" - , - - " : " It t . . . ' . . - , ' . ' . , . , , , " ' , ' 'I . \ ' " , ' 11' , . , ' - - , ' ' ; . ' ' , I : ' I ) . . r. . I , -iL , 1 - - . . ] . ' . I . . , The " ' ttl : 4 i , ! Main µ f . . . . 5 Chance r ' . iti t1 Ii , { I I : ; BY la ! : i Meredith Nicholson I . . ' . i COPYRIGHT 1903 THE BonlJS- : 1JRP.ILL COMPANY i ,1 . \ ( - " . . . , - . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . CHAPTER V. - ( Continued. ) A few . days : aftor Evelyn Porter came t tome , Wheaton followed .liaridan to his " room cne evening after dinner. Raridar 'bad set The Bachelors' an example of I white flannels for the warm weather , and Wheaton also had abolished his evening clothes. Raridan's ro'oms had not yd ; s lost their novelty for him. The pictures the statuettes , the books the broad couch with its heap of vari-colored pillows , the i table with its candelabra , by winch Rari . ' dan always read certain of the l'oets- these still had their mystery for Whea < ton. - "Going out to-night ? " he- asked with a show of indifference. ' "Hadn't thought of it , " answered Rari- I dan , who was cutting the pages of a . magazine. ' "Don't let me interrupt if you're read- - ing , " said "rhea ton.hHut I thought , some of dropping in at Mr. : Porter's. . Miss : : Porter's home now , I believe. " I . . . "That's a good idea " said Raridan , . who saw what was wanted. He threw his magazine at the cat and got up and yawned. "Suppose we do go ? " The call had been successfully ] man- . Miss : Porter'was ' pretty aged. as very pretty , and : not so young as Wheaton expected to I find her. -Raridan left him talking tc I her and went across to the library , where I Mr. Porter was reading his evening pa- per. Raridan had a way of wandering ! about in other people's houses , which oj I Wheaton envied him. Miss Porter seemed I , 1 to take his call as a matter of course , n . ' i ! f i ' and when her father came out presently i and greeted him casually as if he wero a IR j : i , familiar . of the house he left relieved and , II gratified. ! r , , . ' ' ' 4 ! CHAPTER VI. 0 ' . Raridan was at the station to meet I ' , Borne guests of Evelyn's , as he had prom- H . ised. He had established a claim upon their notice on the occasion of one of his visits ' to Evelyn at college , and he greeted them with an air of possession I which would have been intolerable in an i , . other man. He pressed Miss Warren foi ; . news of the Connecticut nutmeg crop , , , I and hoped that Miss Marshall had not \ lost her accent jn crossing the Missouri. Annie Warren was as reserved and i quiet as. Evelyn could be in her soberest j moments ; Belle Marshall was as frank and friendly as Evelyn became in her ' " lightest moods. Evelyn had been the i boaury of her class ; her two friends were , what is called , by people that wish to' ' ; _ 11' be kind , nice looking. Annie Warren had been the best scholar in her class ; . Belle Marshall ; had been amongst the i poorest ; and Evelyn had maintained a ) : happy medium between the two. And so ( it fortunately happened that the trio . . mitigated one another's : : imperfections. Evelyn : had d ussed with her father J ways and means of entertaining her ! guests. He preferred large functions. i He wished Evelyn to give a lawn party I I before the blight of fall came upon his I : i : flowers and shrubbery ; but she persuad- I , f ed him to wait until after a pending ; - carnival. The ball of the carnival was , j . near at liaud and she proposed that they give a small dinner in the interval. I "I'll ask Warry anl Mr. Saxton. Peo- pIe were already coupling Saxton's name with Raridan's. " 'Ob . yes , that's all right. * 'l don't want very many ; I'd like to osk the Whipples ; " she. went on , with . the anxious , far-away look that comes "into the eyes of a woman who is weigh . ing dinner guests or matching fabrics. ; "Can't you ask Wheaton ? " ventured Mr. Porter cautiously , from behind his paper. , . "If jou say so , " Evelyn assented. "He Isn't exciting , but Belle ' Marshall can : get on with anybody. I'm out of practice ; . . vand won't try too many.rs. . Whipple -will help ] over the hard places. " . Finally , however , her party numbered . ten , but it seemed to Wheaton a large ' assemblage. He had never taken a lady in to dinner before , but he had studied a ' book of etiquette , and the chapter oil "Dining Out" had given mm a hint of what was expected. It had not , however , supplied him with a fund of talk , but j I he was glad to find , when he reached the 1 table , that the company was so small l that talk could be general , and he was thankful for the shelter made for him by the light banter which followed the set- tling of chairs. Saxton went in with , . Evelyn , who ' wished to make amends foi his clumsy reception on the occasion of I his first appearance . in the house. I . General Whipple persuaded Miss Mar : i ; t ; ; shall to tell a uogro story , which she did , : delightfully ' , while the table listened. " Southerners are , after all , the most nat- . , ural talkers we have and the oniy ones t who can talk freely of themselves with- ; - " i. . out offense. Her speech was _ musical . , : ' ; and she , told her story with a nice sense of its dramatic quality. P , They had their coffee on the veranda , t , y' where the lights from within made a . , i pleasant dusk about them. Porters " , . heart ' warm with the joy of ' ' : lrt was \ ) Evelyn's home-coming. She had been away from I I him so much that he was realizing for the first ; time the common experience of . i fathers , who find that their daughters , have escaped suddenly and inexplicably , . . . from girlhood into womanhood ; and yet ; : the girl heart in her had not lost its. ! : . y ; . . . freshness nor its thirst for pleasure. She had carried off her little company charm ingly ; Porter had e3jo ' ; d it himself , and . . -t ( he ' felt . young again in the presence of . youth. ; General Whipple had attached himself * . ( J to one of the' couples of young people - that were strolling- here and there . in the " i- : grounds. Porter ! and Mrs. . Whipple held . " the rcranda . alone : both were uncon- . : sciorisly watcliius ' .Bweljn , and Saxton as - , - f\ : , . - . , . . ' . $ , , . . . . . , J y . , . . . . . . . - < - - - - - . . - ' . . . . . . . . . , " , - - ' , I' .J , . ; "f ; . . . -O. . : " : i' , - . r they walked back and forth in front of the house , talking gaily ; and Porter smiled at the eagerness and quickness oi her movements saxton's : deliberateness contrasted oddly with the girl's light step. Such a girl must marry a man worthy of her ; there could beno question of that ; and for the 'first lime the thought of losing her rose in his heart and numb- ed it. ' it.Evelyn Evelyn and Saxton had 'met the oth- ers , who were coming up from the walks , and there was a redistribution at the house ; it was too beautiful to go in , they said , and the strolling abroad continued. A great flood of moonlight poured over the grounds. A breeze stole up from the valley and made a soothing rustle in the trees. . Evelyn and 'Yheaton' heard the sound of the piano through the open windows , and a girl's voice : broke gaily into song. "It's Belle. She does sing those coon songs wonderfully. Let us wait here un- til she finishes this one. " The sun-porch opened from the dining . rCO = l1. They could see beyond /it , into th- . drawing- room ; the singer was in plain view sit- ting at the piano ; Raridan stood facing her , keeping time with an imaginary baton. A man came unobserved to the glass door of the porch and stood unsteadily peering in. He was very dirty and bal- anced himself in that abandon with which intoxicated men belie Newton's d sco\- ery. He had gained the top step with difficulty ; the light from the window blinded him and for a moment he stoofl within the inclosure blinking. An ugly grin spread over' his face as he made out the two figures by the window , and he began a laborious journey . toward them. . - - : : . 4 4 % k 4' t , , E < f ' $ ; ! . . . . . . . . . . ii > : k' lURID.\ STOOD FACI\G IIEB , KEEPING TI1IE. He tried to tiptoe , and this added fur- ther to his embarrassments ; but the fig- ures by the window were intent on the song and did not hear him. He drew slowly nearer ; one more step and he would have concluded his journey. He poised on his toes before taking it , but the law of gravitation now asserted it- pelf. He lunged forward heavily ] , casting himself upon Wheaton , and nearly knock- ing him from his feet. , "Jimmy. " he blurted , in a drunken voice. " , J " \ "Jim-uy ! Evelyn turned quickly and shrank back with a cry. Wheaton was slowly rallying from the shock of his surprise. lIe grab bed the man by the arms and began push- ing him toward the door. "Don't be alarmed , " he said over his shoulder to Evelyn , who had shrunk back against the wall. "I'll manage him. " This however was not so easily done. The tramp , as Evelyn supposed him to bo. had been sobered by Wheaton's attack. He clasped his fingers about Wheaton's- throat and planted his feet firmly. He clearly intended to stand his ground , and he dug his fingers into Wheaton's neck with the intention tof , hurting. "Father ! " cried Evelyn once but the song was growing noisier toward its end and the circle about the piano did not hear. She was about to call again when a heavy step sounded outside on the walk and Bishop : Delafieid came swiftly into the porch. He "had entered the ground.- : from the rear and was walking arouu-l the house to the front door. "Quick ! that man there-I'll call the others ! " cried Evelyn ] still shrinking against the wall. 11 ' Keaton . had been : forced to his knees and his assailant was choking him. But there was no need of other help. The bishop had already seized the tramp about the body with his great hands , tearing him from Wheaton's neck. He strode , with the squirming figure in his grasp , toward au open window at the back of the glass inclosure , and pushed the man out. : There was a great .snort ing and threshing below. , ' The hill dipped abruptly away from the side of the uou.se and the man had fallen several feet , into a flower bed. "Get away ; from here , " the ( bishop said , in his deep voice , "and be quick about it. " The man rose and ran swiftly down the slope toward the street' : The bishop walked back to the window. The others had now hurried out in re sponse to Evelyn's peremptory calls. and she . was telling of the tramp's visit , while "Wheaton received their condolences , and readjusted his tie. His collar and short- : : front showed signs of contact with dirt. "It was a tramp. " slid'elyn. , as the others plied her . with questions , "and he attacked Mr. : Wheaton. " "Where's he gone ? " . demanded Porter. excitedly. ' "There he goes ; " said the bi hop. point ing toward the window. "I dropped him gently out of the window. The shock seems to have inspired his logs. " "I'll have the po ice- " began Por- ter. ter."Oh. "Oh he's gone now , Mr. Porter , " said : 1 Wheaton , coolly , as : : he restored his ; 'tie. "Bishop Delafield disposed of him : . o vig- orousily that he'll hardly come back. " "Yes , let him go. " said the bishop , wip ing his hands on his handkerchief. "I'm 'only afraid. Porter , that I've spoiled you i best canua bed. " ' . . . - I CHAPTER Til. j The following Sunday- : , morning aftei I church , as Wheaton l'e } ch d.his"rpom he fouifd " "an envelope lying * on- ' . his ! . table. much soiled , and addresseH , in"an tnble'l " ' ' . I .A * , - _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . . . - . " . ' " , " ' , " " ; " , : . * , ; , , * - . I .k - - - - , formed hand , to himself. It contained a dirty scrap of paper bearing th ° se words : "Jim : I'll be at the Occiden al Hotel to-night at 8 o'clock. Don't fail to come. . "BILLY. " Wheaton tore up the' note with irrita tion and threw it into the waste paper basket. He called the Chinese servant , who explained that a boy had left it : in the course of the morning acd had said nothing about an answer. The' Bachelors' did not usually muster a full table at Sunday dinner. All Clark- son dined at noon on Sunday , and "most of the bachelors were fortunate enough . to be asked out. Wheaton was not fre- quently a diner out by reason of his more slender acquaintance ; and to-day all pere present including Raridan , the most fickle of all in his attendance. It had . pleased Wheaton to find that the others had been sotting him apart more find rtore with Raridan for the daily disci- pline they dealt one another. They liked to poke fun at Raridan on the score of 'what they called his mad social whirl ; there was no resentment about it ; they were themselves of sterner stuff and had no patience with Randan's frivolities ; and they were within the fact when they assumed that , if they wished , they could go anywhere that he did. ' It touched Wheaton's ; vanity to find himself a joint target with Raridan for the arrows which the other bachelors ] fired at folly. . Wheaton aftor dinner went to his room and mado himself comfortable. He re- road the Sunday paors : through all their supplements , dwelling again on the events of the carnival. lie had saved : all the othor papers that contained society news , and now brought : them out and cut "from them all references to himself. He re- solved to opon a kind of social scrap . hook in which to preserve a record ol , his ! social I doings. : He remembered a com- , plaint often heard in Clarkson that there wore no eligible men there ; he was not sure just what constituted ligibility , but as he reviewed ; the men tha't went about 11 ( ' could not see that they possessed any advantages : over himself. It occurred to him for the first time that he was the only unmarried bank cashier in town ; and this in itself conferred ' -distinction. . He was not so secure in his place as he should like to be : . if Thompson died there would undoubtedly be a reorganization of the bank and the few shares that Por- ter had sold to him would not hold the cashiorship for him. It might be that Porter's plan was to keep him in the place until Grant grew up. Again , he. . reflected the man who married Evelyn Porter would become an element to reck- on with ; and yet if he were to be that man - manHe slept and dreamed that he was king of a gream realm and that Evelyn Porter reigned with him as queen } ; then he awoke ) : with a start to find that it was late. He sat up on the couch and gath- ered together : the newspaper cuttings which had fallen about him. He remem- bered } the imperative summons which had been left for him during the morning ; it was already G o'clock. Before going out he changed his qlothes \ to a rough busi ness suit and took a car that bore him i rapidly through the business district and beyond into the older part of Clarkson. The locality was very shabby , and when he left the car presently it was to con tinue his journey in an ill-lighted street over board walks which yielded a pre carious footing. The Occidental Hotel : was in the old part of town , and had long ago ceased to be what it had once been , the first hostelry of Clarkson. It I had descended to the level of a cheap hoarding house , little patronized except by the rougher element of cattlemen and by railroad crews that found it conveni - ent to the yards. ; Over the door a dim light blinked , and this , it was understood in tlu ' neighborhood , meant not merely an invitation to bed and board , but also tc the Occidental bar , which was accessible at all hours of the day and night , and was open through all the spasms of vir- tue with which the city administration was seized from time to time. The door stood open and Wheaton stepped up to the counter on which a boy sat playing with a cat. "Is William Snyder stopping here ? " he asked. The boy looked : up lazily from his play. "Are you the gent he's expecting ? : " "Very likcl ' . Is he in ? " "Yes , he's : : number eighteen. . " ' He drop ped-the cat and led Wheaton down a darli hall which was stale with the odors oi cooked vegetables up a steep flight ( oi stairs to a landing from which he point- ed to an oblong of light above a door. "There you are , " said the boy. He kicked the door and retreated down the stairs , leaving Wheaton to obey the sum mons to enter which was bawled from within. William Snyder unfolded his long 'Ggure and rose to greet his visitor1 ( To be continued. ) IIo-vv It Soumletl. . Since this \ is a confession it may as well } ] be a frank : and truthful one. 1 am not jealous of my husband's first wife-at least I hope I am not. But when ho looks depressed , or when I sec thnt he is not as happy as I would like him to be , I am conscious of an uncomfortable doubt. I have tried to bring my sense of humor to bear upon this pain , too , and sometimes have suc- ceeded fairly well - sometimes I have failed dismally. } ] ; A trying trick that my dear husband ? has : is that of sink ing into an absent-minded reverie or abstraction ; and he sometimes so far forirets himself to call me "Mary" in stead of "Sarah. " ' Once when he had been particularly forgetful I . and ' dreamy he did this three tiuics in one eveni ' g . At last my resentment and apprecia tion of the ridiculous : sprang to arms. With the fourth "Mary" I answered sweetly : "In heaven , dear ! Won't I do ? " I had heard of another wife wht ht < l done this. and it had sounded fnniiy ; to me when I heard the story ; but wbon I utfored the unseemly and unrefined spooch I was overcome with shame my anger fled and , bursting into tears. I begged my husband's par don ! and I told him so. "I am hurt " hc&said ; "I had no idea that the memory ; of my poor girl , OT : that : my thought of her. distressed : \ ' u. Since Jt does , I shall be more careful in : the future. my clear wife , and try I not : ti > talk of her. " - - Success ! Magazine London : has ' SOO.OBO one-room dwell ' era. ' ' J ' 'I I - / - . . , - < : ' ' ' . , " " " . ; ; ; ' : 'i'o : _ _ _ ' ' . . " ' ' ; . y - . . , \ n - - _ _ _ _ , . . . . . n . I . ' k - I _ I < ' ' t- . a.- _ . . . . . . . . . _ _ _ I TAHOPENS BIG fAIR . WITH ALASKA GOLD KEY President Sends Sparks Across w t' Continent Starting Pacific , Exposition. TAMES J.yHILI WAENS NATION , Magnate Sees Danger and Pleads for : Law Enforcement Instead of Law Making. .f President Taft , in the White House , at 3:15 o'clock Tuesday afternoon , pressed a telegraphy key of Alaska gold and sent a spark : across the con tinent that put in motion the wheels of tlie Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposi tion in Seattle , loosed the waters of its fountains , unfurled its banners , started its bands playing , released showers of daylight fireworks , called upon the saluting guns of the Ameri- can and Japanese fleets , set all the steamers in the harbor and all the lo comotives in the railroad yards whis- tling and brought forth universal re joicing from all Seattle. Ui ; ; Fair la ! Complete. The exercises at the world's fair grounds preceding the President's sig - I nal were carried out with military pre- cision : The exposition gates were opened at 8 : 30 o'clock. At 9:30 troops . from . : the United States army and navy , from the Japanese cruisers Aso and Soya and the State militia paraded through the grounds , under the com- mand of Colonel T. C. Woodbury , U. S. A. , and the column was reviewed from a stand at the head of the court of honor by exposition officials , visit ing governors and Admirals H. Ijichi and Uriel Sebree. The ceremonial exercises were held in a vast natural amphitheater sloping to Lake Washington. The program consisted of music , invocation by Cath- olic Bishop Onward J. O'Day , brief ad- dress by Director General I. A. Na- deau and President J. F. Chilberg , the long address by James J. Hill , chair- man of the Great Northern board , and it benediction by Episcopal Bishop Frederick W. Keator. . Mr. Hill said : "There are four great rvords that should be written upon the four cornet stones of every publiC building in this land , with the sacred- ness of a religious rite. These watch words of the republic are equality , sim- plicity , economy and justice. They are interwoven with every fiber of the na- tional . fabric. To forget or deny them will lead to every misfortune and ev ery possibility of destruction that rises now threateningly in the path of our country's greatness. "Frequent use of the phrase , 'our complex civilization , ' creates a vague impression that simplicity has been banished necessarily from the modern world by a kind- of natural evolution. Whereas it remains now , as always , the normal rule of a wholesome nation- al life. ' "We have complicated our lawmak- ing until , despite the high standards , the unimpaired traditions and the con- tinual labors of the courts , the admin- istration of justice is difficult and sometimes uncertain. The greatest service to the nation , to. every State and city to-day , would be the substitu tion for a term of years of law en forcement for law-making. 'Taft Semis Me.ssngre. The ceremony of pressing' the gold key in the east room of the White House Washington by which Presi dent Taft to-day formally opened the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition was simple. There was : a delay of fifteen minutes at Seattle in completing ] arrangements , and it was 3:15 p. m. Washington ( time ) when President Taft 'touched the golden telegraph in- strument. Practically the entire diplo- matic corps was present The message , which followed quickly after the cur- rent that put everything in motion was as follows : "The White House , Washington , June 1 , 1909. - Mr. : J. E. Chilberg , President Alaska-Yukon-Pacific ] . Exposi tion , Seattle , Wash. "I congratulate you and your asso- ciates on this auspicious opening of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition , and I congratulate the people of the great Northwest on the courage and enterprise they have shown in bring- ing it forth. The exposition , designed as it is to exploit the natural resources and marvelous wealth of ' Alaska and the development of trade and com- merce on the Pacific slope , should ap peal not only to the people of the West but to the people of the country at large. I trust it'will fully ] } meet the expectations ? of those to whose untir ing energies it owes its birth and that It will prove a source of instruction and education to its thousands of visi tors. WILLIAM H. TAFT. " President Taft and Senator Piles then made brief addresses. Finds "Fortune" "Worthless ; Insane. When he learned that $22,000 in pa- per money , which he dug up two weeks ago in a field while plowing , was worthless , William Murphy , a farmer living three miles east of Snyder , . . Okla , . lost his mind. Murphy guarded his find carefully for a week before he learned- that the bills were issuad by the Confederate States of Am- 'ica during the Civil\War \ . . . . \ : . , ' .S\ . > . ' ' " . , ' -0 _ . - _ . , ' - " , - > ' ' . 42 ' : , ' . - , ' ' . . - . , _ Onl _ L _ _ c s - A recent executive order was found to be the first step in the policy of economy and retrenchment contem plated by the administration. Its pur- pose ] is to systematize the purchase of r.upplies needed in common by two or more departments , to. procure such sup plies at lower and mora unifdrm prices and to create a General Supply ' Com mittee. This committee is to be made up of one representative from each de- partment and independent bureau and its duty will be to prepare a schaJtJle of all supplies needed by the various Departments and bureaus before the nd of each fiscal year. A uniform oiethod of ' . ad vertisement , inspection and testing is prescribed. , Desiring to find out independently of the revisionists in Congress what th " "ultimate consumer" may expect to get from a revised tariff law , President Taft has directed the Treasury De- partment experts to compile for him the approximate amount of duties on articles in common use as fixed under the existing. Dingley law and as pro- posed in the Payne and Aldrich bills. Considering such articles as clothing , furniture , tinware , foods , coal , etc. , the President asked that the duty be com puted on the average retail price of the article. For example , how much duty does a $2 pair of shoes pay in I each of the systems of tariff referred to ? I _ * * The appropriations committee of the Senate and House have now published the figures of the money bills passed at the last session of the Sixtieth Con- gress , the number of new offices creat ed and other information. The total of is . an in appropriations $1,044-101,857 crease of $36,000,000. The new offices and employments created were 10,120 in number , involving an expenditure of $11,170,899. Government ownership , of an ice plant in the city of Washington , is contemplated in a plan which Presi- dent Taft has under consideration for centralizing the purchase of all sup plies for all of the government depart ments. The purpose is to stop the practice ) of charging the departments excessive prices. _ * * _ William S. Washburn , until recent ly chairman ofi : the Philippine Civil Service Commission and a former em- ploye of the United States Civil Ser- vice Commission , has been appointed a member of the latter body by Presi- - dent Taft -in : place of James T. Will iams , Jr. , resigned. President Taft has named William Williams , immigration commis ion- er of the Port of New Work , the man who was forced out by the Roosevelt administration. This appointment was made without regard to the wishes of the local Republican organization. The United States army is to have an aeronautic field near Washington which will rival the aerodrome at Ber- lin and that at Issy-Les Moulineaux near Paris , where many famous avia- tors have startled the world with their performances. - * - * - Walter E. Clark , Washington corre spondent of the Seattle ; Post-Intelli gencer and also a member of the Nc\v York Sun Washington bureau , has been named by the President to be Governor of Alaska in place of Hog- gatt , resigned. _ _ _ * - : - Thomas H. ' Netherland , an expert penman , formerly" employed at the White House , but lately in the postof- fice department , broke down as the re- 'suit of overwork and committed cide. . : _ : . I James J. Hill called on the President I the other day. He declared that if I J Congress would only get through with the tariff , business would be good. 1t TRADE AMD INDUSTRY. Fruit promises to be a good crop in Minnesota this year. Near Fergus Falls , Minn. , prairie fires have done a lot of damage. , * Agriculture is to be taught in the public schools of Warren , Minn. Slot machine accident insurance pol- icies caniiot be operated . Minnesota. . This is the opinion of State Insurance 1 Commissioner Hartigan. 1a About : ; one hundred officers of the i National Retail Grocers' Association , t : left St. Louis in a special car en s route to the Alaskan-Yukon exposi- ) tion. tion.The' f The Superior , Wis. , Commercial s Club has indorsed the lakes to the gulf canal scheme and pledged the i support , of the organization and the r individual influence of the members of the club . to its agitation. c : The Alfalfa Food Mill : : at South Omaha for the preparation of stock- food , belonging to the M. : C. Peters Mill Company : , of Omaha , has burned. The loss is estimated at $125,000. With the closing of the Rational Tube Works at McKeesport , Pa. , .last of Sunday , the United States Steel Cor n poration took the first step toward 1 : what is understood to be the discon- ! : : I tinuance of all Sunday : work > n its p : mills in the Pittsburg district antj i later. : : throughout the country. q qIe Ie . 4 - . . . , . . . \ - - - ' - . . - . - I . _ . - .r- - - - - - - - . TEXAS Atm OKLAHOMA / SWEPT BY TORNADOES y 4 Village of Zephyr , Texas , Is Struck .t , in Night by 'a Terrific . - , , Windstorm : * ' ; " ' . . . " ' t , , . : , : . .Y i' FLOODS ADD TO THE PfRIL . -1 - ) ' . . Series of Twisters r in Oklahoma , . t . Leave Two Towns . Heap - of . Ruins. \ " " t" : ; * . . $ t % / -v t . . . . . . . . . , ; . . . - . ' l' t . ! I' . ' . , ' . 4 .1 A tornado of great ' fury struck , the little village of Zephyr : , in the % eastern portion of Brown County , Texas , : at 1 o'clock Sunday morning and left a path of death and destruction4 seldom - paralleled. The death list has reached ; - " - a total of thirty-two , and the number of seriously and fatally wounded ' will reach fifty. \ ! . . The storm formed half a mile south i west of Zephyr and swept down upon the village , cutting a path directly through the residence and business district. Nearly fifty houses were de molished. . Lightning struck a lumber yard and started a conflagration which destroyed : one business block. No . , ef - fort was made to fight the.fire , as the care of the dead and wounded victims demanded all attention. ' , ' A section hand rode a hand car to Brownwcod ; and spread the alarm. In two hours the Santa Fe Railroad was speeding a special train to the scene of the storm with nine surgeons and a score of Brownwood citizens. Hundreds of - persons directly in the storm's path saved themselves by taking refuge in storm cellars. More than a dozen 'bod ies were horribly mutilated. , County Clerk Thad Cabler and wife and two children , who had 'gone to Zephyr to spend the night , were kiljed. The big stone school building and two .church es were swept from the face ' ' of the earth. , Destruction Olclaliomn. . . . . . . - ; ( 33- Fifteen and perhaps . more persons were killed Saturday night in a series of tornadoes that devastated the Okla- " , homa towns of Key West and Depew. ' " Forty or more are injured. At least \ . . \ . , ten were killed in Key West Five are dead at Depew. The tornado swept over a wide stretch of farming coun try. Following the wind came a del uge of rain. Floods then added their terrors to the situation. The wreck age of Key West soon was overwhelm ed by the rising waters. Practically nothing was left of the town of 200' inhabitants. Rescuers hastened to\ \ the t place , but could not cross Salt Creek , which had become raging torrent. A few inhabitants of Key West cross ed the streat before the rise made it impassable. Depew was destroyed by a double twister that was formed from that / striking Key West and traveled in a : northeasterly direction and' another coming from the east. The tornado I wiped out Depew , then pushed north east , spending its force presumably a few miles forther on. Small torna- does followed in-'rapid succession in an atmosphere that was very humid. They rose high into the ' air , circled about and dipped. As many as five were observed during the display. The little tornadoes had spent their force when the big one came at 5 o'clock. Preceding and following it were ter- rific rain and hail storms. The streets of Stroud and Sapulpa were veritable rivers. , " - - , Seven Die in Xortlt Dakota. " Seven persons are known to be dead many are dying and over a score are seriously injured as a result of a tor nado which swept over northwestern North Dakota. The storm was - espe- cially severe at' Langdon , where the residence section of the city : was prac tically : wiped out , four people killed and twenty injured. . The tornado de- molished all of the buildings of the Jamestown Fair Association , ' the loss being $50,000 , and several other large , . buildings. , _ . . ; v , . _ , . . . . : ' ' . " . . . . . . . J" d---- . .i MOBBED BY : WOMEN ; IS DYI"VG. ' ' < < I' . . . . . ; 4 Sinn Accused of Slandering Tlierii Ia Driven from ' ToivJa : : 1 > y ' Victims. . George Englert , an English'coal : : : niner , died in Washington , Pa. , from Bounds inflicted by a mob of 250 ' -worn- m who drove him frQID the town of Manifold , , three miles north. En'glert ' , ' it is charged , had ! ' slandered women ind girls , had refused to heed warn- : : ngs to desist , and' , it is alIeged , % red he residents to stop him. He- was aved from death on the spot byHown fficials who rescued him from the in- uriated mob / and placed him on a street car with orders not to return. 3nglert's wife , who had just been re- eased from a local hospital following recovers- : from an operation , fainted vhen told of the affair and . is still un- ensclOp.s- 'With little ' hope of rec'over - . KILLED 33T QUARiEL.f. f. ' v'enHby ; Xcw York Farmer Slain by HIM lci ' - - XeIohlH } : " . . . Morris DonO\'an , a wealthy firmer' \ If ClYde , N. Y. , was killed . by hi- . . . : e - = bg hbor , Beckwith Tremper. The kill- " , ng occurred at the home of Tremper. Ie. Donovan and Fred . . , . i . Hart , an em- ploye ot Dono _ van ' s , spent the nigh * n the Tremper emper barn " drinking cMer A" ' uarreL was started and the killin- ' fol , ' owed. . . _ t . . t , / , , . ' * * : , , ' . . . . . . : ! ' . ' " ' - . ' . . . . - , ; . . . . . . . . . . : . . . .t' . . .J &l ! "