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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1913)
tice repeated the oath to the preai- dent. Mrs. Wilson, seated on a lower level, climbed on a chair at the edge of the platform and peered up at her husband as he repeated the oath after the chief justice at 1 :35 o ’clock. In a moment her daughter, Margaret, pulled another chair forward and joined her. A moment later, as Pres ident Wilson began his inaugural ad dress, Mrs. Marshall joined them and peered over the rail. Lieutenant Commander Rodgers, Fire swept the town o f White naval aid at the White House, placed Plains, N. V., causing $700,000 loss. chairs for the other women and they A Kansas sexton dropped dead of Washington, March 4.— Woodrow President Taft bowed to the crowd as stood on tiptoe for a near view o f the heart disease in a grave he was dig Wilson became president o f the Unit they took their seats in the center of proceedings. While President Wilson was deliver ging. ed States today amid imposing cere the platform. President-elect Wilson sat at the ing his address, the first van load of monies and tumultuous scenes of pop Snow and cold have almost stopped ular greeting. Standing at the his right of President Taft, while Vice- the Wilson family’s belongings reach the fighting between Turks and Bul toric east front o f the capitol he took President Marshall took his seat at ed the White House from Princeton. garians. the constitutional oath o f office, and in the left o f President Taft at the edge There were seven trunks, 11 suit The first'Alaskan territorial legisla his brief inaugural address made a o f the platform and talked with Sena cases, 11 umbrellas and several walk ture met at Juneau, March 3, with 24 ing sticks. There also reached the tor Bacon. fervid appeal to all patriotic men for members. counsel and aid. A burst o f applause and cheers White House a large cake, which “ This is not a day o f triumph, ” he greeted Champ Clark as he passed on graced the Wilson dinner table in the T aft’s last day in the White House It was surmounted by a was one o f the tfbsiest and apparently said; “ it is a day o f dedication. to the inaugural stand at the head of evening. brown donkey and a purple elephant. Here muster not the forces of party, the line of house members. happiest o f his administration. President Wilson’s voice at first Major-General Wood directed the but the forces o f humanity. Men’s The senate voted to promote three hearts wait upon us; men’s lives hang closing in o f the troops before the failed to carry into the crowd, but as colonels in the army, and turned down in the balance; men’s hopes call upon guests had all been seated and the he raised it he secured close attention, several other Taft appointments. us to say what we will do. Who shall | crowd gradually edged toward the in which he held throughout the reading Fire destroyed almost the entire o f his address. Although he had live up to the great trust? Who dares augural platform. fail to try? I summon all honest men, Speaker Clark leaned toward Presi memorized much o f his address, he ad town o f Numadzu, Japan, burning two all patriotic, all forward-looking men dent-elect Wilson and the two shook hered closely to the reading o f the thousand houses and causing $3,600,- 000 loss. to my side. God helping me, I will hands, bringing more applause from manuscript. A burst o f cheers greeted the Presi not fail them if they will but counsel the crowd. More than 600 Indiana suffragettes and sustain me.” Applause came from the crowds near dent’s 'declaration, "ou r work is a stormed the legislature and a resolu Vice-President Marshall had been the entrance of the capitol as former work o f restoration,” and it swelled tion was introduced granting full inaugurated in the senate chamber Speaker Cannon emerged, swelling into cheers and hats were thrown into suffrage rights to women. the air when he said: American officers at Douglas, report “ A tariff which cuts us off from our proper part in the commerce of the the discovery o f a plot to capture world, violates the just principles of Douglas, New Mexico, and Agua Pri taxation and makes the government a eto, Mexico, by Mexican rebels. facile instrument in the hands o f pri Dr. Freidmann has been informed vate interests.” by New York medical authorities that From time to time as the President he must have a physician’s license in spoke the sun peeped from behind the order to administer his tuberculosis clouds and shed a feeble light on the serum in America. scene. Senator Fall, of New Mexico, bit A moment later the crowd voiced its approval in cheers at his declaration terly assails the Mexican border policy that “ justice and only justice shall of the United States, declaring the troops are a menace instead of a pro always be our motto.” A storm o f cheers greeted the end tection to residents. ing o f his speech at 1 :54. A ship’s butcher was arrested by William J. Bryan was the first man customs officials at Honolulu trying to to shake hands with the President. get ashore with a big string of sau He then shook hands with Mr. Taft. sages, which were found to be stuffed The party then prepared to head the with about $4,800 worth o f opium. procession back to the White house, The congressional conference com and this time President Wilson sat on the right-hand side o f the carriage. mittee has allowed $1,000,000 for a The procession to the White House new postoffice building at^Portland. started at 1 :57 p. m. The great suffragist parade in Wash Vice President Marshall returned ington was forced to fight its way frorp the inaugural stand to the sen along the entire line o f march, jeers ate. Mrs. Wilson with other members and insults meeting them on all sides. o f the family party took carriages for Portland Rose Festival plans for the White House. 1913 to cost $100,000 are announced. WILSON IS INAUGURATED NEWS NOTES OF CURRENT WEEK Greatest Crowd in History Witnesses Ceremony —Seventh Democratic Resume of World’s Important Events Told in Brief. President Now Holds Reins. Society women o f Corvallis, Or., BE R E W A R D E D have agreed not to go above a $7 limit for hats. Good Roads Congress W ould Give Eastern Oregon farmers traveled Incentive fo r Highway W ork. 100 miles to attend the college course Chicago — The Fifth International for farmers at Burns. Good Roads congress closed here Sun President Taft pardoned four Feder day after adopting resolutions urging al prisoners on account of their pre- the employment of convicts on public vious good character, highways at a commutation o f 10 All requests for tuberculosis serum only shortly before, and at the con into a large volume as William J. days o f their sentence for every 30 are being refused until the U. S. sur- clusion of President Wilson’s inaug Bryan came forward 'with the other days o f labor. The resolution reads: •We urge' the adoption by every ? eon-general has made satisfactory ural address the party hurried back to guests comprising the membership of tests. the White House, ahead o f the inaug President Wilson’s cabinet. Governor state o f the convict labor system o f j ural procession, where Mr. Taft said Fielder, successor to President-elect Colorado, giving all available convicts j British merchants resent the Chinese goodby to President Wilson and pre Wilson as governor o f New Jersey, the privilege o f working on the public war on the opium trade, as it is in pared to leave at once for Augusta, came out to the stand with Senator highways with a commutation o f 10 juring also the trade in opium from days for every 30 days’ work. We India. Ga. President Wilson shortly after Martine. took his place to review the proces Mr. Bryan, Mr. McAdoo, Mr. Red- urge the state and national construc Secretary Meyer blames Wilson for sion. field, Representative Burleson, Mr. tion o f post roads and the construction While Vice-President Marshall was Daniels, Franklin K. Lane, Represen o f a national Lincoln memorial high the defeat of the two-battleship plan. swearing in new senators and return tative Willipm B. Wilson, Professor way, connectiong Washington with Money trust investigating commit ing ones, the remainder o f the com Houston and the others o f the new the capitals o f every state in the tee recommends revision o f national Union.” pany began the march to the stands cabinet were escorted to seats as the The next International Good roads banking laws. on the east front, where the inaug crowd voiced its approval by cheers. The U. S. senate has allowed an uration o f Mr. Wilson was to take Mrs. Wilson and her daughters took congress will meet in San Francisco in amendment to the sundry civil bill of place. President Taft and Mr. Wilson seats close to the square platform at 1915. $1.500,000 for a government exhibit were greeted with loud cheers as they the left. At. Mrs. Wilson’s request, at the San Francisco exposition in 1915. came out the main door. Probers Cannot Agree. Mrs. Marshall took a seat beside her. Immediately in front o f the presi The two women walked forward to the Washington, D. C. — The senate Official circles in Washington be dential platform Major-General Wood rail to look at the crowd. The Wilson campaign expenditures committee lieve General Huerta will be equal to and his general staff held a space girls joined them. made to the closing congress no report the Mexican situation and that affairs “ Oh, isn’t it wonderful” ? said Mrs. upon its exhaustive inquiry into cam in that country will soon be running clear. Across the open space loomed a battery o f nearly 100 cameras and Wilson, as she looked out over the im paign expenditures for 1904, 1908 and smoothly. motion picture machines, trained on mense gathering that extended so far 1912, and into the relations of John D. the Bingle spot where President Taft that faces were not recognizable. Archbold and the Standard Oil com At 1 :29 the last restraint on the pany with members o f congress and was to pass his mantle o f office to PORTLAND MARKETS President-elect Wilson. Back of the crowd was removed, and across the Federal offiers. Members of the spe West Point cadets stood the Kssex empty space o f asphalt came a cheer- cial committee have found it impossi Wheat—Track prices: Club, 86®- troop, President Wilson’ guard o f ing mass o f men and women waving ble to agree upon the report, and the 86Jc per pushel; bluestem, 98(ff99c; honor, and near them the Black Horse hats, flags and coats upward in the di question is to be carried over to the forty-fold, 88c; red Russian, 85® rection o f the president-elect. In a new congress, when it is believed bet 85Jc. troop o f Culver. Barley— Feed $23.50 per ton; brew The troops were prepared to give moment a dense sea o f people touched ter progress can be made. ing, nominal; rolled, $25.50®26.50. way when the delivery o f the inaug ” | the very edge o f the inaugural stand, Millstuffs — Bran, $21® 21.50 per Election Bettor On Hike. ural address began so that the crowd the military preserving their places might close in to hear the new presi with difficlty. Somebody in the crowd Portland, Maine — Leading a 22- ton; shorts, $23(023.50; middlings, $30. dent. There was a lull in the cere shouted : Hay — Eastern Oregon timothy, "Three cheers for Miss Nellie Wil year-old donkey and wearing a khaki monies as the company assembled. uniform, B. H. Anderson, of Butler, A mild wind blew over the stands, son,” and a good-natured laugh went Pa., left Portland Tuesday to settle an choice, $15(u 17 per ton; mixed, $10® 12.50; oat and vetch, $12; alfalfa, and the West Point cadets and sailors up. The Wilson cabinet on the stand in election bet on Theodore Roosevelt by $11.50; clover, $10; straw, $6®7. ran about in little groups to relieve walking from this city to Portland, Oats— No. 1 white, $27® 28. the tedium, while the presidential cluded all but James C. McReynolds, Oregon. Anderson, who was a page Apples—Spitzenberg. extra fancy, the new attorney general, who had party slowly assembled. The east in the national house o f representatives front of the capitol, sweeping down been unable to accept the invitation to in 1901, was a follower o f Colonel $1.25®$ 1.50; choice, 75c® $1; Yellow Newtown, extra fancy, $1.25®!1.50; from the dome to the ground and out be present. Roosevelt and laid a wager on his elec choice, 75c® $1; Winesap, extra as far as the Congressional library President Taft, who had sat with a tion. The distance Anderson will lead fancy, $1.25® 1.50; Red Cheek Pip and neighboring apartment buildings good-natured smile on his face as the the donkey is 4300 miles, and he ex presented a brilliant scene of color. crowd surged about, burst Into a pects to complete the journey in eight pin, extra fancy, $1.25®1.50; Arkan sas Black, extra fancy, $1.75® 2; The weather still was cloudy, but there hearty laugh when some one yelled, months. Baldwin, extra fancy, $1®1.52; was no immediate sign of rain. “ Where is Teddy?” choice, 75c®'$l; Rome Beauty, $1.25 It was 1:11 o ’clock before the pro- It was 1:34 o ’clock when Chief Jus- («T 1.60; small sizes, all varieties, less; Strike May be Averted. cession to the stand had got as far as ( tice White stepped forward and the Ben Davis, etc., common pack, 60® London There are prospects o f an the diplomatic corps, so slowly did it party arose and President-elect Wilson 60c. amicable settlement o f the dispute move. This was because many re raised his hand to take the oath of Vegetables— Artichokes, $1.50 per which threatened to cause a strike on mained behind to see new senators office. Cheers which greeted the all the Hiitish railway systems. The dozen; cabbage, lc pound; cauliflow sworn in. President-elect Wilson and rising fell to a hush as the chief jus- Midland Railway company has issued er, $2 per crate; celery, $2.50®4 a letter offering to reinstate the crate; peppers, 30c pound; rhubarb, M adero’ s Guard Prom oted. Falls 17 Floors; R olls Cigarette. offending guard, Richardson, whose $2.75 per box; sprouts, 10c; toma Mexico City— Major Cardenas, who New York John Brunnon, a marble dismissal because he refused to violate toes, $2 per box; garlic, 5® 6c pound; was in charge o f the escort o f Fran worker, fell from the 17th floor o f the the company's written regulations at turnips, 90c®$1 per sack; parsnips, 90c®$1; carrots, 90c®$l. cisco Madero and Jose Pino Suarez on Municipal building to the bottom of the order o f his foreman, led the rail Onions—Oregon, $1 per sack. way men to threaten a strike in order the day they were killed, was promo an elevator shaft and treated his ex Potatoes — Jobbing prices: Bur The ted from the rural guard to the same perience so lightly that those who ran to compel his reinstatement. rank in the regular army. A general to his aid found him rolling a cigar- company makes certain stipulations, banks, 50c per hundred. Poultry— Hens 16c; broilers, 22c; inclination to recognize General Huer» ette and casually inquiring if an am- which it is believed will be accepted. turkeys, live, 18®'20c; dressed, ta’s administration is being manifest bulance could be summoned. Much choice, 25c; ducks, 17c; geese, nom ed by the rebels in all parts o f the re shorter falls have taken scores o f lives Jail Preferred to W ife. inal. public. Nearly all the rebel leaders on the recent skyscraper buildings, Des Moines, la.—John Davis was Eggs Fresh locals, candled. 19c have now fallen in line. Many o f the but Brunnon was saved from being sentenced to a year in the penitentiary rebels, however, display sensitiveness dashed to pieces because he landed in the District court here Monday for per dozen; current receipts, 17® 18c. Butter—Oregon creamery cubes, 37c in regard to the amnesty bill, which on a bundle o f empty bags. He suf wife desertion, after he had told the pound; prints, 39c. they say wrongly implies their defeat. fered fractures o f the leg. judge that he preferred hard labor in Pork— Fancy, 10® 10c per pound. prison either to returning to Mrs. Veal— Fancy, 14® 14c per pound. Foreign Comments Favorable. Davis or contributing to her support. Loeb to Be Guggenheim Dirctor. Hops 1912 crop, prime and choice, London—That Woodrow Wilson is New York The resignation o f Wil- Davis was in court a week ago and 16®'18c per pound; 1913 contracts, splendidly equipped to handle the liam I,oeb, Jr., collector o f the port o f was given that much time to deter 15c. wheel o f the American ship o f state la New York, has been sent to Washing mine which he would prefer— impris Wool Early shorn, east o f moun the opinion here. The Chronicle de ton. Mr. Loob's withdrawal from of onment or reconciliation. His liberty tains, 15® 20c pound. on a bond qf $100(1 was offered him. clares: “ Woodrow Wilson represents fice was forecasted recently. A posi Cattle — Choice steers, $7.50®'8; the new spirit visible In more than tion as managing director o f the Gug good, $7 ( i t 7.30; medium. $6.50®7; one country, but nowhere so clearly as genheim companies, with a few o f Foreign Steamers Fired On. choice cows, $6.50® 7; good. $6®6.50; in America.” The Daily Gazette which he Is associated as a director, choice calves. Constantinople— French and Italian medium, $5.5(>®6; says: “ Woodrow Wilson has Im has been created for him. Woodrow steamers passing Charkeii have been $8<u 9 ; good heavy calves, $6.50(0' pressed the Anglo Saxon race o f both Wilson, as president, will act upon the fired upon by the Bulgarians. One 7.50; bulls. $5.60®6. the old and the new world with his resignation, which Mr. Ix>eb asks to Italian vessel was badly dam aged and Hogs — Light, $8 ® 8.50; heavy, sterling honesty.” The Morning Post: have accepted on or before March 8. as a consequence was beached. It is $6.50® 7. “ Few American presidents have en On that date Mr. Loeb's bond o f reported that British vessels also have Sheep -Yearling wethers, $."><,! 6.50; tered office so well equipped.” $480 ,000 as collector expires. ewes, $4®5.25; lambs, $6®7.1&. attracted the fire o f the Bulgarians. CONVICTS TO A ld in g to n FW e % sfyü. F letcher ßoßmsow ObdiU/ior wYA /I.CvkinDoy/e ef The/ioujid c///)< &iiÁerw/U¿ít C qpyr/yA / à y “What Is It?” I asked him, a s h« panted up. "I want you—come along," he whis pered. and started back, by the way he had come. We passed round the right-hand wing, under my bedroom window, and, stopped where the yew walk endea' To right and left of the entrance two stone fauns leered upon us under the starlight. "This thing you call a dog—could you see It as far as this?" “No; the angle of the wing pre vented me." “You saw It pass In this direction. Are you certain It did not go back the way It came?" “ Yes. I am quite certain." “Then It must either have turned up the road. In which case I should have met It; or down the road, where you would have seen It as It passed under your windows; or else have run straight on. If we take these facts as proved, It must have ruD straight on." “That Is so.” We had our backs to the laughing fauns. Before us lay a broad tri angle of even snow, with the chapel and wing of the house for Its sides, and for Its base the carriage-drive on which we stood. There was no shrub or tree In any part of It that might conceal a fugitive. Close to the wall of the house ran a path ending In a small side door. The chapel, which was Joined to the mansion, had no entrance on the garden side. “If It entered this triangle and dis appeared—for I am certain It was not here when I ran by—we may con clude that It found Its way Into the house. It had no other method of es cape. Kindly stay here, Mr. Phillips. This snow Is fortunate, but I wish the sweepers had not been so con scientious about their work on the paths.” He drew a little electric lantern from his coat, touched the spring, and with an eye of light moving before him, turned Into the path under the wall. He walked slowly, bending double as he swept the brilliant circle now on the exposed ground, now on the snow ridges to right and left. The sills of the ground floor windows were carefully examined, and when he reached the door he searched the single step before It with minute attention. A curlour the corner of the wing came a man. running with a patter of little strides, while a dozen yards behind him were a pair of less active followers. What they wanted I did not consider; for at that moment the sight of my own kind was Joy enough for me. The electric lamps In the room behind (Continued.) me threw a broad golden patch upon It was a quiet, moonless night, lit the snow, and as the leader reached by the stars that blinked In their It he stopped, glancing up at where I thousand constellations. Though the stood. The light struck him fairly snow lay deep, the air struck mild In the face. It was Addington Peace! ly. Indeed, If It were freezing. It “Did you hear that cry?” he panted; could not have been by more than and then, with a sudden nod of recog two degrees. Upon the edge of the nition: “I see who it Is, Mr. Phillips distant cliffs robes of confusing mist —well, and did you hear It?’’ curled In veils as thin as moonlight; “It came from over there— In the but In the foreground the yew walks fir avenue,” said I, pointing with a and aisles of ancient laurel showed trembling finger. “I don’t understand clearly upon the white carpet. Abyut it. Inspector; I don’t Indeed. There the central avenue of firs which was something that came up that carved the gardens Into the dark yew walk behind you about a minute ness lay Impenetrable pools of shad afterwards. I should have thought It ow. As I watted, the silence was would have passed you." startled by a bell. It rang the four "No, I saw nothing. What was It quarters In a tinkling measure, fol like?" lowed by eleven musical strokes. I “A sort of a dog," I stammered; knew that the sound must come fr:>m I for under his steady eye I had not the little church that lay to my nerve enough to tell him of my pri right; but, though I leant from ajy vate imaginings. window, the angle of the wing In "A dog—that’s curious. Are all the which I was, hid the building from rest of you In bed?” me. “ No; they're gambling." I feel that the story which I have “Very good. I see there Is a door now to tell may well turn me Into an at the back there. Will you come object for ridicule. I can only de down and let me In, after I've had a scribe that which I saw; as for tire look around the gardens?” conclusions at which I arrived there “ Certainly." are many more practical people jn "If you meet any of your friends, the world than myself who wojld you need not mention that I have ar have Judged no differently. At best rived. Do you understand?” It was a ghastly business. I nodded, and he hopped away I had returned to the dressing-table across the lawn with his two eom- and was changing my dress-coat foy a panlons at his heels. comfortable smoking-jacket when I I slipped on an overcoat and made heard It—a faint and distant cry, yet a cry which was crowded with such terror that I clung to a chair with my white face and goggling eyes star 1 RUSHED TO THE WINDOW, PEERING ing back at me from the mirror on OUT INTO THE NIGHT. the table. Again It sounded, and again; then silence fell like the abut ter of a camera. I rushed to the window, peering out Into the nl^ht. The great gardens lay sleeping in the dusky shadows. There was noth ing to be heard; nothing moved save the curling wreaths of mist that i»me creeping up over the cliffs like the ghosts of drowned sallormen from their burial sands below. Could It have been some trick of the Imagina tion? Could It—and the suggestion which I despised thrust itself upon me— could It bear reference to that grim tragedy that had been played In the old fir avenue so many years ago? And then I first saw the thing that came towards me. It was moving up a narrow path, hedged with yew, that led from the gardens and passed to the right of the wing In which I stood. The yew had been clipped into walls some five feet high, but the eastern gales had beaten out gaps and ragged Indenta tions In the lines of greenery, so that In my sideways view of It the path Itself was here and there exposed. It was through one of these breaches In the walls that I noticed a sign of movement. I waited, straining my eyes. Yes. there It showed again, a something, moving swiftly towards my way quietly down the stairs. spectacle he made, this little atom ol the house with a clumsy rolling From the roulette-room, as I passed a man, as he peeped and peered hit It, came the chink of money and the way like some slow-hunting beast on stride. It was never nearer to me than murmur of merry voices. They would a cold scent. It was not until he left the path fifty yards, and the stars gave a not disturb us, that was certain. I shifty light. Yet it left me with an reached the garden doors In the cen for the snow-covered grass-plot that Impression that It was about four ter of the main building, turned the I saw him give any sign of success. Inspector Peace dropped on his feet In height and of a dull white key, and walked out Into the gloom knees with a little chirrup of satis color. I remember that Its body con of a great square porch. As I have said, the temperature was faction like the note of a bird. Then trasted plainly with the dark hedges, but melted Into uncertainty against scarcely below freezing-point, and If he rose again, shaking his head and a patch of snow. Once It stopped and I shivered In my fur-lined overcoat It staring up at the windows above him half raised Itself on Its hind legs as was more from excitement than any In a cautious, suspicious manner. For a good Finally he came slowly back to me, If listening. Then again It tumbled great chill in the air. forward 1(1 Its shambling, ungainly twenty minutes I waited listening and with his head on one side, staring at fashion—now hidden by the yew wall, peering Into the night. It was not a the ground before him. "You thought It was a dog?" hg now thrust Into momentary sight by pleasant time, for my nerves were a ragged gap until It disappeared Jangled, and I searched the shadows asked. “ Why a dog?” "It looked to me like a big dog— round the angle of the house. Doubt with timorous eyes, half fearing, half less It would turn to the left, round expecting. Heaven knows what hide or a wolf,” I told him boldly. "Whether It be beast or man, oi the old chapel, across the snow-bound ous apparition. It was with a start park, and so to the woods—where a which set my heart thumping that I both, I believe the thing that killed saw Peace turn the corner of the him Is In the house now.” wolf should be! I jumped back, staring at him with I was still staring from the win right-hand wing and come trotting dow In the blank fear of the unknown, down the drive towards me. There a sudden exclamation. "Who has been killed?” I stam when I heard the swift tap of feet was something In his aspect that told mered out. upon the road beneath me. Round a story of calamity. “ Baron Steen. We found him on the cliffs yonder. He was badly cut about.” “It’s Impossible, Inspector," I cried. “He left the roulette-table not a quar ter of an hour before you came." “Ah—he was a cool hand, Mr. Phil lips. It was like him to put off bolting till the last minute. The war rant against him for company frauds is In my pocket now. But some one gave the game away to him, for his yacht Is lying off the beach there, Worth eat down with pencil with a boat from her waiting at tha BORROWING AS A FINE ART and Mrs. patiently made an alphabetical list foot of the cliff. But we've no tlms Proof That This Bad Habit Is Impos of all the articles she could remem to lose— come along.” ber. sible to Eradicate In Boms Before the big garden porch the In Jimmy took the list and disappeared. spector's two companions were wait People. A half-hour later he once more reap ing. He drew them aside for a min Day by day. as Mrs. Worth s house- peared at the back door and an ute's whispered conversation before lold and kitchen furniture and grocer nounced: they separated, and disappeared Into ies slowly disappeared, she saw that "Ma says If you’ll lend her the wash the night. What had they done with the moment approached when a final boiler to carry 'em In. she'll bring 'em the body? I had not the courage to stand must be made. One morning, home."—Youth's Companion. Inquire. when Jimmy, son of the borrower, ap We entered the house, moving very peared at the back door with the state softly. In the hall Peace took me by First Use of Asphalt. ment. “ Ma wants the wash-boiler," Mrs the arm. Asphalt, with which so many roads Worth determined to act. "You’re a bit shaken, Mr. Phillips, "You tell your ma that when she are paved, was found by accident. and I'm not surprised. But I want brings back what she has already bor Many years ago. In Switzerland, nat your assistance badly. Can you pull rowed, I will lend her the boiler.” ural rock asphalt was discovered, and yourself together and help me to see In a little while Jimmy reappeared for more than a century It was used this through?" "Ma wants to know what she bor for the purpose of extracting the rich “TO do what I can." stores of bitumen It contained. In row-ed." "Take me up to your room, then.” ’♦here Is a quart of flour.” began time it was noticed that pieces of rock We were In luck, for we tip-toed ___ Mrs Worth, "a peck of potatoes, a cup which fell from the wagons and were ap the great stairs and down the of sugar, a can of coffee, a half-pound I crushed by the wheels formed a mar- long passages without meeting a guest of lard, some onions, and butter and velously fine road surface when or servant. Once in my room, the In spices: the screw-driver, the hatchet, slated by the heat of the sun. A prop spector walked across and pushed a pair of scissors"—she paused, recol er road of asphalt rock was then the electric bell. Three, four minutes leettng—"three spools of thread, a pa made, following upon the discovery, went by before the summons was an and In 1854 an experimental roadway swered. and then It was by a flushed per of needles, and—” But Jimmy was gone. Presently he was laid In Paris. From that tlms the and disordered footman who bounced use of rock asphalt for the making of Into the room and halted, staring open- rapped on the back door again. "lta says for you to writs am down roads and pavements has Increased mouthed from me to my companion. | and extended to many countries l forgot some of saa" (C B K O N IC L X a TO BE CONTTM L'ED.) THE TERROR IN THE SNOW