E OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Event! of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest, and Other Things Worth Knowing. Demobilization of the navy demoral ized the Atlantic fleet bo far as man power is concerned, it was said Satur day at the navy department. The steamer Barnstable, coal laden from Savannah to a Cuban port, went down off St. Catherines Friday night. It is reported that 14 of the crew are missing. The miners, by a vote of 5 to 1, de cided to end the strike that has for several weeks halted production in the Tonopah district, and an order was is sued Saturday night to resume work at once. Several villages In the province of Siena, Italy, were severely shaken Sun day night by an earthquake. Houses were badly damaged. One person is dead and several injured at Piancas tagnajo. Ten were injured at Celle. A dispatch received in Paris from Sosnowlce In the government of Plotr- kow, Poland, asserts that a German army, comprising a minimum of 200, 000 men, is concentrated on the fron tier of Silesia ready to be thrown against Poland. The bureau of internal revenue an .' nounces that virtually all federal taxes, WORLD P IS i even the 2 cents paid for the privilege of an ice cream soda, may be deducted from gross Income in computing in come taxes. Only income and excess ' profits taxes may not be deducted The railroad adminrstratlon will un reservedly accept the proposal of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and Railway Shop La borers for a now working schedule, ac cording to a message read before a closed session of the organization's convention in Detroit Sunday morning. "Radical ideas, bolshevlsm and I. W. W.lsm are corrupting the universities of America," declared Colonel David P. Barrows, former dean of the Unl- ' vorsity of California, at a banquet in Oakland, Cal Sunday night, given in honor of Lieutenant-Colonel Theodore Roosevelt by American Legion posts of Oakland, Alameda, Berkeley and Richmond. A Dawson, Y. T. dlspatoh says sev eral thousand tons of silver ore will be shipped "outsldd" next spring from Yukon and Alaska, according to Vol- ney Richmond, superintendent of the Northern Commercial company. Half of this amount, ho said, would come from Nixon Fork, near Idltaroil, and half from Kantishna,-near Fairbanks. Tho Stewart river country is expected to ship possibly 1000 or 2000 tons By a vote of 244 to 7 the bill confer ring tho rank of permanent admiral on Admiral Benson and Rear-Admiral Sims was passed Wednesday by the house. The moasure now goes to the senate. Tho government has so much "coin of the realm" that it actually bulges out tho walls of the vaults containing it. The treasury has asked congress to appropriate $1,500,000 to make the vaults secure and provide additional ones. The treasury's gold and silver accumulated during the war. All members of the Wisconsin dele gation In the house introduced identi cal bills Wednesday proposing bonus es at the rate of $30 a month for each month's service of soldiers, sailors, marines and Red Cross nurses. It was estimated $1,400,000,000 would be required to make tho payments. One hundred and twonty-one women teachers in the public schools in Yak ima, Wash., have so far been able, with the liolp of City Superintendent Davis, to find only 11 suitable rooms for rent. The situation is causing the school authorities embarrassment, as the opening of school is only about a week distant. Four hundred thousand Gorman workers have volunteered for the work of restoration In northern France, ac cording to Vorwaerts. Large scale re construction operations are contem plated. Peter Lynch, said to be an organizer for the I. W. W who was arrested Saturday and placed in tho city jail at Calipatrla, Cal was released from jail, escorted to the city limits by a "citizens'" committee and ordored never to return. SEA-WALL SAVES GALVESTON Hurricane HitB Many Gulf Cities But Little Damage Done: Dallas, Tex. Driving furiously into the Texas coast, principally in the section southwest of Galveston, the ropical hurricane that has skirted the United States gulf coast for nearly a week, apparently has swept inland near the Mexican border. Wire communication was interrupt ed in most of the affected area and the extent of the storm's damage could not be learned accurately Sunday, but there were no reports of fatalities. Brownsville and Corpus Christ! ap parently felt the brunt of the storm which weather bureau officials believe has passed on into Mexico where it will be dissipated in the Mexican mountains. Galveston, where considerable anx iety had been felt, apparently was struck by the edge of the storm area and again the city was saved from any considerable damage by the pow erful sea wall, constructed after the 1900 disaster. Water was reported to a depth of six feet in sections of Cor puB Thrlsti and information received by the weather bureau from San An tonio said water was three feet deep In the lobby of the Corpus Christi ho tel. Early reports from Corpus Christi told of considerable damage done by a 65 miles an hour gale which swept away signs and awnings and drove residents of outlying districts to the greater security of brick and stone buildings downtown. Isolation or urownsvme was com plete Sunday night, so far as wire communication was concerned, the only information coming from that city being contained in a brief wire less dispatch from Fort Brown to southern department headquarters at San Antonio reporting a 75-mile wind at 4 P. M. 50 HURT IN FIRE; LOSS IN MILLIONS Now York. With more than 50 per sons injured and the damage already done estimated at from $5,000,000 to $10,000,000 weary firemen Sunday night still were fighting a threat of further explosions of oil tanks at the tire which practically wiped out the Stone & Fleming Oil company's plant in Long Island City Saturday. Five tanks of crude oil were burn ing late Monday. Should there be a sudden shift of the wind from north to northeast, many additional tanks In plants nearby would be threatenod, as well as thousands of tons of coal. The 20 acres of fire-swept territory looked like a scene in war-devastated France or Belgium. Tanks were crum pled up; huge steel girders lay in a tangled mass, few walls were left standing, and burning oil continued to (low along the surface of Newton creek. Plane Up 34,000 Feet. Mineola, N. Y. A new unofficial world's altitude record, it was learned waB established here Saturday, when Roland Rohlens, testing pilot for the Curtlss Aeroplane & Motor corpora tion, climbed to a height of 34,000 feet more than six miles beating the previous world's unofficial record of Adjutant Gasale of the French army at Vallacoubley last June by 864 feet. Rohlens explained that he took the air intending only to make a test flight, but he found conditions so satis factory that he decided to keep climb ing until his air apparatus showed the new record altitude. The machine Rohlens used was the same Curtlss wasp, equipped with a 400-horsepower motor, in which last July he flew to a height of 30,700 feet. He said ho found that he was comfort able In his warm garments at the 34,000-foot level, where the thermom eter registered 44 degrees below zero. Deaths Now Total 13. Kansas City, Mo. With the death Monday of four more employes of the Murray grain elevator here, which was wrecked Saturday by a spontaneous combustion explosion and fire, the list of fatalities in connection with the accident reached 13. Four bodies were taken from the ruins Monday. Five persons were killed outright by the explosion or died early Monday. Officials of the company said the loss would be in the neighborhood of $3,500,000. They said iiiere were ap proximately 1,000,000,000 bushels of grain in the elevator. Japan Demands Shantung. New York. Japan will refuse to rat ify the peaco treaty if the Shantung clause is excluded, in the opinion of Baron Shlmpol Goto, member of the Japanese national commission for dis cussion of foreign policies and former foreign minister, who arrived here on his way home after a three-months' visit to England and France. Baron Goto said he spoke as a private citizen and was expressing only his personal views. PRESIDENT APPEALS FOR ALL MANKIND Firm Stand Js Explained Forci bly to Big Audience. FIGHT NOT PARTISAN Senate Contest Involves Only Inter pretation, With Phraseology of Little Import. Portland. Sanely and directly, with but Infrequent recourse to eloquence, Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of the United States, spoke to 7000 citi zens of Oregon Monday night at the auditorium, bringing immediately home to them his uncompromising advocacy of the league of nations and his plea that they as Americans stand with him for the redemption of ideals root ed deep in the traditions of America. He spoke as one speaks to his neighbors and friends, confident of their appraisal of the justice of his position and of their judgment of the task that remains unfinished, ere peace may come in permanency. He spoke as one friend to another, of the trust that troubled nations of the old world place In America in the dark hour, a trust .born of unselfish and valiant entry into the war for human liberty and one that is not fulfilled in entire ty until a covenant of nations shall render futile all future attempts to mar the happiness of the race. Should senatorial opposition mar the meaning of the covenant materially, then, warned the president, the giant task to which the nations of the league addressed themselves in Paris must be again attempted; the dictated peace that Germany was forced to sign must be resubmitted for quibbling, and the turmoil that, the world has endured must inevitably reawaken. In his address, without the vestige of hesitancy, President Wilson charged that the inference of politics In his advocacy of the league, thex hint that he may be looking forward to 1920, is utterly unwarranted and unworthy. If any in the audience, he declared, im Duted such a motive, he desired to separate himself from that man. And the president made it clear, with emphasis, that the most sincere ill-wisher of the league is the German propagandist, whose hope is that the United States may reject the covenant and thus alienate herself from the friendship of her former allies and the trust of sister nations weakening the strength of the alliance for lasting peace and leaving open the path for such a course as Germany took when she sought to dominate the world. "My contest with them is a contest of interpretation, declared president Wilson, speaking of the opponents and the opposition to the league covenant, asserting that mere phraseology is a matter of little moment, providing that the substance of the document remains unmeddled with. From first to last the address was an appeal for the support of Americans In retaining the fruits of peace and assuring "the safety and honor of future generations." He dealt but slightly with critics of the covenant, though at one period he upbraided them as men, in some instances, for whom he had no vestige of respect. AUTO WRECK KILLS 2 OF WILSON PARTY Portland. Two men were killed and three others were injured when a high- powered Packard touring car attached to President Wilson's automobile high way party swerved into a ditch and overturned on the Powell Valley road, a mile and a half west of Gresham, shortly before 12 o'clock, noon, Mon day. The two men killed were Ben F. Allen, aged 39, Washington correspond ent for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, and a member of the newspaper party attached to the president's special train. James R. Patterson, aged 66, a re tired real estate dealer of 444 Carter Lane. Portland. Mr. Patterson, owner and driver of the machine, lost control and went into a small ditch when he was compelled to swerve sharply to the right to avoid striking a machine driven by-C. H, Barnett of Wasco, Or. The Barnett machine had been parked by the road side until the presidential party had passed by on its way into the city, Thinking, he asserts, that the long line of automobiles had passed, Mr. Barnett started his machine back Into the road, but had stopped squarely in the roadway when Mr. Patterson ap proached in his big car traveling about 40 miles an hour, according to wit nesses. Sugar Crop Is Largest Honolulu, T. H. The sugar crop of the territory of Hawaii this year will reach 605,000 tons. This is above any previous estimate by several thousand tons and is based upon the latest cal culations on "cleanups" at several plantations. The factories have ship ped 446,000 tons and 31,000 tons more will be sent to San Francisco prior to October 15. The total output from original mills will be 635,000 tons of raw sugar and 20,000 tons of refined Geoffry Finds a Friend and an Enemy. Synopsis Geoffry Cnrlyle, master of sailing ships nt twenty-six, is sentenced to 20 years' servitude In the American col onies for participation in the Monmouth rebellion in England. Among the passengers on board the ship on which he is sent across are Roger Fairfax, wealthy Maryland planter; his niece, Dorothy Fairfax, and Lieu tenant Sanchez, a Spaniard, who became acquainted with the Fair faxes in London. CHAPTER III Continued. 2 "Why especially with me?" "Rather a hard question to answer at the very beginning,. I smiled back at her. "Yet not so difficult as the one I shall ask you. I am only one of fifty prisoners, scarcely cleaner or more reputable looking than any of my mates. Yet surely you have not sought speech with these others? Then why especially with me?" Even In the growing dusk I could mark a red flush mount into the clear cheeks at this insistent question, and for an Instant her eyes wavered. But she possessed the courage of pride, and her hesitancy was short. "You imagine I cannot answer. Oh, but I can; I know who you are; my uncle pointed you out to me. I am traveling home with him to Maryland. I am Dorothy Fairfax. lie was pres ent at your, trial before L'ord Jeffries. You are Geoffry Carlyle, In command of the ship that brought Monmouth to England. I heard it all." "All? What else, pray?" Her eyes opened widely in sudden surprise and she clusped and unclasped her hands nervously. "Do you really not know? Have you never been told what happened?" "Only that I was roughly forbidden to speak, called every foul name the learned Judge could think of, and then sentenced to twenty years penal servi tude beyond seas," I answered soberly. "Following that I was dragged from the dock, and flung into a cell. Was there anything else?" "Why you should have known. Lord Jeffries sentenced you to death; the decree was signed, to be executed Immediately. Then Influence was brought to bear some nobleman in Northumberland made direct appeal to the king. That was .what angered Jeffries so." - "An appeal I For me? Good Godl not Bucclough was It he, the duke?" "Yes; it was whispered nbout that the king was in his debt some word of honor, and dure not refuse. The word of mercy enme just in time, or dering Jeffries to commute your sen fence. At first he swore he'd hang you, king or no king, but his nerve fulled. My uncle said he roared like a bull. This Bucclough ; Is he not your friend?" I hesitated for an Instant of indeci sion, looking into her face, but the truth would not be denied. "Scarcely that," I said soberly. "Nor can I solve entirely his purpose. He is my brother, and I am the next in line. We are not even on speaking terms; yet he Is childless, and may feel some measure of dislike to have the family end in a hangman's knot I can think of no other reason for his interference. I knew nothing of his action." "I am glad it became my privilege to tell you. Besides, Captain Carlyle," simply, "It may also heliiyou to un derstand my interest. If you are of the Carlyles of Bucclough, how hap pened It that you went to sea?" "Largely necessity, and to some ex tent no doubt sheer love of adven ture. I was a younger son, with very little Income. There were then two lives between me and the estate, and the old duke, my father, treated me like a servant I always loved the sea, and at fourteen to get out of his sight, I think largely was appren ticed to the navy, but lost my grade In the service by a mere boyish prank, His influence then would have saved me, but he refused to even read my letter of explanation. I dared not re turn home In such disgrace, and conse quently drifted Into the merchant serv ice. It Is a story quickly told." "Yet not so quickly lived." "No, it meant many hard years, on all the oceans of the world. This is the first message reaching me from the old home." "I have seen that home," she said quietly, "and shall never forget the Impression it made on me. A beauti ful place. I was there on a coaching party, the first summer I was In Eng land. I was a mere girl then, and everything seemed wonderful. I have been away from Maryland now for three years. Nothing else would sat isfy father. Maryland is only a colony, you know." "Your home is at Saint Mary's?" "Lower down the Potomac. Have you ever been there?" "Twice; once as mate, and the last time as master of a ship. My latest voyage In these waters was made nearly two years ago." "It Is not so strange then, Is It, that I should have felt Interested in you?" she asked suddenly, as though justify ing herself. "When Uncle Roger first told me who you were, and then ex plained what had occurred at your trial, naturally you became to me something entirely different from the others. Were you actually with Mon mouth?" "In sympathy, yes; but I had no hand in the actual fighting. I wus not even ashore until It was all over with, Still I shall pay my share of the bill." "And you know what that means, do you not? What will happen when we reach Virginia?" .1 "Perfectly ; I have no illusions. have seen just such ships as this come In. We are to be advertised, and sold to the highest bidder. A week from now I shall probably be out In the tobacco fields, under the whip of an overseer, who will call me Jeff. All I can hope for is a kind-hearted master, and an early opportunity to escape." 'Oh, no!" and in her eagerness her hands actually clasped mine. "It is not going to' be quite so bad as that, That is what I wanted to tell you, That Is what gave me boldness to come across here to you tonight. It has all been arranged. You are not going to be sold on the block with those others. Uncle Roger has already contracted with the captain for your services. You are going north with us to Maryland." I drew a deep breath, , and In the sudden Impulse of relief which swept "I Have Seen That Home." over me my own fingers closed tightly nbout her hands. "I owe this to you; I am sure must owe this to you tell me?" Her eyes dropped, and In the dim light I could mark the heaving of her bosom as she caught her breath, "Only only the suggestion," she managed to say In a whisper. "He he was glad of that. You see I I knew he needed someone to take charge of his sloop, and and so brought you to his mind. So please don't thank me." "I shall never cease to thank you,' I returned warmly, conscious suddenly that I was holding her hands, and as instantly releasing them. "It will save me the degradation which I dreaded most of all the tolling in the fields beside negro slaves, and the sting of the lash. Ay, It means even mon I hesitated, instantly realizing that I must not utter those Impetuous words leaping to my lips. "Morel" she exclaimed. "What more?" "This," I went on, my thought shift ing into a new channel. "A longer ser vitude. Up to this moment my one dream has been to escape, but I must give that up now.' You have placed me under obligations to serve. Be tween us this has become a debt of honor." "But wait," she said earnestly, "for I had even thought of that I was sure you would feel that way any gentleman would. Still there is a way out You were sentenced as an in dentured servant I saw the entry my self. It read : 'Geoffry Carlyle, Master Mariner, Indentured to the Colonies for the term of twenty years, unless sooner released; crime, high treason.' Any Indentured man, under our Mary land laws, can buy his freedom, after serving a certain proportion of his sentence. Did yon not know that?" I did know It, yet somehow had never connected the fact before di rectly with my own case. God! what relief; I stood up straight once more in the stature of a man. I hard ly know what wild words I might have spoken had the opportunity been mine; but at that instant the figure of a man crossed the deck toward ns, emerging from the open cabin door. Against the gleam of yellow light recognized the trim form advancing, arid as instantly stepped back into shadow. My quick movement caused her to turn and face him. "What!" he exclaimed, and evi dently surprised at his discovery. "It is indeed Mistress Dorothy out here alone? 'Twas my thought you were safely In your cabin long since. But prithee I mistake; you are not alone." "I was preparing to go in, she an swered, ignoring his latter words. "The night already looks stormy." "But your friend?" The tone in which he spoke was insistent, almost insolent in Its de mand, and she hesitated no longer In meeting the challenge. "Your pardon, I am sure Lieuten ant Sanchez, this gentleman is Cap tain Geoffry Carlyle." He stood there stiff and straight against the background of light, one hand in affected carelessness caress ing the end of a waxed mustache. His face was in shadow, yet I was quite aware of the flash of his eyes. "Ah, indeed some passenger I have not chanced to observe before?" "A prisoner," she returned distinct ly. "You may perhaps remember my uncle pointed him out to us when he first came aboard." "And you have been out here alone; talking with the fellow?" "Certainly why not?" "Why the man is a felon, convicted of crime, sentenced to deportation.? "It Is not necessary that we discuss this, sir," she Interposed, rather proud ly, "as my personal conduct Is not a matter for your criticism. I shall re- tire now. No, thank you, you need not come." He stopped still, staring blankly after her as she vanished; then wheeled about to vent his anger on me. "Carlyle, hey !" he exclaimed sneer ingly. "A familiar sound that name in my ears. One of the brood out ol Bucclough?" "A cadet of that line," I managed to admit, wonderlngly. "You know of them?" . Quite as much as I care to," his tone ugly anil Insulting. Then an Idea suddenly occurred to his mind. "Saint Guise, but that would even up the score nicely. You are, as I understand it, sent to Virginia for sale?" "Yes." "For how long a term?" "The sentence was twenty years." "Helal and you go to the highest bidder. I'll do It, fellow 1 To actually own a Carlyle of Bucclough will be a sweet revenge. 'Twill count for morehan were I to tweak the duke's nose." "A very noble plan for revenge," 1 admitted. "And one which I am no! likely to forget. Unfortunately yon come too late. It happens, senor, that I am already safely Indentured to Roger Fairfax." I turned away, but he called angrHj after me: "Do not feel so sure of that Curly W I I am In the game yet" CHAPTER IV. Black 6anchez, Pirate. I rested In my berth for a long time, staring blankly up at the dark deck above, unable to sleep, and endeavor lng to figure out the true meaning of all these occurrences. I felt that 1 could understand the Interest exhib ited by Dorothy Fairfax, and, greatly as I already admired her, I was not egotist enough to even Imagine that her effort to serve me had basis in any personal attraction. But what about Lieutenant Sanchez? Why was this ' unknown Spaniard already so openly my enemy? Could it be because ol Dorothy Fairfax? I felt finally that had the clue Jealousy, the mad, un reasoning jealousy of his race. I had no false conception as toHhls no vagrant thought that her Interest In me was any more than a passing fnncy, born of sympathy and a de sire to aid. Nevertheless, as she had thus already served me, I now owed her service in return, and here was the first call. If conditions made It pos sible it .was my plain duty to place myself between these two. What mystery Is back of the Namur of Rotterdam, the strange ship which the Fairfax party encounters as it Mils up the bay? Sanchez shows, little Interest, but Fairfax and Carlyle are worried. What can the strange craft be doing In this spot? (TO'BE CONTINUED.) ' . j Greedy for Wasps. The common green frog has been di covered to possess1 an Insatiable greed for wasps. This extraordinary appe tite does not seem to be In the least checked by an occasional sting. The protecting color of the frog, which sits motionless upon leaves, no doubt do ludes the most wary of Insects Into) sense of security. Louisville Courieci Journal. ,