the Cur«, nilf th* three blacks weuld
speak, and the yacht sailed on and on.
CHAPTER XX.
Half an honur later Le Malheureux
/olned them in the rose and humming
bird patterned chintz drawing room.
Benoni withdrew and Le Malheureux.
still veiled, congratulated Larry Morris
and Betty.
“If you wish to be married before
you leave here,” he said, “there is the
old French priest who used to be my
mother’s chaplain still here. He is a
nonogenarian, but still a priest for all
that. He will marry you yet to-night,
If you wish, and I think, Miss I^incey,
It might be better if the ceremony wen-
celebrated.
Do you not think so?
There’s no knowing what may await
you.”
Betty blushed, but Larry hesitated
not a minute.
“Bring him on, bring him on," he
cried. “W e’ll be married to-night!"
“And I’ll be the best man," shouted
Johnny.
“And City Editor Burton can ush
er."
“Will you let Meta be the -brides
maid?" questioned Betty.
“Oh, but
what shall I do for a wedding gown?"
“If you weren’t so big,” said Tyoga.
surveying her critically, “we could loa i
you Mrs. Hackleye's mother’s bridal
robe. I have it still upstairs in an old
chest."
Meta and Tyoga had come in silent
ly in the wake of Le Malheureux. “ But,
mother," interposed Meta, “ there are
other garments up in the old chest.
Perhaps we could make some of them
fit "
“Your wedding clothes will fit as well
as mine, anyhow," ventured Larry.
Put a woman on a desert island and
the prospect of a wedding will cause
her inventive faculties to evoke the
flesh-pots of Egypt from the barrenest
sand!
“The old chest" proved a treasure
house.
The gowns, the youngest of
them, were at least a quarter of a cen
tury old, and some of them were of the
mode of the French empire. All were
rich with rare lace and heavily wrought
hand-embroidery. Some were of cloth
of gold, tarnished now with the scowl
of time, but exquisite still. There w ev
quaint old slippers, and a bridal veil
of the filmiest Honlton that ever came
off a loom.
No bride could be decked with more
loving hands than was Betty for her
midnight marriage in mid-Africa. Met*,
as bridesmaid, had a glowing frock of
scarlet satin and faintest amber lace,
and great topazes about her shining
ebony neck, and Tyoga produced a new
frock from somewhere. But Betty, ah,
Betty! An old court gown of cloth of
gold and yellowed satin was her bridal
robe.
Over it all ran delicately
wrought roses in faded pinks.
The
marvelous web of Honlton draped her
sweet face and rippled to the hem of
her dress. The neck of the dress was
low, and Betty’s white shoulders were
a sparkle of diamond pendants falling
from a high diamond collar Tyoga had
placed around her throat, and her
plump arms were half covered with
flowery bracelets. When they reached
the chapel Le Malheureux himself put
a diamond girdle around the bride’s
none too slender waist.
“ My gift to the bride,” he explained
Johnny’s head was the brightest
spot in the chapel. From the musty
odor within and the drip of water on
the moss-grown walls,
the chapel,
which had been reached through weird
ways, was evidently a subterranean
room. The altar was of ivory, the ser
vice dazzling beyond belief, and the
altar cloths of exquisite workmanship.
The ebony pews were miracles of the
carvers’ art, and the ever-present leop
ard skin rugs were on the floor. The
priest, bent double with years, and
with hair and skin as gray as the pell
of a field mouse, mumbled through the
long l^atln ritual, at a slow, nerve-
racking pace. The candles flickered
and the scent of the jasmine and lotus
with which Benoni had wreathed the
altar, and filled the great vases that
flanked the sanctuary, grew unbear
able.
The wedding supper was laid in the
little sitting room. There were many
flowers, and the viands, oddly assorted
to occidental eyes, rested royally on
platters and dishes of pure gold. Nit-
body ate much, though Meta, Tyoga
and Benoni served assiduously.
Le
Malheureux touched nothing at all.
Betty, after several urglngs. forbore
to press him. She hud noticed that he
never drank before anyone, and had
long since grown accustomed to the
down-dropping veil, the closely shroud
ed figure, the well-concealed feet and
hands.
When the last course
was
served Le Malheureux arose.
“Let me not be the skeleton at the
feast," he temporised, "but Time dors
not pause for us. The woman you
know as Cerisse Wayne, In reality
Cerisse Wayne llackleye. was my full-
blooded sister. The letters that w e * •
found in her safety deposit box In Sun
Francisco bore reference to the dia •
mond mines at Tlougnley. For reasons
I cannot now make known to you.
their location for years was known
only to me. My father In some wu>
discovered their situation beneath and
beyond the castle to which Miss Lan-
cey, now Mrs. Morris, was taken when
she first arrived In Africa, and from
which she has so recently departed.
“You must know that though he !s
American born and bred, that for thir
ty years my father has lived In this
section, as absolute king over several
thousands of the most desperate racu
of blacks that inhabit this continent.
He subdued them years ago through
fear of what they considered his mag
ic. Tyoga, there, was the wife of the
rightful king. Meta, her foster daugh
ter, and Benoni. as you have guessed,
her son. For love of my poor mother,
they not only served her, but have
tended the family most faithfully ever
Since. Father has sent the blacks up
there to pre-empt those mines, and
Charged to bring back with them a
goodly load. Unknown to him his sub
jects have long been rebelling against
him.
But the half of them went to
Tlougalby. The other half remained
bidden here, and at any time may
storm the castle. Many of the housc
servants are with the mutineers, and
that enhances tne danger. I cannot
blame them for revolting. My father
has been a cruel and despotic master.
Their woes have been many. Tyoga
can usually check them. It was dur
ing her absence in America that they
broke bonds. That is why she left
Tiougaley so long alone with but Meta
and Mrs. Morris to guard it. We
thought they were safer there than
they would be here. W e did not know
that father had discovered Tiougaley
and had sent a force there to storm
it! At that time we knew only of the
mutiny."
“Then we did come Just In the nick
of time," exclaimed Johnny Johnson.
Larry squeezed Betty’s hand thank
fully.
“No time for congratulations now,"
admonished Le Malheureux. “We must
depart with the dawn."
“How many of us will there be?"
asked Benoni.
“See— the two children,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Morris, Johnson there, myself,
Meta, Tyoga, my father, if he will go;
the Cure, and Hackleye,” counted Le
Malheureux.
“The murderer of your sister?"
broke In Johnson.
Le Malheureux raised his hand.
"H ush," he said, curtly. “You have no
right to accuse! We are not lawmak
ers— we dare not Judge nor charge.
And be careful what you say before
the children. I beg of you that. We
will try to get to Khartoum.
From
there passage for you and the children
to England will be eaiy. And it will
leave me free to deal with what I
must."
CHAPTER XXI.
An hour later brought the dawn.
Guided by Meta, Larry and his wife,
and Johnny reached the yacht that had
brought Betty from America and found
the children still sleeping and Tyoga
und Hackleye already aboard.
The
Cure, fat and waddly, was trying ills
best to clamber on. Benoni was not in
sight, neither was Le Malheureux. A
few moments later they appeared, Le
Malheureux with a wallet in his hand,
Benoni carrying the old man,
who,
cursing and screaming with all his
might, was struggling against the iron
grip of the black.
"M y diamonds, my diamonds!
Let
mo have them. What else is worth In
life to me now since Cerisse has died.
Murderer, murderer!" ho shrieked at
Hackleye. “Ah, let me at h im !" Mr
Wayne raved like a maniac and tried
to leap on shore again, but they lashed
him to a chair and put a gag in his
mouth.
“Many as are his crimes, wo dare
not leave him to their hands," said Bo-
nonl, half regretfully, U seemed to
Larry.
The yacht took the river like a gull
on the wing. The morning breeze was
chill and portent of rain hung In the
sky, though the sun was lighting to
prick the thickly banked up clouds.
Fifty leagues had they gone, when City
Editor Burton, who hail not been left
behind, to Betty’s great delight, roared
like a hurricane.
Following the lion’s staro to the left
of them on the shore, they saw advanc
ing up the river bank toward them t
horde of blacks. Benoni hurried the
women down stairs where the children
and the Cure already were, and reached
to lift the senior Mr. Wayne from his
moorings. But he was too late. The
yacht was now abreast of the barbar
ians, whose leader with fine aim shot
his
quondom
tormentor
straight
through the heart with a long, fine ar
row.
v
Benoni drew the gag from the old
man’s mouth and leaned over to look at
the arrow. Even superficial examina
tion showed him the futility of aid. He
knew too well the poisoned barbs of
the tribe. Hundreds of arrows whis
tled about the yacht, but glanced harm
less from Its sides, and by rare chance
none struck Benoni. When he realized
that Mr. Wayne was beyond human
help he left the body as it was and
crawling to the hatchway dropped be
low.
There be found the women In a tor
ment of terror and the children, awak
ened by their sobbing, nervously com
plaining about the cramped quarters
and the rocking motion of the yacht.
“ What sort of fiends’ work is this
boat?" questioned Larry, though Beno
ni and Le Malheureux had both risen
in his estimation since they had seen
him successfully married to Betty.
"It's my own invention," replied Le
Malheureux, with not a little pride in
ha tone. "Simple enough, too, If you
Just know how. Merely the scientific
application of a few of the fundamen
tal principles of electricity. This lit
tle mirror here reflects your whole
course as plainly as If you were above
deck or standing on the highest cap
tain's bridge that ever was built. That’s
Just the application of the rules of
convergence and infraction of light. As
for the propulsion of this boat -well, a
series of buttons on this keyboard does
It all. It's as easy as playing on a
piano or writing on a typewriter, or a
sewing machine or running a telephone
switchboard, if you Just know how.
Thlt is my wireless apparatus.
I’ve
found it useful no. Indeed," as he read
the query on Larry's face— “no press
dispatches from this. I told your wife
that on the way over. And I warn you
as I warned her not to tamper with
it."
When I.e Malheureux paused, Beno
ni went to him and spoke In African
patois. Betty made out that he was
telling him of his father’s death. I e
Malheureux turned his post over to
Benoni. Then he went up alone to
view his dead.
He was gone a very long while, and
when he came back he neither ques
tioned nor was questioned. Afterward
when the Americans went above and
found the body gone, and the deck
freshly scrubbed, they asked Benoni
what had been done with the corpse.
Benoni pointed silently to the river.
All day they followed the river and
its chain of lakes. At every possible
Interval Hetty or Ijirry or Johnny
tried to hasten the solution of the mys
tery still palpable before them, but nei
ther Le Malheureux, nor Hackleye ssr
CHAPTER XXII.
December was crisping the air when
they tvld Narcisse Harcourt she might
leave the hospital.
“Not for any length of time, but Just
for a trip down town, If you wish,” said
Dr. Fothergtll. “Who do you want to
go with?"
“I'd like you, and Mr. Hartley,“ an
swered Mrs. Harcourt, frankly. “I want
to go and buy some presents for these
nurses who have been so kind to me.
and I want—I want to go and see my
husband."
Dr. Fotherglll telephoned for Philip
and he was there shortly before noon
as the doctor had asked. Philip had
not been able to buy a new overcoat
that winter, and he felt more the Perl
outside the gate than ever, when Mrs.
Harcourt, In her rich furs and radiant
beauty, followed the doctor Into the
parlor.
The months In the hospital
had worked wonders with Mrs. Har
court. The old, unfathomable brillian
cy had left her eyes, but there was a
sweeter, a more human look within
them, and the weird alabaster tones of
her skin were replaced with a more
babyish purity of luster.
She was
more a woman, less a strange, unreal
phantom from another world. They
did their shopping first, but curtailed It
because the crowds In the stores stop
per to gaze open-mouthed at the start
ling beauty of Mrs. Harcourt, the grim
plainness of Dr. Fotherglll, and Philip
Hartley’s assiduous attentions to both
the ladies. Then In one department
store, some one whispered that the
woman In the luxurious furs was “that
mysterious Mrs. Harcourt, you know,”
and Phil had much ado to get both his
charges unharmed Into a waiting taxi
cab.
Thither they went direct to the Jail.
Harcourt had not been told of their
coming visit, as his wife had expressly
wished it so. She went rapidly through
the dingy hall, and rattled Imperious
ly at the bars of the door. Harcourt
was sitting moodily In one corner of
the room, as had been his habit of late.
He did not heed the rustle of silken
skirts nor the faint perfume that au-
reoled his wife.
"Harold,” she called, “Harold, oh,
Harold."
At sound of her voice he turned and
gasped. Then he rose, and like an old,
old man, walked over and thrust his
hands through the door.
' Narcisse,” he faltered, and whether
It was fear, or wonder, or admiration
in his face and voice, one could not
tell. Plainly he was 111 at ease.
(To be continued.)
CURRENT EVENTS
OF THE WEEK
Ooings of the World at Large
Told in Brief.
Ueneral Resume of Important Events
Presented in Condensed Form
for O u r Busy Readers.
Mark Twain’s niece won the first
prize in English composition at Cornell
university.
Blackmail will be the defense of
Senator Lorimer, of Illinois, on trial
for bribe-giving.
A 10-year old boy living near Eu
gene, Or., killed a bear with a 32-
calibre Winchester rifle.
A Chicago theater will employ girls
instead of men to take tickets, believ
ing they will not become grafters.
The Hearst-Agnew anti-betting law
of New York has been declared valid.
It will stop betting at Coney Island.
The International Harvester company
avers that it deals in 21 different lines
of business, and therefore is not a
trust.
Thirty Japanese driven from the
town of Darrington, Wash., will return
to work in the mills there under pro
tection of officers.
A serious forest fire is raging in the
timber north and east of Fort Wil
liams, Ontario.
One town is com
pletely surrounded.
F L O U R B O T T L E B LO W S UP.
Chemist Tells of Injurious Effect ot
Doctored Article on Stomach.
Kansas City, Mo., June 15.— The
contents of a bottle, said by govern
ment attorneys to have contained
bleached flour, exploded during the
“ bleached flour” trial here today.
It
was while Professor S. F. Acre, o f the
chemistry department of Johns Hop
kins university, was on the stand that
the explosion occurred.
“ What caused it?” asked an attor
ney.
“ The formation of peroxide gas in
the flour,” answered the professor.
“ Decomposition as well as bleaching
would cause gas to form in flour, ” he
explained.
On cross-examination the professor
admitted that there were nitrites in
air, rainwater and melted snow.
Alfred Steigel, professor of clinical
medicine in the University of Pennsyl
vania, testified that nitrites, when in
troduced into a human body, lowered
the grade of the blood, depressed the
circulation, had an injurious effect on
the muscular tissues and excited in
juries to the stomach and intestinal
tracts by impairing indigestion.
He
added that in 50 years of practice he
had never seen a case of nitrite poison
ing.
Miss Hanna L. Wesslyng, o f the
government food laboratory, Chicago,
brought into court biscuits of her own
baking. The biscuits had been made
by Miss Wesslyng from some of the
flour seized by the government. Those
which had been subjected to the Greiss
re-agent test were pink.
Biscuits
made from unbleached flour subjected
to the same test retained their normal
color. Miss Wesslyng said the pink
color indicated the presence of nitrites.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND
PROGRESS OF OUR HOME STATE
T A F T O P E N S BIG T R A C T .
ROAD E X T E N S IO N LIK E LY .
203,635 Acres Eliminated From Wal
lowa Forest Reserve.
Washington—The president has sign
ed a proclamation eliminating 203,635
acres from the Wallowa national for
est, in Oregon. The elimination is the
result o f a careful examination mode
by the United States department of
agriculture during the past summer,
which disclosed the fact that the areas
now eliminated were either open grass
land with very little timber, or tim
bered areas so largely alienated that
further administration by the forest
service was considered impracticable.
The lands released are not needed for
watershed protection, and are not con
sidered to be chiefly valuable for na
tional forest purposes.
The principal eliminations occur in
townships 1 and 2 south, range 47 east;
townships 1 and 2 north, ranges 45, 46,
47 and 48 east; township 3 north,
range 42 east; township 4 north, 42
and 43 east; townships 5 and 6 north,
range 46 east, and township 6 north,
range 47 east. In addition, a strip of
land from one-half mile to three miles
wide is eliminated along the southern
boundary of the forest, in ranges 42 to
47 east. Section 6 and the west half
of section 5, township 4 north, range
42 east, is transferred from the Wal
lowa to the Wenaha forest, the area
having been isolated from the Wallowa
by the large eliminations.
Harriman Officials Will Look Over
Route at Condon.
25 A C R E S BRING $45,000.
Condon— Members of the committee,
representing the people of Southern
Gilliam and Wheeler counties in their
campaign for improved transportation
facilities, has returned from Portland,
bringing the assurance that their ap
peal will be considered by the officials
of the Harriman system.
The committee held a conference
with General Manager O'Brien and
other officials of the Harriman inter
ests and submitted data showing the
large volume of freight and passenger
business which would become immedi
ately available through the requested
extension of the Condon branch of the
0 . R. & N. from this city to Fossil, a
distance of 20 miles.
As a result o f this conference, Gen
eral Manager O’Brien, accompanied by
R. B. Miller, traffic manager, and W.
W. Cotton, general counsel, will come
to this city shortly and look this sec
tion of the state over wiLi a view to
determining the feasibility of the ex
tension that has been asked.
C O M M E N C E M E N T A T EUGENE. *
Invitations Are Issued for Thirty-
fourth Year Exercises.
University of Oregon, Eugene— In
vitations are out for the Thirty-fourth
annual commencement of the Univer
sity of Oregon. The program covers
four days, June 19, 20, 21 and 22. Al
umni who desire private entertainment
may address Robert W. Prescott, as
sistant alumni secretary, or inquire at
alumni headquarters.
Tickets for the alumni dinner may be
secured at alumni headquarters. Ad
mission will be by ticket only. All
alumni, their wives or husbands, are
invited. Alumni headquarters will be
in the main reception hall, men’s dor
mitory.
Every convenience will be
provided. The phone number is Main
841. Reserved seat tickets for all the
exercises may be obtained by alumni
at headquarters. Reserved seats are
held only until five minutés before the
beginning of the exercises.
One and one-third rates have been
granted by the railroads for commence
ra enL Do not forget to ask the agent
for a certificate when buying your
ticket.
The summer session opens
June 27; closes August 6. Reduced
rates for the session begin June 18 and
tickets may bo purchased at any time
between that date and August 6, good
for return at any time not later than
August 9.
New York Capitalist Invests in Hood
O P E N S H O P C O U P IN VIEW.
River Orchard Land.
Governor Haskell, of Oklahoma, was
served with papers by a Federal court 400,000 Men Will Be Taken to Los
Hood River— Hood River orchard
officerc for removing the capital of
land to the amount of $59,000 was dis
Angeles if Unions War.
that state to Oklahoma City.
posed o f by the Hood River Realty
Los Angeles, Cal., June 15.— Owing
Senator Heybum declared that there to threats by San Francisco labor union company to Eastern purchasers this
is enouugh power in the falls of the leaders to spend a fortune, if neces week, one of whom was R. Eliot, a
Potomac river to run all the machinery sary, to make this a union city, the New York capitalist. He bought the
in the District o f Columbia, and ad Merchants’ & Manufacturers’ associa J. M. Vannier place on the East Side,
The or
vised the conservationists to look after tion, which stands for the open shop, for which he paid $45,000.
the East, and allow the West to care for has arranged with 400,000 working chard consists of 25 acres, 20 of which
is in eight-year-old Spitzenberg and
its own resources.
men in the East to come to Los Ang
Newtown trees.
American horses are winning many eles to live if a general strike is called
The other sale was made to Mrs.
prizes at the annual horse show in here. These include trained men in Mary Lamonte, a wealthy New York
all braniftes of the metal and building
London.
woman who bought a ten-acre or
trades. .
chard
from R.
Jarvis,
in the
A cloudburst in the Ahr valley in
Secretary
Zeehandelaar
stated
today
AN UNMISTAKABLE BOND.
Oak Grove district, for $14,000. Mrs.
the Efel district of France is reported
that if all the union workers in the Lamonte recently bought a winter
to have killed 150 persons.
city were to strike their places could home in Los Angeles, and bought the
S om e Illu s tr a tio n s o f th e lielu tlon e
A mob of a 100 white men drove all be filled in ten days. He added:
o f V lc t u n ls in M u sic.
Hood River property for a summer res
“ We have a list of over 400.000
As we have more than once sug the Japanese mill hands, about 30 in
idence. She said that before leaving
names of non-union mechanics of every
gested in the past, there is a sort of number, out of Darrington, Wash.
New York she had shipped a carload of
subtle bond between great victuals and
The brief in the Ballinger-Pinchot character registered in Eastern cities, furniture here, although she had not
great music. The exact nature of that case has been filed by the investigating who can and will be brought here if purchased, but was determined to buy
bond eludes scrutiny, but there It Is, committee, and
covers over 1,000 ever an attempt be made to force an an apple orchard at Hood Rivar if
industrial war. When they reach here
the Ilaltlmore Sun says. Find a lover pages.
money would obtain it.
they will find employment and will be
Water System to Be Built.
of sauerkraut and you will find a man
The royal Mail steamer Etruria is protected in their rights as American
who understands and admires the nine
Marshfield— Work has been started
Bumper
Wheat
Sample
Shown.
ashore
at
the
entrance
to
the
port
of
citizens to earn an honest living.
superb symphonies of Ludwig von Bee
The Dalles— An evidence of the dur on the new water system at Myrtle
Cartagena, Colombia, but is in no im Whatever may come, we are pre
thoven. Such a man would warmly
ability of the soil of this locality is on Point. The old wooden pipes are to
mediate
danger.
pared.”
Indorse the Idea of playing the grand
exhibition at the rooms of the Business be replaced by new water mains and
The estate of the late “ Lucky”
finale of the fifth symphony during the
Men’s association in this city. It is a metal pipes, and the whole system will
S W O L L E N F O R T U N E S BLED.
kraut course at dinners. The deter Baldwin is appraised at $10,930,801.62.
bunch of wheat from the Rice home be extended, with the result that mod
mined reiterations in the coda of that His famous thoroughbred horses are
stead on Ten Mile, taken from a field ern conveniences will be put in many
Minnesota Gets Fat Sum From Es that has been continuously cropped for of the houses. Not many months ago
movement seem to suggest in a mystic appraised at $25 to $50 each.
a sewer was laid in the main street of
way the benign endlessness of the
tate of John S. Kennedy.
45 years.
The water tank on the roof of the
krautlan skein. Like a rubber band, six-story building of the Herald, at
The stalks are four feet high, the the city, and the place is now quite up
St. Paul, Minn., June 15.— Through
sauerkraut is without beginning and Montreal, Canada, crushed its supports a settlement effected with the estate heads plump and well filled.
The en to date. The city was bonded for $22,-
without end. Each strand clings to and fell through the building to the of John S. Kennedy, New York multi tire field from which the sample is ta 000 to raise the money for the new
another. Eat a yard of It and another basement, killing and injurying about millionaire, Minnesota has been en ken will yield not less than 40 bushels water system. The water comes from
yard lures you on. Once started It Is 30 employes.
riched to the extent of $345,325, one to the acre. This field was one of the the mountains several miles from town.
dlfltcult to cease.
of
the greatest sums ever paid in this first “ upland” fields cultivated in Was
James E. Woodbury, held under ar
Prune Growers Form Pool.
So much for Beethoven and his gas
co county, and has raised a crop every
country as an inheritance tax.
rest
at
Los
Aageles
for
the
passing
of
Salem—The Salem Fruit Union prune
tronomic affinities. Coming to the
year
for
the
past
45
years.
The
tax
is
the
first
paid
on
property
bad checks, has been positively inden-
symphonies of Johannes Brahms, one
Some years the yield from this land pool, with about 50 crops represented,
tified as J. E. Marcell, who is alleged in Minnesota by a non-resident. It
discerns a suggestion of another de
has
not been very great, but it has nev was organized recently at the offices
consists
of
100,000
shares
o
f
stock
in
to have robbed the State bank of High
lightful German delicatessen, to wit,
er
failed
to produce a crop, and the of the Fruit Union on Trade street.
the
Great
Northern
Railway
company.
land, Kan., of $350,000.
rinderbrust mit meerrettig (breast of
The state will also endeavor to col average yield has been about 35 bush The pool fixed a selling price of 33-y
cents lor 40-50s, and decided to offer
By a large majority the people of lect an inheritance tax from the estate els to the acre.
beef with horseradish sauee). If one
a premium on larger sizes.
For sizes
contemplates a rasher of rinderbrust, Oklahoma have voted to move the cap of the late E. H. Harriman, who is
smaller than 40-50s,
cents will be
boiled in the simple German fashion, ital of the state from Guthrie to Okla supposed to have owned stock in the
T o Appeal Rate Case.
paid. The Salem Fruit Union is a
one eomes inevitably to the thought homa City, and the governor has al Minneapolis & St. Louis and the Great
Salem—Complying with a request
This will prob made upon Attorney General Craw new factor in the prune situation, this
that. In itself, It has no epicurean ready moved his office to the new cap Northern railroads.
merit whatever.
It is, In fact, the ital, but the Guthrie citizens will go ably far exceed that of the Kennedy ford, Clerk Moreland, of the Supreme being the first year that a pool has been
attempted.
estate.
most insipid of dishes--tough, bleak, to law to fight the move.
court, has sent to the Inferior court the
monotonous and uninviting. Eating It
mandate in the case o f the Portland
A free municipal day nursery has
New Line to Baker City.
“ Open Shop" is Endorsed.
as it eomes from the pot would be an been opened at New Brighton, Eng
Railway, Light & Power company
Union— The Pacific States Telephone
appalling experience for a true con land.
Tacoma, Wash., June 15.— Trustees against the Oregon Railroad commis company has a force of men working
noisseur of victuals. Is there not In
of the Tacoma chamber of commerce sion, in which the company was denied on the lines at Union, stringing two
Over 15,000 delegates will stand in
all this some hint of Brahms? Isn't
today adopted resolutions declaring for a rehearing recently. Milwaukie peo new lines from Baker City to Walla
line to receive Roosevelt upon his ar
It a fact that his symphonies, ns they
the “ open shop,” and it is announced ple desire the immediate enforcement Walla.
rival in New York.
Clerk Moreland has
the Commercial club will do likewise of the decision.
appear In the cold black i(nd white
P ORTLAND M ARKETS.
Charles K. Hamilton flew seven at its next meeting. The resolutions been notified that the company will at
score. Impress one chiefly by their uttei
lack of flavor? One seeks in vain for times around Governor’ s island, New declare that "organized labor has no tempt to appeal to the Supreme court
Wheat — Track prices:
Bluestem,
right, either by force or otherwise, to of the United States, but it is not be
luscious deviltry. The bassoon lacks York harbor, in a pouring rain.
83(884c; club, 77<8)78c; red Russian,
lieved
in
legal
circles
here
that
it
will
buffoonry. The hass fiddles have no
A SL Louis multi-millionaire has interfere with the rights of any indi
76c; valley, 82c.
piquant wriggles.
It is magnificent, deeded $3,000,000 worth of property to vidual to work for whomsoever he may be successful.
Barley— Feed and brewing, $19(8)20
true enough, but It Is not appetizing.
a trade school which he had founded, see fit, and on whatever terms may be
per ton.
Wasco Needs New Courthouse.
But Just as the flat rinderbrust has keeping only $3,000 a year for himself. arranged between the employer and
Corn— Whole,'$32; cracked, $33 ton.
employe,” and assert the “ open shop”
The Dalles— The grand jury has rec
Its saving meerrettig. just so the sym
Hay—Track prices: Timothy, Wil
The
beef
trust
has
again
raised
the
is
for
the
best
interests
of
all.
ommended
that
an
annex
be
built
at
an
phonies of Brahms gain favor in the
lamette valley $20(821 per ton; East
price
of
beef
in
New
York.
It
is
now
approximate
cost
of
$25,000
or
a
new
playing. The meerrettig give the rin
ern Oregon, $22(824; alfalfa, $15(816;
a cent a pound higher than when the
court house and jail be constructed at grain hay, $17(1818.
Brazil Next Sees Revolution.
derbrust an Indescribable tang, an in
people began the boycott gainst it sev
Berlin, June 15.— Advices received a cost of $80,000, subject to the decis
effable sting, a quaint flavor of diab
Oats—No. 1 white, $25(826 per ton.
eral weeks ago.
by the German Cablegram company ion of the taxpayers at the November
lerie, and In the same way the emo
Fresh Fruits—Strawberries, $1.50@
election.
The
jury
recommended
that
from
Rio
de
Janeiro
state
that
insurg
A company has been organized in
tions and mistakes of orchestral per
2.25 per crate; apples, $1.50@3 per
the
county
take
the
necessary
steps
formers lnno< ulate the scores of London to make a business of recover ents in the prefecture of Jurua, in the
box; cherries, Oregon, 3(810c pound;
Brahms with file blest microbes of hu ing cash, bullion and other valuables Acre district of Western Brazil, have that an opinion may be obtained from gooseberries, 5@6c; apricots, $1(81.50
man weakness. In the midst of a de from the many wrecked ships about the driven out the government officials ard the voters o f Wasco at that time. An per box; blackberries, 75(8$1 per crate;
declared their independence.
The other important recommendation is raspberries, $2.75 per crate, loganber
velopment
section as academically southern coast o f Africa.
that a suitable piece of land near the
perfect as the binomial theorem some
A dog in Oroville, Cal., makes it his Acre territory, where an insurrection city be secured, to be used as a county ries, $1.75(^7 2 per crate.
Irresponsible viola player (suffering, business to stop runaway horses, and is reported to have occurred, has an
Potatoes— Old Oregon, 60(fi75c per
poor farm.
perhaps, from the fumes of cheap liq has succeeded in stopping a number of area of about 74,000 square miles and
hundred; new California, l% @ 2 c per
pound.
uor), sounds a wolf tone or snaps a them. In recognition of his services a populaion of about 70,000. The ter
Pullet Lays at Four Months.
string, and the result Is a golden mo the city makes him exempt from taxa ritory was acquired by Brazil from
Vegetables— Artichokes, 60(8 75c per
Klamath Falls— A pullet that began dozen; asparagus, $1.25(82 per box;
Bolivia'in 1902. The liberal element
ment. The music, thus mutilated. In tion or license fee.
laying
when
four
months
old
is
owned
predominates.
sults the Intellect, but touches the
cabbage, 2 V ? 2 L c per pound; cauli
A Lincoln, Neb., boy cut the para
by Colonel J. D. Lathrop, who is devel flower, $2 per dozen; head lettuce, 50
heart. One ceases to admire it. and chute rope of a balloon just as it was
oping
a
large
poultry
farm
near
Klam
200
Lives
Lost
in
Flood.
logins to enjoy It.
<*60c per dozen; hothouse lettuce, 50(8)
ready to ascend, and leaving the aero
Cologne, June 15.— It is estimated ath Falls. Mr. Lathrop received the $1 per box; green onions, 15c per doz
The whole subject, of course, is full naut on the ground clung to the severed
first bunch of newly hatched chicks en; peas, 4(u5c; radishes, 15(ii20c per
of snares, and we pause for refresh | rope and made a 6,000-foot flight, that 200 persons lost their lives in the
flood that swept the valley o f the river ever received in Klamath county from dozen; spinach, 8(810c per pound; rut-
ments. But there Is need In the world alighting safely in a shallow lake.
May 28 the 1 abagas, $1.25(8:1.50 per sack; carrots,
Ahr, in the Eiffel region. Eighty- California January 28.
for a philosopher who will work It
first egg was laid, just four months 85c(8$l; beets, $1.50; parsnips, 75c
out to ten places of decimals whowlitj
A big red touring car containing two seven bodies have been recovered.
and three days from the time of hatch ; M l .
explain to us the subtle relationship i persons plunged over the trestle lead These were found along the river bank.
ing. The chickers are the Imperial
A
report
received
here
yesterday
says
Onions—Bermuda, $1.50(81.75 per
between music and viands. We have ing from Portland to the Vancouver
White Leghorns.
that
50
lives
were
lost
at
the
village
crate; red, $2(8 2.25 per sack.
hinted at the nature of the chains ferry slip at 11:30 o’clock at night,
Butter—City creamery, extras, 29c;
which bind sauerkraut to the great into 75 feet of water in the Columbia o f Schult when a bridge crowded with
Novel Heating System.
persons watching the turbulent waters
(fancy outside creamery 28(829c per
Ludwig, and rinderbrust to the nu* slough. The wrecked car has been re
was
carried
away.
Throughout
the
Klamath Falls — Paul Johnson is pound; store, 201823c.
Butter fat
tore Johannes
But why does the Bis cover«! but the bodies cannot be found.
valley only one bridge is left standing. building a $6,000 residence in Hot prices average l ‘ ._,c per pound under
marck herring suggest Wagner and
President Taft announces that he
Springs addition. One of the unique regular butter prices.
the succulent kartotfelkloss Weber and
Father and Son Burned.
feels he has made good his promises.
features of the place is to be a hot
Eggs—Oregon candled, 27c dozen.
"P er Frclschuetz.” and stewed prunes
Corning. N. Y., June 15.—-Clarence water heating system served by plac
Ilaydn. and hascnpfeffer Mozart. And
An airship dashed into the grand Buck and his son Bernard were burned ing coils o f pipe in the “ hot ground” 1 Pork— Fancy, 12(812'oC per pound.
Veal—Fancy, 10(8 11c per pound.
why. when we hear the music of Rich stand at Buda Pest, Germany, injuring
to death in a fire which destroyed their section near by. No fire will be need-! Poultry— Hens, 18(818 sc; broilers,
ard Strauss, do we think inevitably ol many persons.
factory operated by the Buck Manu ed for heating the house.
i 25(828c; ducks, 18«; 25c; geese, 12c;
pink lemonade and snake-eaters, shell
Every building in the town o f Hahn’s facturing company at Couderaport,
turkeys, live, 20(822c; dressed, 25c;
games and tight ropes, jugglers and
Malheur Fair Dates Set.
Pa., yesterday afternoon.
The elder
squabs, $3 per dozen.
Peak, Colo,, was destroyed by fire.
peanuts?
Buck was the inventor of a so-called
September 20, 21, 22 and 23 have
Cattle—Beef steers, good to choice
A delegation o f Jewish rabbis took “ safety” powder, which was manufac been set as the dates for the Malheur California, $5.75(86; good to choice.
"Dear, If the old clothes man come* up with the president the question of tured by a secret process.
county fair. September 19 will be en Eastern Oregon and valley, $5.f(X8
around this week you had better sell the expulsion of Jews from Russian
try day, when all exhibits will be 5.75; fair to medium, $4.25(84.75;
Princeton Graduates 208.
him what old clothes we have.”
towns.
placed in the buildings. The grounds cows and heifers, good to choice, $4.25
"N ot till you get me some new ones.*
Princeton, N. J. June 15.— The 163d are located near Ontario.
Colonel Roosevelt slips quietly away
(85.50; fair to medium,, $3.75(84 50;
— Houston Post.
from London to avoid a big sendoff, commencement of Princeton university
! bulls, $3(84; stags, $3.50(85; calves,
Rebuild
Burned
Mill
today
was
attended
by
one
of
the
larg
and goes for a long hike through the
S t e p l»y S t e p .
light, $5.75(86.75; heavv. $4(86.
est crowds in years. President Wood-
Baker City — The Oregon Mill &
I believe In Improving environments country.
Hogs — Top, $9.50(89.60; fair to
row
Wilson
conferred
degrees
on
208
Grain company’s new mill is leady for medium, $8.40(89.15.
but when we have made the world lit
A lone highwayman held up a Texas members of the senior class, and Dean active operations. It has a capacity
for men to live In we shall still need
Sheep— Best wethers, $4.50(84.75;
passenger train, robbed every person Andrew F. West conferred the higher o f 280 barrels of flour daily. Last fall
to make men lit to live In It.— Bit
fair
to go<xi, $4(8 4.25; best ewes, $4(8
In the Pullman car, and escaped across degrees on examination, aa well as six a mill was burned on the site o f the
James Duckworth
4.50; lambs, choice, $5.50(86; fair,
| the desert into the mountains.
honorary degrees.
present structure.
$4.75(85.25.