WORLD
M
OF lUT WEEK
Brief Resume Most Important
Daily News Items.
COMPILED FOR YOU
Events of Noted People, Government
nd PadficNorthwf st, and Other
Thing! Worth Knowing.
Presidential headquarters for Sen
ator W. G. Harding were opened in
Chicago Monday.
Notices announcing a wage increase
of 15 per cent affecting 2500 employes
were posted in Rockville, Conn., Mon
day in the seven woolen mills.
The condition of Dowager Queen
Alexandra, who is suffering from a
bronchial cold, Is causing anxiety,
says the London Star. Alexandra is
75 years .old.
The noted Madrid toreador, Gallito,
whose real name was Joselito Gomez,
was killed Sunday night at Place de
Talavera, as he was about to dispatch
the fifth bull of the evening.
Thomas Annear, superintendent of
the Denver United States mint, has
received instructions to purchase bar
silver in the open market; The gov
ernment price will be ?1 an ounce.
The peace resolution adopted by
the senate Saturday was formally pre
sented to the house Monday and laid
on the table.
The Chloago Motor Liverymen's
association has announced a 20 per
cent increase In the prices of horses
and cabs for funerals.
The U. S. supreme court failed again
Monday to decide the validity of the
prohibition amendment and the en
forcement act and recessed until
June 1.
The cold storage bill requiring that
the date of the entry of goods into
cold storage be marked on them when
they are offered for sale and limiting
the period of such storage was passed
Monday by the senate. It now goes
to conference.
The world's altitude record for a
pilot and three passengers was broken
at Mineola, N. Y Monday by Clarence
E. Coombs, who rose to the height of
17,150 feet. This is 50. feet higher
than the altitude reached by Captain
Lowell II. Smith, commanding officer
of Puryear field In El Centro, Cal.,
last Monday.
The federal grand jury In Drooklyn
returns indictments against Morris &
Co. and the Cudahy Packing company
of Chicago, charging profiteering In
foodstuffs. The Morris company was
alleged to have sold "City pork" to a
dealer at 39 cents a pound, although
a few days before the price had been
but 33 cents.
The Atlantic fleet, which has been
at anchor in the Hudson river for the
last two weeks, put to sea Monday.
After maneuvering and practice runs,
it is understood the fleet will go to
Hampton Iloads. Rumors were also
current that additional ships may soon
be sent to the Gulf of Mexico to join
the Oklahoma and the destrpyors now
on duty there.
Government authorities captured 17
Chinese, six quarts of some liquid
thought to be an opiate, 1000 quarts
of whiskey, 1500 quarts of cognac, 14
five-gallon demijohns of aguardiente
and five demijohns of Cuban wine on
board the Cuban schooner Iteemplazo
off the coast of Florida at Tarpon
Springs. The liquor was takon into
Tampa, Fla.
The high cost of clothing, partlcu
larly women's appare,' slumped in
San Francisco Monday. Advertise
ments appearing in the morning and
afternoon newspapors" announced re
ductions, either temporary or until
further notice, amounting to 20 per
cent. Several haberdasheries also an
nounced material decreases hi men's
furnishings, exclusive of clothing,
Exclusion of aliens from control of
oil resources within the empire, gov
ernment aid In developing new sup
plies In other countries and restriction
against disposal of oil stocks hold by
British nationals are features of Great
Britain's petroleum policy, tho senate
was informed Monday by President
Wilson. The Information, given in a
special report from the state depart
ment, was In answer to a senate reso
lution asking what disabilities attach
ed to American participation In world
petroleum resources. The governmen
tal policy of Great Britain, the report
added, also contemplated financial and
technical aid to pioneer companies.
mm
: STATE NEWS S
IN BRIEF.
Roseburg. With the close of busi
ness on Saturday, May 8, approximate
ly 500 applications had been filed In
the Roseburg land office for Oregon
and California grant lands, which
were opened for filing on April 12.
The Dalles. A controlling share In
the stock of the Norman Cream com
pany of this city has been purchased
by the White Clover Ice Cream com
pany of Portland. The new manage
ment proposes to make the local
creamery one of the largest in eastern
Oregon.
Corvallls. Peter Whitaker of Pine
Cake ranch reports a turkey that has
laid an egg every day for 62 days and
the agricultural college hen record of
shows no signs of quitting. This beats
55 eggs In 55 days and the record of
the G. B. Coon white leghorn hen
which laid 67 eggs in 67 days.
Roseburg. The Drager company
has begun erecting what they declare
to be one of the biggest fruit packing
plants In the state. The present build
ing, a frame structure 130x45 feet and
part of it three stories high, is being
wrecked and a modern packing plant
160x50 feet, with an annex, will be
built.
The Dalles. Due to Increased pro
duction of the five-mile sawmill, lum
ber prices, effective last Thursday,
have been cut 6 per cent by a local
yard. It is hoped here that the re
duction In the price of lumber may
tend to relieve the serious housing
shortage which has gripped this city
for the last year and a half.
Baker. The 12th annual show of
the Union Livestock Show association
at Union will be held Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday, June 2, 3 and 4.
There will be racing, wild west car
nivals, dancing and other amusements.
The automobile highway to Union has
been improved. Many Baker people
plan to go to Union for the show.
Bend. That black volcanic cinders,
inexhaustible deposits of which are
found in the immediate vicinity of
Bend, may solve the problem of find
ing a light aggregate to take the place
of gravel in bridge concrete, which
has been confronting the state high
way commission for some time, is the
belief of District Highway Engineer
Stebblns.
Hood River. Workmen are now en
gaged in completing new garage, ware
house and residence structures here,
the total cost of which will exceed
$75,000. One of the garages will cost
in excess of $26,000, and another $20,
000. Both will be equipped with every
metropolitan convenience. A new coal
bunkers and warehouse will cost
about $15,000. The remainder of the
total sum represents residence build
ings.
Salem. An unasslgned surplus of
$841,618.51 is shown In the report pre
pared by the state industrial accident
commission here Friday and filed with
Governor Olcott. Assets set out In
the report include bonds in the hands
of the state treasurer amounting to
$3,691,201.65; cash, $316,978.14; cash
In bank, $98,477.67; premiums In
course of collection, $40,093.69, and
accrued interest estimated at $60,-
385.83.
Monmouth. Both bonds and special
tax for a new high school gymnasium
carried in the special election held
here Wednesday, It was an easy vic
tory, the tax of $6000 carrying by a
vote of 27 to'13, and the $5000 bonds
was voted for 62 to 29. Mr. Bergraff,
an Albany architect, has planned
building for the sum to be expended
and in addition to Its use as a gym
nasium it will be used for community
gatherings. The gymnasium will have
a seating capacity of 800.
Salem. Bonds Issued by the Grants
Pass, Medford and Ochoco irrigation
district will be certified by state Irri
gation securities commission as soon
as the records of each project are com
pleted and filed with the state en
gineer, according to a decision reached
at a conference held here recently.
The Grants Pass district, in Josephine
county, has voted bonds In the sum of
$184,000, the Medford district $1,250,-
000, and the Ochoco district $100,000,
The three projects are now under de
velopment.
The Dalles. The Dalles will build a
civic auditorium at a cost of $125,000
This was decided Thursday, when citi
zens went to the polls and gave the
project a majority of 154 votes. Six
hundred and twenty-four votes were
cast. General obligation bonds to the
extent of $50,000 also were voted. The
bonds carried by a majority of 285
While considerable opposition to the
auditorium bond issue developed, the
valiant work of the American Legion
which Is strongly behind the propost
tton to gtvo music, literature and art
a home in this city, carried the project
over by a safe margin.
TheCowPuncfier
Cnnvr1fl.ht ti ITftnwr A Brothers
CHAPTER XI. Continued.
17
Bert Morrison's confession had, how
ever, set up another very Insistent
train of thought in Irene's mind. She
realized that Bert, with all her show
of cynicism and masculinity, was
really a very womanly young woman,
with just the training and the insight
into life that would make her almost
irresistible should she enter the mat
rimonial market. And Bert and Dave
were already good friends; very good
friends indeed, as Irene suspected
from fragments of conversation which
either of them dropped from time to
time. Although she never doubted
the singleness of Dave's devotion, she
sometimes suspected that In Bert Mor
rison's presence he felt a more frank
comradeship than In hers. And it was
preposterous that he should not know
that Bert might be won for the win
ning. And meantime ...
Another winter wore away ; another
spring came rushing from the moun
tain passes; another summer was
upon them, and still Irene Hardy bad
not surrendered. A thousand times
she told herself it was impossible, with
her mother to think of and always
she ended In indignation over her
treatment of Dave. It was outrageous
to keep him waiting . . . and some
where back of her self-lndignatlon flit
ted the form the now seductive form
of Bert Morrison.
Irene Hardy chose to be frank with
herself over the situation. She had
not doubted the sincerity of her at
tachment for Dave Elden; but, hud
she experienced such a doubt, the en
try of Bert Morrison into the drama
would have forever removed It. In
fairness she admitted that things
could not continue as they were. If she
continued to trifle with Dave Elden
Tes, trifle. She would be frank.
She would not spare herself. She had
been trifling with him. . . . She would
lay her false pride aside. In the purity
of her womanhood, which he could not
misunderstand, she would divest her
self of all convention and tell him
frankly that that
She was not sure what she would
tell or how she would tell it She was
sure only that she would make him
know. At the very next opportunity.
It came on a fine summer's evening
In late July, while Dave and Irene
drifted In his car over the rich ripen
ing prairies.
Everywhere were fields of dark-
green wheat, alreauy Beginning xo
glimmer with the gold of hurvest ; ev
erywhere were herds of sleek cattle
sighing and blowing contentedly In
the cool evening air. Away to the west
lay the mountains, blue and soft as a
pillow of velvet for the head of the
dying day; overhead, inverted Islands
of brass and copper floated lazily in
an Inverted sea of azure and opal ; up
from the southwest came the breath
of the far Pacific, mild and soft and
gentle.
"We started at the wrong end in our
nation building," Dave was saying.
"We started to build cities, leaving
the country to take care of Itself. We
are finding out how wrong we were.
Depend upon It, where there Is a pros
perous country the cities will take
care of themselves. We have been
putting the cart before the horse "
But Irene's eyes were on the sunset ;
on the slowly fading colors of the
cloudlnnds overhead. Something of
that color played across her fine face,
mellowing, softening, drawing as It
seemed, the very soul to cheeks and
lips and eyes. Dave paused in his
speech to regard her, and her beauty
rushed upon him, engulfed him, over
whelmed him in such a poignancy of
tenderness that It seemed for a mo
ment all his resolves must be swept
away and he must storm the citadel
that would not surrender to siege. . . .
Only action could hold hlin resolute;
he pressed down the accelerator until
the steel lungs of his motor were
drinking power to their utmost capac
ity and the car roared furiously down
the stretches of tho country road.
It was dusk when he.had burnt out
his violence, and, chastened and
spent, he turned the machine to hum
back gently to the forgotten city.
Irene, by some fine telepathy, had fol
lowed vaguely the course of his emo
tions ; had followed them In delicious
excitement and fear and hope. She
sensed In some subtle feminine way
the impulse that had sent him roaring
into the distances; she watched his
powerful hand on the wheel ; his clear,
steady eye; the minute accuracy with
which he controlled his flying motor;
and she prayed and did not know
what or why she prayed. But a color
not all of the dying sunlight lit her
cheek as she guessed she feared
she hoped that she had prayed that
he might forget his fine resolves
that nls uCnrt m'ght at last outrule
his head. ...
In the deepening darkness her fin
gers found his arm. The motion of the
car masked the violence of her trem
bltng, but for a time the pounding of
her heart would not allow her speech.
"Dave," she said, at length, "I want
to tell you that I think you that we
that I Oh, I've been very selfish and
proud" Her fingers had followed his
arm to the shoulder, and the car had
idled" to a standstill. "I have fought
as long as I can, Dave. I I always
wanted to to lose, you know; and
now I surrender."
Elden lost no time in facing the un
pleasant task of an Interview with
Mrs. Hardy. It was even less pleas
ant than he expected.
"Irene is of age," said Mrs. Hardy,
bluntly. "If she will, she will. But I
must tell you plainly that I will do all
I can to dissuade her. Ungrateful
child!" she exclaimed, In an outburst
of temper, "after all these years to
throw herself away in an infatuation
for.a cow puncher when there are men
like Mr. Conward "
"Conward!" interrupted Dave.
"He has the manners of a gentle
man," she said, in a tone intended to
be crushing.
"And the morals of a coyote," Dave
returned hotly.
"O-o-o-h I" said Mrs. Hardy, in a low,
shocked cry. That Elden should speak
of Conward witti such disdain seemed
to her little less than sacrilege. Then,
gathering herself together with some
dignity: "If you cannot speak re
spectfully of Mr. Conward you will
please leave the house. I shall not
forbid you to see Irene; I know that
would be useless. But please do not
trouble me with your presence."
When Dave had gone Mrs. Hardy
rang up Conward's number.
"Oh, Mr. Conward !" she said. "You
know who is speaking? . . . Yes.
You must come up tonight. I do want
to talk with you. I I've been insult
ed in my own house. By that that
Elden. It's all very terrible. I can't
tell you over the telephone."
Conward called early in the evening.
Mrs. Hiirdy had heard the bell and
bustled into the room. She had not
yet recovered from her agitation, and
made no effort to conceal it. -
"Come into my sitting room, Mr.
Conward. I am so glad you have come.
Really, I am so upset. It is such a
comfort to have some one you can de
pend on some one whose advice one
can seek, on occasions like tills. I
never thought "
"There, there," he said. "You must
control yourself. Tell me. It will re
lieve you, and perhaps I can help."
"Oh, I'm sure you can," she re
turned. "It's all over Irene and that
that I will say it that cow puncher.
Flatterers Are Seldom Proof Against
Their Own Poison,
To think it should have come to this!
Mr. Conward, you are not a mother, so
you can't understand. Ungrateful girl !
But I blame him. And the doctor. I
never wanted him to come West. It
was that fool trip, In that fool mo
tor" Conward smiled to himself over her
unaccustomed violence. Mrs. Hardy
must be deeply moved when she for
got to be correct. He had readily sur
mised the occasion of her distress. It
needed no words from Mrs. Hardy to
tell him that Irene and Dave were en
gaged. He had expected It for some
time, and the Information was not al
together distasteful to him. He had
come somewhat under the spell of
Irene's attractiveness, but he had no
deep attachment for her. He was not
aware that he had ever had an abid
ing attachment for any woman. At
tachments were things which he put
on and off as readily as a change of
clothes. He planned to hit Dave
through Irene, but he planned that
when he struck it should be a death
blow.- Their engagement would lend
a sharper edge to his shaft.
It may as well be set down that for
Mrs. Hardy Conward had no regard
whatever. Even while he shaped soft
words for her ear he held her In con
tempt. To him 6he was merely a silly
old woman.
From the day he had first seen Mrs,
Hardy his altitude toward her had
been one of subtle flattery, partly be
cause it pleased his whim and partly
on that same day he had seen Irene,
and he was shrewd enough to know
that his approach to the girl's affec
tions inust be made by way of the ac
quaintanceship which he would estab
lish under the guise of friendship for
her mother. Since his trouble with
Dave Conward had a double purpose
In developing that acquaintanceship.
He had no compunctions as to his
method of attack. While Dave was
Br
Robert J. GSteid
Author ot
"Kitchener and
Other Poems"
Jltustrationt by
IRWIN MYERS
manfully laying siege to the front
gate Conward proposed to burglarize
the home through the back door of
family Intimacy. And now that Dave
seemed to have won the prize Con
ward realized that his own position
was more secure than ever. Had he
not been called in consultation by the
girl's mother? Were not the inner af
fairs of the family now laid open be
fore him? Did not bis position as
her mother's adviser permit him to
assume toward Irene an attitude
which, in a sense, was more Intimate
than even Dave's could be? He turned
these matters over quickly in his mind
and congratulated himself upon the
wisdom of his tactics.
"It's very dreadful," Mrs. Hardy was
saying, between dubbings of her per
fumed handkerchief on eyes that bore
witness to the genuineness of her dis
tress. "Irene is not an ordinary girl.
She has in her qualities that justified
me in hoping that that she would do
very different from this. Need I
conceal from you, Mr. Conward from
you, of all men what have been my
hopes for Irene?"
Conward's heart leaped at the con
fession. He had secretly entertained
some doubt as to Mrs. Hardy's pur
pose in opening her home to him as
she had done; absurd as the hypothe
sis seemed, still there was the hy
pothesis that Mrs. Hardy saw In Con
ward a possible comfort to her declin
ing days. He had no doubt that her
vanity was equal to that supposition,
but he had done her less than justice
in supposing that she had any directly
personal ambitions. Her ambitions
were for Irene. She had hoped that,
by bringing Conward Into the house,
by bringing Irene under the influence
of a close family acquaintanceship
with him, that young lady might be
led to Bee the folly of the road she was
choosing. She had hoped that he
would be the successful suitor for
Irene. And Conward's heart leaped
at the confession.
"I suppose I need not conceal from
you," he answered, "what my hopes
have been. It is reasonably safe to
judge a daughter by her mother, and
by that standard Irene is one of the
most adorable of young women."
"I have been called attractive In my
day," confessed Mrs. Hardy, warm
ing at once to his flattery.
"Have been?" said Conward. ."Saj
rather you are. If I had not been ren
dered, perhaps, a little partial by my
admiration of Irene, I well, one can
scarcely give his heart In two places,
you know. And my deep regard for
you, Mrs. Hardy my desire that you
shall be spared this ah threatened
humiliation, will justify me In using
heroic measures to bring this un
fortunate affair to a close. You may
trust me, Mrs. Hardy. Irene Is you
will forgive me, Mrs. Hardy, but Irene
Is, if I may say it, somewhat head
strong. She Is"
"She Is her father over again," Mrs.
Hardy Interrupted. "I told him he
should not attempt that crazy trip of
his without me along, but he would go.
And this Is what he has brought upon
me, and he not here to share it."
Mrs. Hardy's tone conveyed very
plainly her grievance over the doctor's
behavior in evading the consequences
of the situation which his headstrong
folly had created.
"She is set in her own mind," Con
ward continued. "We must not openly
oppose her. We must adopt other tac
tics."
"You are very clever," said Mrs.
Hardy. "You have been a student of
human nature."
Conward smiled nleasurably. Little
as he valued Mrs. Hardy's opinion, her
words of praise fell very gratefully
upon him. Flatterers are seldom proof
against their own poison.
"Yes, I have studied human nature,"
he admitted. "The most interesting
and the most profitable of all studies,
And I know that young couples in love
are not governed by the ordinary lawB
of reason. That Is why it is useless
to argue with Irene sensible girl
though she is on a subject like this,
We must reach her some other way.
"The way that occurs to me Is to
create distrust. Love is either ab
surdly trustful or absurdly suspicious.
There is no middle course, no bal
anced judgment. In the trustfulness
of love little virtues are magnified to
angelic qualities, and vices are quite
unseen. But change that trust to sus
picion, and a hidden, sinister meaning
is found behind the simplest word or
act. We must plan two campaigns
One, which I have already suggested,
and one, if that should fail, to cause
Elden to distrust Irene. No, no," he
said, raising his hand toward Mrs.
Hardy, who had started from her seat,
"there must be no vestige of reason,
except that the end justifies the means.
It is a case of saving Irene, even if we
must pain her and you In the sav
ing."
"It's very dreadful," Mrs. Hardy re
peated. "But you are very thorough
you leave notning.to cnance. 1 sup
pose that Is the way with all big busi
ness men."
"You can trust me," Conward assured
her. "There is no time to be lost, and
I must plan my campaigns at once.'
(TO BB CONTINUED.
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Forty million bushels of wheat are'
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The country is largely devoted to
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New South Wales Information Bureau.
149 Broadway, New York City.
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Indian Silk.
There are 1,000,000 persons in India
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Caterpillars and maths of the mul
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A Secret.
"Why, yes," said Miss Pertie Good-"
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In the Island of Formosa dogs' feet
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P. N. U.
No. 21, 1920