Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911, July 11, 1907, Image 7

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    DOOMED
By
W IL L A R D
C H A P T E R X X I — (Continued.)
“ In making my claim for this proper­
ty,” »he said, " I shall have to prove my
Identity— would you have any objection to
state all you know?”
“ I ’d much rather not have anything to
do with it,” he answered, bluntly. "Hut
howev -r. if it’s necessary, I won’t stand
In your w a y ; you sba’n’t »ay I show
you any malice. Hut what I know would
be nothing in a lawyer's eyes.
I find
yon, a child, lying, apparently dead, upon
th* seashore; but fancying I can see some
symptoms of life, I carry you home. As
you know, I was a Coastguardsman at
the time.
When you come round, you
tell [me that your name is Eleonore Sois-
son
I find ‘ Eleonore S.’ marked on your
pePioipur. You tell me you have friends
torHritanny. Eleonore Is too Frenchified
a [name for my mouth, and I call you
B lli n, and Soissons becomes Lawson; but
if after a time you are called by my name,
and pass as Ellen Jenkins. That is all
p
I know.”
■¿“ And that would be most important
evld »nee,” she answered, quickly. “ And
hav” you that petticoat by you still?"
os,” he answered, hesitatingly, as
though ashamed to confess it.
V O n o more question, and I have done.
AF strange story has recently been told
me by one who had no conception that I
Wib an actor in it. Before you found
me. I had been saved from the shipwreck
by a gentleman— I and my mother. We
Wen taken to a fisherman’s hut, laid out
i
for dead, and the gentleman was after­
wards told that we were buried next
morning. How came I, then, down by the
again, where you found me?”
" I have lately heard the story myself,”
answered. “ The gentleman who saved
3 was Sir Launce Penrhyddyn. But as
<n as he was gone, the fishermen carried
the bodies back to the coast and put ’em
where the tide would wash ’em back into
,the sea again.
They’ve a superstition
bout drowned people, and don’t like ’em
n their houses.”
“ How horrible!” she exclaimed, shud-
;ring. “ But what had become of my
other’s body? Did you not see that?1
■ Just as I came up I saw what might
la v e been a body washed away by a
wave. Whatever it was, it sank directly,
■here was not light enough for me to
^e<‘ very distinctly. I was only just in
■me to save you.”
w “ Would to heaven that you had been
too late !” she exclaimed bitterly.
§ “ And now have you anything more to
■ay to me?” he asked, resuming his cold
■tern manner; “ because my time is valu­
able, and is not my own to waste.”
V “ Nothing more,” she answered, sadly.
C H A P TE R X X II.
I On the second morning after Mrs. Oss-
T
¿vggtleton’s interview _ with Jenkins,
Mr. Wy-
He was somewhat surprised to hear Mr.
F ig announce that that lady was in the
II. outward office.
! “ I have not come to draw any more
■ money, or to ask you to lend me any,”
■ ■he said, pushing aside the clerk, and
;
entering the room before Mr. W ylie had
H time to speak.
She threw herself into a chair, with
j a m her usual air of bantering insolence.
Mr.
* I W ylie turned green, which was his way
■ of turning pale, and bit his nails. Ila.
I both hated and feared his visitor, and
J H with every succeeding interview these feel
I ings increased^ Her scornful,
lefiant
; Jp bearing »tung him to madness.
■
“ I f that is all you have coma to tell
B
me, the sooner our interview is eo led the
H i better.” he answered.
[
-H ave you the vanity to suppose that
■
I have come here for the purpose of eon-
1 templating and criticising your ugly fea­
tures? Oh, dear, no; I would not be
■o rude as to so annoy my dear rela­
tion ! How surprised you look ! I repeat,
my dear relation!
It is a melancholy
fact, I have discovered that you are my
dear relation !”
I , , “ What do you mean?” he snarled sav-
L I agelv. “ Arc you going to vamp up some
II
lying story to extort money from me?"
L
“ I try to extort money from you?” she
■ f e d . fiercely ; "not if I were starving.
■ although you have robbe.d me of many
hundreds. Yes, strange as it may sound.
I am your relation— a distant one, I
am thankful to say. With all your cun­
ning, James Wylie, and all your prying,
you never found out one secret of my
life— my real name is Eleonore Soissons.”
“ Soissons?" he echoed, looking aghast.
“ Y e s ; of the Breton branch o f the fam­
ily.
My father was Adolphe de Sois-
■ons---- - ”
"Adolphe de Soissons had but one child
— a girl— and she and her mother went
down in the Genevieve off the coast of
Cornwall. Every soul perished. I know
the family history too well to be decelv-
fd by such a shallow, flimsy lie ! I knew
Adolphe well, and his widow, to o ! She
Fame begging to me more than once while
•he was in London. What put this trum
pery story into your head?"
She turned very pale at his last words,
•nd bit her lips until the blood came, and
there was a baleful light in her eyes as
■he spoke. “ Take care what you say about
my mother— she was a fond, doting moth­
er to m e! When the occasion require», I
can produce ample proof of my identity.
The only one I condescend to give you is
this” — throwing a paper upon the table—
” my marriage certificate, upon which you
w ill see inscribed the name of Eleonore
de Soissons. The Genevieve did go down
off the Cornish coast, and every soul per­
ished— except one. The man who »aved
me still lives, and is ready to appear and
give evidence. The clothes I wore, with
my name marked on them, are also pre-
- ■,
M A C K E N Z IE
tiently. "Whenever you put on that tone,
I fancy you mean mischief.”
"W hat is It you want of me?” he ask­
ed.
"You have a paper which will secure
Sir Launce Penrhyddyn the mortgage
money when it falls due. I want that
paper.”
Mr. W ylie laughed, and slowly rubbed
his hands together as though enjoying a
Joke. " A modest request, certainly,” he
said. “ In the first place, bow do you
know that the letter is genuine?”
"That I have ascertained for myself.
I called upon Messrs. G’room and Fry to
ask whether they were instructed to pay
o>er to Sir Launce a certain sum of
money upon a certain date. O f course, as
I expected, they declined to furnish me
with positive inform ation; but their man­
ner convinced me that some such com­
munication had passed.
Hand me over
that paper, and I will sign a bond mak­
ing over to you one-half the sum that I
may inherit under Mrs. Grierson’s will.”
“ A sum that it is more than probable
you may never touch,” he sneered.
“ A sum which it is more than proba­
ble I shall touch before the bells ring
this year out. Oh, I know everything;
I know that Constance Grierson wants
not a month to her twentieth birthday,
nnd that there is not the slightest chance
of her fulfilling the condition under which
she is to inherit the property.”
Mr. W ylie looked amazed; then bent
his brows and gnawed hi» nails again.
During the last few minutes he had been
revolving In his mind a desperate plan,
but as yet it was only half formed.
“ I f what you say be true,” he said,
slowly, “ we are both equally interested
in the girl’s forfeiture of her fortune.
Have you any love for Constance Grier-,
son ?”
“ I hate h er!” she cried, vehemently;
"and more than ever since I heard A r­
thur praise her beauty, and say that he
could have loved her had it not been
for----- ”
“ I suppose that it is quite a settled
thing that you are to be the future Lady
Penrhyddyn?” he said, observing her sud­
den break. “ Help me, then, In n plan
which, if successful, will be equally to
your advantage as to m ine; and that pa­
per shall be yours within sufficient time
to save Penrhyddyn.”
“ What is the plan?” she asked, looking
steadily Into his face.
" I t has come to my knowledge that
Constance, alarmed, doubtless, at the near
approach of the fatal day, is about to
draw a large sum of money— many thou­
sands of pounds.”
“ But can she do so?” Inquired Mrs.
Castleton.
“ Yes, with the concurrence of
her
gunrdian, who is so violently opposed to
the will by which she Is hampered that
he would do anything to nullify its pro­
visions. I find that there is no provision
In the will against such a contingency.
Unless I could prove that the principal
of the fortune was being reduced, I am
powerless to check
such expenditure
without the coalition of my fellow trus­
tee. There are many people for the for­
tune to be divided among, nnd Its dimi­
nution by some twenty or thirty thousand
pounds will materially diminish your
share and mine.”
“ And how do you propose to prevent
this?”
“ It can easily be done by our united
efforts. And, remember, the price of your
assistance is the salvation of the Penrhyd­
dyn estates. Refuse, and they are lost,
and you will never be Lady Penrhyddyn.
Which is it to be? Draw close, and
listen.”
She drew close to him, and he, bending
forward, began to speak In a low, earnest
whisper, to which she listened with pale,
anxious attention.
But that secret he knew inwardly, as
clearly as though she had written it
down.
“ Shall I tell him now?” she thought.
“ N o ; let no other dark shadow come be­
tween us on this day.”
The cheerful drawing room, with Its
blazing fire, and the table laid out dain­
tily for the wedding breakfast, revived
their flagging spirits. There was to bs
no honeymoon excursion; they “ were to
remain at Brompton.
“ Ours has, indeed, been a quiet wed­
ding." she said, as they sat by the firs
together.
"Y ou know my reasons, dearest; in tbs
present state of my father’s health and
affairs, I could not break so important
an event to him. But, hereafter, there
shall be another wedding— one worthy of
you, and of the future mistress o f Pen­
rhyddyn.”
What sweet music those last words
sounded In her ea rs! “ And it is I who
will save Penrhyddyn,” she thought. But
even with this feeling of triumph came a
revulsion.
“ I f W ylie should play me
false !”
“ You shiver— are you cold?” asked Ar­
thur.
“ Oh, n o ; but I fancied I saw a hide­
ous face in the fire,” she answered.
That evening a letter was forwarded to
Arthur from his own lodgings.
It an­
nounced that Sir Launce would be in
town on the next day.
OPEN DOOR 10 CHINA
DENIES WAR REPOEt ^
CARNAGE P A L L S FO U RTH .
C s le b ration V ictim s U p T o F o r m e r
R e c o rd s f o r N u m b e r .
lb
it- a d l
Japan Has Blocked it aud Broke
Many Promises.
BATTLESHIPS COMING TO PACIFIC
Navy Departm ent Officials Sti ll T r y to
M in imize the Im portan ce of
the Dem onstrati on.
W ashington,
July
6.— Interest
world p olities and the
p ossibility
in
of
conflict w ith Japan was renewed here
today when the defin ite news
that
i
great fleet o f U nited States warships
would be sent to th e Pacific coast be­
came gen erally known.
A lso a new
phase,was put on the m atter when it
iiecame known that the move, calculat­
ed as it is to impress Japan that slie is
not dealing w ith a power like Russia,
hinges on som ething deeper than the
C H A PTE R X X III.
resentment of Japan at the treatm eftt
Not until a fortnight after his visit her citizens have received that San
to Jerome could Stafford obtain his eag­ Francisco. The real issue, it is pointed
erly desired interview with Constance.
out here, is the open door in the Far
He had traveled to Guildford the next East.
morning by the first train, and hnng about
O stensibly it was for the open door
the neighborhood of Linden Grange in th«.
that Japan went to w ar w ith Russia,
hope of accidentally meeting her. But
the hope was not fulfilled. The next day, i But a fte r her victory the door o f trade
by dint of indirect inquiries, he learned in M anchuria and Corea was pretty
that she was confined to her room by a well blocked up w ith obstacles placed
Bevere cold. He contrived to get a letter by Japan, much to the discom fiture of
conveyed to her and to receive a reply, Am erican and B ritish merchants.
A m erica was given assurances that
making an appointment.
and,
The day on which tuey met was Ar­ the door would rem ain open
thur’s and Eleonorc’s wedding day. The though the president is at Oyster Bay
place was the same which had witnessed and other officials of the governm ent
their meeting some ten weeks back. Spite are out o f xhe c ity , it is reported here
of himself, he could not prevent his first that the United States intends, if it
greeting being cold and restrained.
should become necessary, to be prepar­
"W h at has happened, Edward?” she ed to insist that the Japanese govern­
asked, anxiously. “ Why have you writ­
ment put no restrictions in the way of
ten so urgently to me?”
trade w ith the continent c f Asia.
“ For your sake more than mine,” he
W h ile it has been constantly declar­
answered; “ to clear your name from a
ed by the N avy departm ent th at no
blighting calumny."
She turned very pale, and asked faintly menace to Japan is intended by the
what he meant.
He observed the look dispatch of the fleet, and Ambassador
and tone, and it struck a pang of fear A o k i, of th at country, has asserted that
to bis heart. But It brought him at once Japan w ill not construe the presence of
to the point, and made him speak plainly the fleet in the Pacific as such, it is
and concisely. So, without one word of understood here th at the arrival o f the
preface or observation, he told the story, battleship squadron in the
Pacific
every incident of It, from Jerome's first marks the in itia l step towards the
meeting with the so-called Katie Doran maintenance of a perm anent fighting
on Westminster Bridge, to his, Stafford's, fleet in the Pacific hereafter.
discovery of the picture in the gnllery of
W h ether te en tire fleet of 18 vessels
Penrhyddyn, and the conversation he had
which is now destined for the Pacific
heard upon his last visit to Jerome’s
rem ains there or not, it is asserted on
studio. Then he wnited her reply.
During the course of his narrative the the au th ority of w e ll inform ed officials
pale, pained look upon her face had grad­ that the Am erican navy in the Pacific
ually changed to one of puzzled inquiry. w ill never again be inadequate to cope
“ But I know nothing of all this,” she with any em ergency on that side o f tfie
said, when he had finished.
“ I never continent unless there is a vast change
in the aspect of international politics.
heard of this Jerome or of his painting.
“ Thnnk heaven !” he cried, seizing her
hand and pressing it passionately to his
B E LIE V E S C H M IT Z BARRED.
lips.
"There is only one circumstance in the
whole story that I have any knowledge of. P ro secu tors S ay N a m e Cann ot Le g a l­
I perfectly remember some men staring
ly G o on Ballot.
rudely at me in Harley street one day
San
Francisco,
July 6.— Announce­
as I was stepping into my carriage; and
that they afterwards came up to the win­ ment by Eugene E. Schmitz that he
dow, which my uncle drew up in their would be a candidate for re-election to
the m ayoralty this fa ll to a fourth term
faces.”
"B ut Jerome told me that you turned unless his appeal for a new tria l is in
quite pale at the sight of him, and in this the m eantim e denied by the A p p ellate
assertion he was corroborated by a sec­ and Supreme courts, has raised the
ond party.”
question whether he can lega lly go
” 1 could not be disturbed at the sight upon the ballot. An exam ination into
of Mr. Jerome, considering that I had the law on this p oin t was made today
never before seen nor even heard of ths by Assistant D istrict Attorn ey Robert
gentleman,"
she
answered,
flushing. H arrison, and the tentative conclusion
“ There was, certainly, one person in the was that the m ayor is barred.
group the sight of whom might have pro­
Schm itz maintains th at he is not con­
duced such an effect.”
victed until his conviction by the jury
“ And that was------”
in Judge Dunne’ s court is fin ally passed
“ A man whom I once knew under ths
name of Parsons,” she answered. In a low upon and sustained by the Supreme
voice, and with downcast eyes; “ a man court of the state.
Chicago, July 5.— T h e annual slaugh­
ter has been done in the name, or
rather under the guise, o f "p a tr io t­
ism .”
W ith 58 known victiine, and
hundreds of others groaning out their
ithi
t
lives iu hospitals, it is certain that the
list of victim s to the "G lo rio u s Fourth”
.11
w ill exceed 158, the total last year. In
VERTISE
1906. w ith a ll the precautions that
eoul-' be taken by authorities, the total I
m
injured reached nearly 6,000 and the |
total this year when a ll the returns are Ru n o r o f S u c h M ovem ent C a m e Fr<e
I in, w ill be quite as large, more lik ely
Naval E x p e r t — O n ly T w o Ships
larger, for the fo o lk ille r has been sadly
D(in >nds All
remiss in his duty.
Inventors have
O r d e r e d to Pacific.
e
3n inities
brought forth new engines o f destruc­
jelPn
tion.
The toy pistol and cannon cracker
W ashington, Ju ly 4.— The gover
and deadly dyanm ite cane have claim ed uient is not going to throw fuel on tly
th eir usual quota. One peculiar feat­ anti-Am erican flames now burning .r
ure of the casualties this yeur is the
Japan by ordering 16 ixittleeh ipi fro
number o f deaths frem fright. Of the
the A tlantic to the Pacific, as has
five instant deaths in this c ity, four
leported in some dispatches.
Ass
were from frig h t. Th is 'is a splendid
ant Secretary New berry of the N avy d
tribute to the manufacturers of explo­
partment said today that no lari
sives and the b lith erin g idiots who use
movement of warshipe from the Atli
them to cause suffering.
tic to the Pacific was contemplate«}
In New Y ork three persons w eie
The W ashington and Tennessee, no
k illed by explosives, and a g ir l was in Bordeaux, are under orders
tram pled to death under the hoofs o f a the Pacific squadron later on, but
panic stricken horse scared by celebra- from that no general m ovement is coij
tors.
tem plated. llis statement is subetar
Cincinnati, P hilad elp h ia, M ilw aukee tiated by an official announcemer
and several other large cities report no made today at Oyster Bay.
deaths, but hundreds of accidents.
I t is pointed qfcfc in diplom atic circle
The total fire loss attributable to fire­ that the Japanese governm ent doea nc
works was $304,000. Th is was greatly
countenance the anti-Am erican agita
reduced by heavy rains, w hich were tion that is in progress in th at country
general over the M iddle W est the night
and this government, as such, enter
before the Fourth.
tains the most friendly feelin g fo
Government Will Not M a t e r i a ^
Strengthen Pacific Fleet.
NO BATTLESHIPS ARE
COMltd
Japan.
It therefore l>eing mutually
understood that the relations of the tw<
governments are most am icable, then
could be nc reason for now m oving I f
battleships to the Pacific.
Some naval experts w ho can scent
w ar every tim e th ey.'sm ell firecracker!
are responsible for sensational reports
that liuve been in circulation, but thesa
experts are not speuking by authority.
There is to be no general change in the
stations o f our warships.
U ltim a te ly
the Pacific fleet w ill he strengthened,
as it needs to he, but there is no inten­
tion of unnecessarily exposing the A t ­
lantic coast w ith its m a n y great citiee
a t a tim e when it is believed there it
no danger of war on the P acific.
S U E SAN FR A N C IS C O .
Injured Japanese C la im D am ag es fro m
Bay C ity .
San Francisco, July 5.— Suit against
the city and county o f San Francisco
was tiled this afternoon in the Superior
court for the recovery o i $2.575 for
damages alleged to have been sustained
by the proprietors of the Hoiceshoe res­
taurant and a Japanese bath house at
E igh th and Folsom streets on M ay 23,
when a row, caused by an attack by la­
bor union men on tw o nonunion men,
who were eating in tire restaurant, re­
sulted in the fronts of the tw o places
being smashed by stones and clubs.
T h e suit was brought in the name of
J. Tim oto, proprietor of the bath house,
but includes the damage to both estab­
lishments, the proprietor of the restau­
rant having assigned his claim to the
p lain tiff. T h e paivers were tiled by Carl
E. Lindsay, attorney for Tim oto. Asso­
ciated w ith him are United States Dis­
tric t A ttorn ey Robert D evlin, who ap­
pears at the request of United States
A ttorney General Charles J. Bonaparte,
and Earl H . W eb b , of counsel for tlie
proscution.
Japanese A ctin g Counsel M atsubaio
is also taking an active interest in the
case, which is the first legal action re­
sulting from the declaration of the
U nited States governm ent that, by due
legal process, reparation should be
made for whatever damage the Japan­
ese may have sustained.
^N1
G A R FIE LD T O U R S M O N T A N A .
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H elena, M ont., July 4.— Secretary of
the In terior G arfield, accompanied by
Senators Carter and Dixon. G iffo rd
Pinchot, ch eif o f the reclam ation bu­
reau, and a host of adm inistration offi­
cials, arrived yesterday. T h e visitors
com pleted an inspection of the H un tley
and Buford projects, and after d e liv e r­
ing a Fourth of July oration at Missou­
la w ill v is it St. Marys and other M on­
tuna projects.
Mr. G arfield delivered
an address here last night.
M r. G arfield spoke at the auditor­
ium, urging the people o f the etate to
co-operate w ith the governm ent in its
efforts to save the natural resources of
the state for the public and from fall­
ing into hands of p rivate interests,
which, he said, was done w ith the re­
sources of the East.
M r. G arfield and party le ft this
m orning tor M issoula. A review at
Fort H arrison in his honor and in th at
of B rigadier General M cCaskev, com ­
m anding the departm ent of Da) ota,
was given.
BIG L E V E E L E T S F L O O D G O .
O n e Million Dollars D am ag e to F a r m
Lands in Cali forn ia .
Bakersfield, C al., July 5.— The Buena
Vista lake levee lias broken, flooding
30,000 acres of land b elonging to M il­
ler A Lux and tlio T evis Land com pany,
and causing $1,000,000 dam age. The
Sunset railw ay has been put out of
commission and the oil fields are cut off
from communication w ith this city.
The levee held back the waters of
Buena V ista lake, covering 19 square
m iles, and protected a laxly o f re­
claim ed land extending for a distance
of 15 m iles, including the old bed of
Kern lake, the property of the Kern
County Land com pany and M ille r A
Lux. This land was covered w ith crops
of grow ing grain ready for the harvests
and w ith alfalfa.
O f the flooded land, alxrut S3,000
acres belonging to the K ern County
Izind company and 8,000 to M ille r A
L u x . T h e territo ry is d ivided into
four b ig ranches, and the work of re­
clam ation has been in progress for
nearly 20 years.
The levee was b u ilt in 1886-7 jo in tly
by the tw o corporations at a cost of
»250,000.
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S c h m itz to Be Cand id a te .
San Francisco, July 4.— M ayor Eu­
gene E. Schmitz, who is aw aiting sen­
tence under conviction o f extortion, in
an in terview this evening authorized
the Associated Press to sav that he w ill
be a candidate for re-election%
to a fourth
term,
lie declared that he is confident
of w inning at the polls and that noth­
ing w ill prevent him from running e x ­
cept the denial by the A p p e lla te and
Supreme court« o f the appeals he is pre­
paring to take for a new tr ia l of the
charge on w hich lie stands convicted by
a jury in the Superior court.
who once cruelly wronged me."
“ In what way?” eagerly Inquired Staf­
Finns A r m i n g to Fig h t Russia.
A quarter of an hour afterwards, Mrs. ford.
8t. Petersburg, July 6 .— The Novoe
She was silent for a moment, then an­
Castleton passed through the outer offices,
V rem ya declares it has learned from
with a grave and preoccupied expression swered, quietly, “ I cannot tell you now." an official E nglish source that the re­
(T o be continued.)
upon her face.
cent seizure o f arms and am munition
Could she, at that moment, have trans­
totaled 90,000 rifles and also several
F i v e r i i u « e » o f M u le s .
ported herself into the little closet in
Many (versons dq not know what m illio n roubles’ worth o f am m unition.
the private office and have watched the
expression of W ylie’s countenance, she constitutes tile five classes o f marketa­ A ll this war m aterial came from G er­
might have considered twice before she ble m ill«* kuown ns cotton mules, lum­ m any and was reshipped via Newcastle.
C a b l e Line in O p e ra tio n .
committed herself to his proposals. He ber mules, railroad mules, sugar mules T h e size of the shipm ent, the paper
San Francisco, July 4.— The C alifor­
says,
is
taken
to
indicate
that
the
pur­
was leaning bock in his chair, convulsed and miners. Cotton mules are most nu­
nia street cable line was put in opera­
with inward laughter. “ She herself will merous. They range from thirteen to chasers are Finns, as none o f the Rus­
tion yesterday for the first tim e since
sian revolutionary bodiee is sufficiently
prevent Constance from saving Penrhyd­
sixteen hands high nnd may he o f vari­
the carmen struck.
T h e cars were
dyn ! The twenty or thirty thousand that
w ealthy to buy so much arms and am ­
ous builds so long as they are smooth.
manned by nonunion men who were
we have plotted against her having is the
m unition.
broko in last week. A fte r a quiet week
very sum she intends devoting to that pur­ They sell at $75 to $165 apiece.
in the strike several cars were stoned
Lumber mules are large, heavy boned
pose ! This is delicious !”
C o a l Will Be S c a r c e r .
T h r o w s S o p to Peasants.
last n igh t in various part* o f the city
Such were the thoughts then passing and rugged for use In big lumber camps.
Rock Springs, W yo., July 6 .— As a
St. Petersburg, July 5.— Th e govern­ »1,000 strike benefit was distributed tc
through h is’ brain.
T h e ir price ranges up to $250. The rail­
result
of
the
suits
filed
by
the
govern­
ment is showing feverish a c tiv ity in the s trik in g carm en, and Treasurer
•
•
• • •
•
*
• * road mules are similar, but need not
m ent against the Union Pacific Coal pushing the distribution of the 25,000,- flow in g reported the union’ s treasury
The die was cast, and Mrs. Castleton have so much w e ig h t T h ey are $15 to
com pany, forcing that com pany to 000 acres of crown, state and peasant In goo<] con dition.
was Mrs. Arthur Penrhyddyn.
$20 cheaper. Th ey are used In grading abandon coal property alleged to have
land, which it has decided to distribute
By advice of Sir Launce. whose health
and hauling. Sugar mules are lighter. I been ille g a lly secured from the govern­
was greatly improving. Arthur had re­
B ig L u m b e r Y a rd s Burn.
in average lots of 25 acres to in d ividual
turned to London a few days after that They must he smooth, with small head ment, three of the b ig coal mines situ­ peasant soldiers on easy paym ent terms,
D enver, J u ly 4.— F ire which was dis­
and
neck
and
smaller
bones.
Their
price
ated
on
the
disputed
property
have
lady. His course lay clearly before him.
in order to make a show ing before the covered in the Hardwood Lum ber com­
been closed down. T h e mines belong convocation of the new parliam en t. pany’ s yards in tliis city at 1:45 this
and he pursued it without hesitation or Is from $65 to $210,
Farm mules are the culls rejected j to the Superior Coal company, which Four o f the participants in a pawnshop
one thought of retreat.
m orning did nearly »50,000 damage be­
One dark, foggy November morning from the other classes. Levee mules are j is owned by the Union Pacific. The robbery here June 12 have been tried
fore brought under control. The ya', 'a
they were married by license, with only used near stenmboats and docks for the effect w ill be a further shortage of coal
by court martial and condemned to be are a th ick ly populated portion of the
Mrs. Freeman for a witness. It was a heavy work. The miners are the hard­ in the W eet.
hanged. Flight bandits a t R iga have city^nnd it was on ly by hard work that
cold, cheerless wedding, and the clergy­
est class to snpply. They must be either
been sentenced to death.
tt.e flames were ¡¡kept from spreading.
man shivered in the raw atmosphere as
F lo c k in g O v e r B o r d e r .
a dark bay or black color. W hite and
As It was, nearly all the windows in
he offered the nsual good wishes.
M exico C ity, July 6.— T w o hundred
P ou rin g Into British C o lu m b i a .
tfie residences for a radius of 100 yards
As they came out, a funeral was siowlj sorrel mules are never used. W here
the mines have long shafts. In the Penn­ and seven ty.five Japanese landed at
V ictoria, B. C ., July 5.— It is ex­ were broken by the extreme heat.
passing down the road.
"T h e poor young lady was married in sylvania coal region especially, they say Santa Cruz yesterday. T h e Japanese pected over 3,000 Japanese w ill arrive
this church only ■ month ago.” said the a w hite mule resembles a ghost and are headed for the coal m ines in the in British Colum bia during this month
O f f a rs D r a g o Do ct rine.
sexton, with that love of garnishing hap­ frightens the other mules beyond oon- district of I-as F.speranza. Joseph Z. from Japan and H onolulu, and as many
T h e Hague, July
4.— Joseph II.
py events by opposite and doleful anec­ trol.
Strand,
a
Chinese
im
m
igration
inspec­
if not m ore are expected in August, Choate, United States delegate, yester-
|
dotes which characterizes the vulgar.
tor stationed at E l Paso, who arrived T fie steam er K um eric w ill bring the lay preeentel a definite draft of his
The government buys all classes o f
Eleonore shuddered, as she could feel
in this city today, stated th at the Jap­ first large contingent of 2,000 Japanese proposition regarding the collection c
Missouri
mules,
hut
never
a
cheap
one.
1
her husband press her arm more closely I
anese are flocking to the border in great , from H onolulu, to lie followed by other debts, em bodying the principles s '«o
and
the
examination
o
f
mules
for
the
to his side as he hurried her into the
numbers and buying
tickets
from steamers. The numbers brought across | made public. M. Bourgeois, Fre- ih ,
brougham.
Pasing his arm round her [ public service Is rigid.
Juarez through to Canada, in order to the Pacific are constantly increasing.! president of the arbitration comr d ee
asrved."
waist, and drawing her towards him, he
enter the U nited State«.
tw o received Mr. Choate’s
Choate’ s proposition
nronoaftion »ml
F ive steamers i due during the next two
W ylie eagerly examined the document said: "W e must think no more of omens
« o m i’f lm M A tw R fA .
weeks have over 600 on board
ordered it to I » printed and d istrib u te^ 7
earn at him. After a minute’s silent re- now, darling; let us leave all such dark
Mr». Newed— My husband and I get
N o Idea o f Boycotting.
to all the delegates before being le y fl
isctlon. his face slowly cleared. “ I have shadows behind us at the altar. We are along so nicely.
W e always
agree
no Interest In denying your claim," he defying augury— let us now think only about everything.
to the subco in eiittee on arbitration./
London,
July 6. — " T h e leading
S tra u s Pro bes Im m ig ration.
»aid. in his usual soft, hypocritical tone. of love.”
c ham tiers of commerce assure m e,”
M ontreal, July 5.— Oscar S. Straus,
Mrs. Oldwed— 1» that so?
“ It will not take away one farthing from
Never had her spirit been so softened.
Earthquake in ihe Alps.
Mrs N etted - Y e » —except, o f eonrsa, cabled the T ok io correspondent of the secretary o f com merce and labor, left
m«- The claim of the Breton De Sois- But tfie next moment came the blighting
D aily Telegraph, th at they never even here tonight for Honolulu, via Toronto
Rome, July 4.— Slight ear
'•* e
now
ahd
then
when
be
gets
plghea'led
»ons is quite distinct from mine. But memory o f how cruelly he was deceived
entertained the idea of
boycotting and W in n ip eg. Mr. Strnus is studying ■hocks were fe lt today at /Toiinexso,
you must confess that your intelligence in h e r; by what lies, and trickery, and or something o f that sort.
Am erican goods. Such a boycott would conditions at the ports where im m ig ra -1 Kandaniele and Arnaro, otesr C ieni,
wa» soDMwhat startling. I f I have said deceit she had gained his love. She h vi
I
o f the tion into the United States is the heoe- 'cap ital of the ptovln « f6 f tnaf name.
T h -re is no thunder or
Ugh In lug be considered suicidal, in view
anything to annoy you, I apologise."
not even confessed to him that she had
feet.
T o I mezzo ia in the Alp
e x istin g trade con ditions.”
-fttop whining,” she answered, impa­ once borna the fatal name of De Soiasons. within the Arctic d re i«.
•
Xht
dy
S e cre ta ry S peak s on Saving Land f o r
Public G o o d .
j
th ti
I
.. !
w
se
;
f
If
a
—
,n
J
W
6
I
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et