under bis bunk. “She's cornin', boys,” be said, He donned a pair of woolen trouser' that had been chopped oft at the knee. thick woolen ■docking’ and the river •hoes, Then he tightened his broad leather belt about bls heavy shirt. cocked his little hat over bis ear and walked over in the corner to select a peavey from the lot the blacksmith had just put in shape. A peuvey is like a Cant book except that it Is pointe«! at the end. Thus it ran be us « k ! either as a I Shear« r. imllarly attired and equipped, appeared in ill“ doorway. The opening i n!” said b* boys. 'T M—WI U! .«.’«. '111.l -J'« "41 ¿«llways. paused at the slack water an«l ( tiavebeon overwhelmed, but the river Ing pool below. Two men tramp« finally hit with a hollow and resound i man always mysteriously appeared at steadily backward and forward on tie ing boom against the tail of the jam ' oue side or the other, nonchalant, urg booms, urging the 1« A moment later they, too, up-ended. ing the men to work before the logs means of long pike th« The crew were working desperately Bbould have ceased to move. History •Oction could seize th. Dowu in the heap somewhere two log- 1 stated that Shearer bad never lost s dam the push of Wilt«? Were crossed in such a manner us V man on the river simply and solely be fonavi them several miles down stream lock the whole. They sought those logs. 1 rause he Invariably took the dangerous when' the rest of Bryan Moloney's Thirty feet above tb«> bed of the river tasks upon himself. crew took tbe^i in charge. By STEWART six m 1 clam; >d tl„ ; aveys into the | In three days th«« railways were bro Thus through the wide gate uearly EDWARD soft pine, jerking, pulling, lifting, slid ! ken. Now it became necessary to start three-quarters of a million feet an WHITE Ing the great logs from tlieir places. ' the rear. hour could Thirty feet below, under the threaten-1 For this purpose Billy Camp, the last of the be run, and at length the logs drifted into the wide LdtvarJ Whht ing face, six other men coolly picked cook, had loaded his cook stove, a quan dam pool. out and set adrift, one by one, the tim-1 tity of provisions ami a supply of bed Dam Two, The rear had arrived at ami Thorpe congratulated tiers not inextricably imbedded. From ding aboard a scow. At either .>nd were himself that one stage of his Journey time to time th«* mass creaked, settled,' long sweeps to direct Its course. Tlie had been completed. XH-eu u.. preur.-.iag.c. zuiun perhaps eveu moved a foot or two, but' craft was perhaps forty' feet long, but above the first roliv.ays will always the practiced river men after1 Three, with Its two wide sluice» I » glanc« «.-.«lit more eagerly to their' rather narrow. In order that It might CONTINUED pass easily through the shoot of a dam. through which a veritable flo«xl could! Work. It was called the “wanlgnn.” be loosened at will: then four miles far Outlined against the sky, big Bryan | The huge, unwieldy craft from that CURIOUS CULLINGS. ther lay tlie rollway of Sadler & Smith, Moloney stood directing the work. II«'1 moment was to become possessed ot the up river firm. au«l above them turn knew by the tenseness of the log he the devil. Dowu the white water of Recently in Machias. Me., the roof ot bled over a forty five foot ledge t!.« stood on that behind the Jam power' beautiful Biscoe falls. These first roll I had gathered sufficient to push tlie rapids It would bump, smashing obsti a house caught dr«' from sparks froa ways of Thorpe's, spread In the broil«'I whole tangle down stream. Now be nately against bowlders, against tlie a burning chimney, and the unique branches of the stream side it would method of tirin: g snowballs to put it marsh flat below til«« dim. contain.««• I was offering it the chance. about 8,<J00,C00. Tlie n st of tlie sen I Suddenly the six men below the Jam scrape, in the broad reaches it would out was giicces-« fully used. son's cut was sca'tered for thirty mile ' scattered. Four of them Junipe«! light sulk, refusing to proceed, and when' The people of the United Smces expediency demanded its pause it spend :.'!0.000.C' > a year in adulterated along the bed of tlie river. ly from one floating log to another In 1 would drag Billy Camp and his entire -Already the fee cementing the log? I fhe zigzag to shore. The other two ran 1 crew at the rope's end. while they tried ( foods which :;re classed as having together hail begun to weaken. Tlie 1. « the length of tbeir footing and. over-' vainly to snub It against successively “poisonous am! otherwise noxious In had wrenched and tugged savagely a' I leaping an open of water, landed heav-1 uprooted trees and stumps. When at | gradients'* by t!:.' 4: ive niuent analyst A physical examination of candidal“» the locked timbers until they had. with 1 ily and firmly on the very euds of two ■ last the wunigan was moored fast for a mighty effort, snapped asunder the I small floating logs. In this manner the I ' the night—usually a mile or so below1 for the police force at New Haven. bonds of their hibernation. Now a nar ' force of the jump rushed the little tim I the spot planned—Billy Camp pushed Conn., showed that two candidates laid row lane of black rushing water' bers eud-on through the water. The I back his battered old brown derby hat.1 stuck cardboards on their heels ci pierced the rollways to boil and eddy In ' two men. maintaining marvelously I the badge of bis office, with a sigh of then pulled on their stockings to rem «1 the consequent Jam three miles below. 1 their balance, were thus ferried to I relief, To be sure, he and his men had j the requisite height. Just for the fun of the thing, a To the foremen Thorpe assigned tlieir 1 within leaping distance of the other still to cut wood, construct cooking North Danville (N. II.) housewife t'.««« tasks. shore. and camp fires, pitch tents, snip browse “Moloney,” said he to the big Irish- [ In the meantime a barely perceptible' and prepare supper for seventy men. ' other day tried her hand nt Ice cutting. man. “take your crew and break tliat motion was communicating itself from ' but the Lard work of tlie day was She dl«l so well that her husband of fered tier n eeut a cake, and slie work jam. Then scatter your men down to1 one particle to another through the cen-' over. 1 ed the livelong day, earning SI cents. within a mile of the pond at Dam Two 1 ter of the jam. The men redoubled tlieir I and see that the river runs clear. You 1 exertions. A sharp crack exploded Im-' Along either bunk, among the bush- Tlie clerk of a parish in England can tent for a day or so at West Bend 1 mediately underneath. There could no1 es, on sand burs mid in trees, hundreds when reading the third chapter of Dan uml hundreds of logs laid been strand or some other point about half way1 longer exist any doubt as to the motion.1 iel. wherein the names of Shadracli. ed when the main drive passed. Those although it was as yet sluggish, glacial.1 logs the rear crew were engaged iu re Meshack and Abe.’.nego are three times repeated, after speaking them Then in silen«?e a log shifted—in silence 1 storing to the current. and slowly, but with irresistible force. I And. as a man lmd to be able to ride once, called them. during (lie remain Jimmy Powers quietly stepped over it' any kind of log In any water, to propel der of the chapter, “the aforesaid gon just as it menaced Ills leg. Other logs 1 that log by jumping on it, by rolling it tlemen.” In aft directions up-ended. The jam 1 squirrel fashion with tlie feet, by punt GOWN GOSSIP. crew were forced continually to alter1 ing it as one would a canoe, to be skill tbeir positions, riding the changing tim-1 ful in pushing, prying and poling oth Long handled parasols are promised bars bent kneed, as a circus rider treads j er logs from the quarter deck of the considerable vogue this season. bls four galloping horses. same cranky craft: as he must be pre In ribbons melon shades, resembling Then all at once down by the face I pared at any and all times to Jump something crashed, The entire stream waist d«K'p iuto the river, to work in the interior of a muskmelon, are much became alive, It hissed and roaretft It ice water hours at a stretch; as lie was favored. shrieked and grumbled. At first slow- called upon to break the most danger Linen belts with small gun metal ly. then more rapidly, the very fore- ous jams on the river, representing, as clasps will be worn as much this year front of the center melted inward and they did, the accumulation which tlie as they were last forward and downward until it caught jam crew had left behind them, it was Veils with ribbon edge and others the fierce rush of the freshet and shot naturally considered the height of glo showing a single thread of gold are out from under the jam. Far up I ry to belong to the rear crew. Here I among the season's leaders. stream, bristling and formidable, the were the best of the Fighting Forty, If we are to judge by the quantity tons of logs, grinding savagely to- i men with a reputation as “white watet I and the beauty of the sash ribbons of getlier, swept forwarj). fered in the shops there is to be a re .birlers,” mon afraid of nothing. The six men and Bryan Moloney, Every morning the crews were divid v tv ill ef this fashion on an extensive who, it will be remembered, were on ed into two sections under Kcrlie and scale. top, worked until the last tnoitunt. Jack Hyland, Each crew bad charge We are growing so fastidious that When the logs began to cave under of one side of the river. Scotty Par ( real lace blouses are worn almost as them so rapidly that even the expert sons exercised a general supervisory commonly as collars and handk> efs river mon found difficulty in “staying eye over both crews. Shearer ami were of okl. Nothing but real la il- on top” the foreman set the example Thorpe traveled back and forth tlie lars is worn by careful dress« .»ew of hunting safety. I length of the drive, riding the logs York I'ost. “She ‘pulls.’ boys!" be yelled. down stream, but taking to a partly Then in a manner wonderful to be i submerged pole trail when ascending CURRENT COh JENT. hold. through tlie smother of foam anti tlie current. On the surface of the Sprany boldly and confidently ten feet spray, through tlie crash and yell of river tn the clear water floated two In five years you wouldn't knew It timbers, through the leap of destruc long, graceful boats called bateaux. had ever happened.—Baltimore Amer utrabjht downward. tloig the drivers zigzagged calmly mil down, and after that you had better These were in charge of expert boat ican. camp at the dam. Just as soon as you surely to tlie shore. men. They carried In racks a great I When the newspapers call a man All but Jimmy Powers, get logs enough iu the pond start to supply of pike poles, peaveys, axes, ! a pyromaniac people are driven to tlie sluicing them through the dam. Yon tense nnd eager on the crumbling fa« «« rope and dynamite for use In various slang of firebug. Philadelphia Ledger. won't ueed mor* than four men tilers of the Jam. Almost immediately tie emergencies. Radium, you may have observed, is it you keep a good bead. You can saw what he wanted and without Intense rivalry existed as to which now guaranteed to do all those things pause sprang boldly and confidently keep your gates open five or six Loors. crew “sucked” the farthest down the that liquid air was going' to do a few ten feet straight downward, to alight stream in the course of the day. There j years ngo. Washington i'ost. And, Moloney”— with accuracy on a single log floating was no need to urge the men. Some ' “Yes, sir.” Probably Mr. Wyndham is correct in -“I want you to t>e careful not to free in the current. And then in the stood upon the logs, pushing mightily I Lis calculation that th«* Irish questl« i very glory and chaos of the jam itself sluice too long. There is a bar jwst with the long pike poles. From one c an scarcely be settled In fifty ye. i below the dam. and if you try t« he was swept down stream. eml of the rear to tlie other shouts, It belongs to tlie |>erpetual izotioi After a moment the constant nccel- sluice with the water too low you'll calls, warnings and jokes flew back class. Boston Herald. center and jam there as sure as shoet- «ration in speed checked, then com- and forth. Once or twice a vast roar When Russia accuses England « menced perceptibly to slacken. At Ing.” of Homeric laughter went up as soma toadying to the United States it mu -i Bryan Moloney turned on his barf once tlie rest of the crew began to rid«« unfortunate slipped and soused into «1« ek a number of fashionable Brito and began to pick bis way down down stream. Each struck the calks tlie water. When the current slacked who have fancied all these years th stream over the solidly banked toga. of Ids river boots strongly into a log and the logs hesitated in tlieir run the it was the other way.—Washlngt« Without waiting the command a dozen anti on such unstable vehicles floated entire crew hastened, bobbing from star. men followed him. The little group miles with the'eurrent. From time to log to log. down river to see about It. bobbed away irregularly into the <U» »luie. as Bryan Moloney indicated, one Then they broke the Jam. standing THE MOVING WORLD. tance. springing lightly from one tim of them went ashore. There, usually surely on tlie edge of tbe^reat dark ber to tlie other, holding their quaintly *t a bend of the stream where the ness. while the ice water sucked In A Swiss watchmaker bus Invent« fashioned peaveys in the manner of a likelihood of jamming was great, they and out of their shoes. an electric watoli which will go f< ropedancer's balancing pole. At th» took their stands. When accessary they Behind the rear Big Junko poled Ids fifteen years without being rewound. lowermost limit of tlie rollways each ran out over the face of the river to bateau backward and forward explod Formetai is a new chemical cur man pried a log into the water and. separate a congestion likely to cause ing dynamite. Many of the bottom standing gracefully erect on this un trouble. Tlie rest of the time they tiers of logs in the rollways had been bination of metals Invented to me« the need of automobile builders for stable craft, floated out down the cur smoked tlieir pipes. frozen down, nnd Big Junko bad to Ail night long the logs slipped down i loosen them from the bed of the material which will withstand sever rent to the scene of bis dangerous la the moonlit current, silently, swiftly. | stream. He was a big man, this, as twists and will not corrode. bor. yet without baste. From the whole I his nickname indicates!, built of many The sinking of shafts through w. “Kerite.” went on Thorpe, "your crew can break rollways with the rest tength of the river rang the hollow I awkwardnesses. Ills cheek bones were ground has recently been successful; until we get ;et the river fairly filled, and boom, boom, boom, of tlmfti rs striking high, his nose flat, his lips thick and accomplished by the aid of artiflcl i I slabbery. He sported a wide, fero- freezing. The ground is hardened ! « then you can move on down stream as one against the other. I The drive was on. fast as you are needed. Scotty, you cions straggling mustacljg and long this manner to prevent a sudden In I eyebrows, under which—glennu'd little rush of water. will have the rear. Tim and I will With tlie assistance of the latest ma CHATTER XXVI.' boss the river." fierce eyes. Ills forehead sloped back I At once the signal was giveu to El I N the meantime the main bo'.v like a beast's, but was always hidden chines a piece of leather can be trans lis, the dam watcher. Ellis and his of tlie crew under Thorpe and by a disreputable felt hat. Big Junko formed into a pair of boots In thirty assistants thereupon liegan to pry with his foremen were briskly tum did not know much and had the pas four minutes, In which time it passes loug iron bnrs at the ratchets of the bling tlie logs into the current. sions of a wild animal, but he was a through the hands of sixty three per heavy gates. The chore boy bent at The men bad continually to keep alert, reckless river man and devoteil to sons and through fifteen machines. tentively over the ratchet pin. liftinc for at any moment they were cal! : Thorpe, Just now lie exploded dynn- it delicately to permit another inch of upon to exercise tlieir best judgment mite. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL, raise, dropping It accurately to enable and quickness to keep from being ca The sticks of powder were piled the men at the bars to seize a fr»sli rled downward with the rush of th« amidships. Big Junko crouch«] over I Of the public school teachers in the purchase. The river's roar dee deepened logs Not Infrequently a frownin. tiieiu. Inserting the fuses and caps,. United States 27 per cent are men. Through the wide sluiceways a tori In English schools three hours a week sheer wall of forty feet would hesltu clo-Mig the openings with soap, finally foamed and tu;(iL!«'<l. Immediately f ou tin« brink of pluuge. Then Shear« ««aiding them nnd dropping them into are given to needlework; In New York spread throi.; g'a the brush on cither him if proved bls right to the title < t!water alongside, where they irnnic •chools but one. ,1 to the limits <>( tlie freshet bai Dr. Simeon Pell of Rosedale, Kan. river man. dlately sank. Then a few strokes of .1 iln't t ■il for then ga Shearer w.re ealks nearly an it. short paddle took him barely out of has given the University of Kansas «Ig» uneasy 1 fl J’S. tn length, lie had been known to r !« danger. H«- huddle«! down in bls craft, <25,000 In Missouri lands. ttw lo I the <l:ir! ten mil« s without shifting bis feet o:> s waiting. One, two. three seconds passed. The teachers of three French public If ■eemed toe <0 » ■ ill that he could ,ar»y .1 Then a hollow uvó.o shook the roani. ■chool« ; In Normandy report that 75 toward ity. For coo! nerve y A clod of water sprang up. strangely per ce nt of the girls In them take Without 1 of tiiuL was un< T:ee!k»(1. beautiful. After a ino nirnt tLe gr at brandy In tbeir coffee ut bre ikfast of the "I don' t • ' yon boys here any I br«isrn logs r« e SU<1<1<* nly to the «nr- r goF.” L p s i ! <jointly. face fr m ■ low. one 1ifter the other Careful!) Br<>UKlit L'p. Brj an Wlion 1 • a ■ n had all withdrawn ' « Ilk«' leviathans of the d.ppp. “Wet e you carefully brought up, my wit ikC'ii < .a«. . niiy under the front f Thorpo nnd Tirn Sn<*nror nearly al lad?" t isked the ¡chant of the ap strF thp roilvray. g! inclng with practli wayn «dept In a «log ti •nt at the rear pllcant for n sitnation. eje at i. «• [ j udicular wall of 1 though occasiona “Phi sp . sir. yes. >lr; 1 came up In tl i a man pries Ja night at Da tu Tv Jere Bryan M«i the eie vator, sir.” said the respectful Fr ■d his poarey a «! for,«T nnd h's cr< NV already . youth. — .. . .,■■■■■ , tu ■-•i" 1 -• through 1 he , gaged In slulclng thè li ! \ _ • - . Hut: Making Snr«. shoot. th- r-. * ru nnd rrosbing tim Gritty George—I hope dat bowl of The affair was i ' enough. Ixing •Jowl; t> an< 1 tlie spot on which tlie river booms arnnged In tliic form of coffee won't stimulate yer to go to 1 u at ways. 1 - 1 wa« buried beneath open V guide«! tl io drf’m tfi th«* slnlrp work. Sandy Pikes—No, pardi I asked nj.i f,j__ ' U. '«••t of solid green wood, lo gate, thrnngb wl ilrh a smooth apron Je Indy to put loaf sugar In ft—Phlla Thorpe it »••• t •<! that Shearer mu* noil in »ip odd*. d«l;.hl* Bulletin. lively !” n W I A PIECE Of SCARF (Original.) Marina was a Mexican girl, with the usual black hair and eyes of Mexia»ns. She was only sixteen, but at sixteen many girls of the tropics are as old as glris of twenty in tlie north. Marina was but a poor mail's daughter, with very little education. One evening a stranger stopped at her father’s cabin. He was a young man with fair hair ■ ml blue eyes and above al! a winning ■mile. He asked Marina If he might have oue of her flowers growing la a be«l beside the door and when he dk! so smiled at her. That was the last of Marina's peace of mind. Edwin Coop er, the stranger, a young civil engi neer on the railroad l>elng built through the valley below, had plucked her heart as easily as he had plucked her flower. But there Is danger in picking hearts in those tropical gardens. It is like touching one of the beautiful insects of the country. Marina did not sting Cooler, but one Narvaez, a dirty little Mexican, who had seen the engineer's smile and how it went to a heart that he had in vain tried to appropriate, was made his enemy, and such enemies, who Invariably strike in the dnrk, are to be dreaded. When Cooper went the next day he had cut an end from a faded many colored scarf Marina wore. She followed him to the gate, chatter Ing as she went, and the Inst th*n«; Cooper said to her was, "See, I will wear your souvenir In my buttonhole.” Cooper had no mioner departed than Narvaez, who had been present the evening before— indeed he hail beet« hanging aboiU Marina most of the tkn«- —entered and upbraided her for her conduct toward the stranger. This •on duct had been without excuse, for Ma rina was betrothed to Narvaez, fhe had consented to be his wife not be cause she loved him, but because he was the first man site had met aftiee «he emerged from childhood. Sh« did not seem to be at all ashamed of litiv Ing been led aside so easily. She odd Narvaez In patois Spanisli that hs was a miserable specimen of bnmnnlty •nd the stranger was a god. Narvaez was so beside himself with rage that he was tempted to run a knife into Jier. but was too much infatuated crith her to do so. He resolved that be woulil tali«1 revenge oil the Americano. Cooper continued to wear the bit of scarf In ids buttonhole. Wbetbev hr didn't bare time to talc« !♦ a’M ;.l whether he expected tbai lie nughl meet tile little girl from w’. im h« got it and «lesi»ed to lot her see that hr valued it. no one knows. Several of his associates asked him wliat it meant was It tlie badge of 11 society. 11 dec oration—what was It? But !•>• only re plied tliat he had got it from a girl. One day Cooper was carrying a theod olite, which lie occasionally so* up on three legs, looked tlirotn.li it ttt a rod on which was a slide and made some figures in ids notebook, He found It n tedious prove . ami One* while be »ent Ills rodsman foru«i»d a long distance he snt down on the Brass to wait. There was no on............«hem. and lie sat enjoying tlie solitude >«u<l listening to tin« birds. Sudd • ity .1 huge stone came down on IP - 11« id and crashed Ills skull. The t> ! h ;:« m . jiot hearing or seeing anything from him for some .time, finally w nt back to find out wliat was the matter. CSbpcr was dead. There was no clew to tlie murderer. Cooper's valuables had not been taken; nt least none was missed, nnd no one could understand bow any person •wulii have had any interest iu iuu:during him. Not long after th«« trag«««Iy Nnr vnez renewed ills attentions to MnvLn i, who. so far ns he could s««e. hod for gotten the hniidsome strangi««'. "When shall we be mai,.. dl” sal«’ the little Mexican one day to Martnn. “I'll tell you.” she rcpllctl. “We will be marriisl when you bring me ihv bit ot my scarf I gave the engineer.” “I bring you the bit of scarft Mow could I get it?” "You must find It. Perhaps he left It among bls clothing. You might steal It” “I will not do such “Then I will not marry you.” From that time Marina would have nothing to «lo with him. At lata one day he brought her tlie souvenir. Then she named a day for the w<«<1<1fng. On that day while Narvaez was put ting on a new suit of clothes he had bought at a store for his marriajje be was arrested and carried Inf«,»» the Judge. There were present a numCvr of the men employed on ralir«' id «<1 infrac tion, and sitting in a conspi« nous pface, wearing on her bosoiu tin- bit of arf which she had made th«« pri« <■ ot her cons«'nt, was Marina. Narvaez looki«d It her in astonishment. yb > retarned his look with a enl<| blooded «tar«. Narvaez wi>« «erased of the r«rvdcr of Cooper, nnd Marina was >.ili»d to tlie stand. She told bei . m >. giving an account of Cooper's visit and the giving Llm the bit of waif, « !.i>g her testimony In tlds wise: "I knew, «nnor judg". •• h«d kill«'«! the ABtorira"'« 1« not make him be punished w proof. I knew the Am «i wewr rny si •;irf, for he 1 ' 1 )l‘. When I 11« a ' «1 that it vr ‘ * id on him I suv; < ted Narr • ' • *• .’9 n trophy. I pnetend d no’ ’n Nsr Vnoz of th- murder, λ *t t' ho must Ste-il tl: for m • fro ■' no’u clothe«. At last b. 1 > me.” It dt«l Mt into long • v«oz of the tminier Ju ' be ’• 1 led sw«y h from n tabi e nnd befo; prevented hinriod It at the Hri he b »O ■uppoae.1 !.- to in > H wH tneb 11 O^becx -ig 1 beratn«' »he Amori«-, n<> Fot tonate!/ he mis- «1 lier. LEVTW r ON.