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vol. v. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. JOHN A. BKOWN, Attorney at Law. Has established a law office In tbe Kahelmao balldlug. Will practice In all the court, of the state. SAMUEL STOKEOW, OIVIXj BNQmSER, U. 8. DEPUTY MINERALSURVEYOR. Office with Fred R. Kced A Co , Dudley Block. 11. J. SNIVELY, Attorney at Law. n*r-Office user Ysklms Nstlousl Bank, North Yakima. Will practice In all th* rourtsof tb* State and f. H. land otUcea. I. D. BE.VIS. • | B. B. BII.BOT. REAVIS A MILROY, Attorneys at Law. £4»T*-Will practice In all Court* ol the BUt*. special atti-utlon given to all U. 8. laud office businc... Nortb Yakima, Wash. i:.s»Fi. whit.ob. raio r*BB«B WHITSON A PARKER, Attorneys at Law. gift i IT, re In First N.tloual Bank Building. 8. O. MORFORD, Attorney at Law. Practice* In *ll Court. In the State. Especial attention to Collections. Office up Hulls. Yak- Ima National Bank Building. T. M. VANCE, ATTORNEY - AT - I_i.A.*W. Office over Flrat National Bank, special at tention given to Land Office bualneaa. 8. C. HENTON, JUSTIOEI of the FHAOHJ, NOTARY PUBLIC, U. S. COMMISSIONER. Special attention given collections and Notary work. Office over Yakima National Bank. B. M. SAVAGE. VV. W. MCCORMICK. savage a Mccormick, Physiciansand Surgeons Office up stslra In tbe Eahelmsu Building, Yak ima Avenue. Dr. Mccormick', residence 1. st hi. office wbere he cau be found at any time during the night. 4-21. O. M. GRAVES, DENTIST. All work In mi lino flrat-claaa. Local sneathet- Ica used to extract teeth without psln. No ebaree for examination. tar-t mice c ■ ver First National Bans. FIRST NATIONAL BANE of North Yakima. DIBBtrrOBB. J. K. L«wi., Theo. B. Wilcox, Ch*». Carpenter, A. w. Kngle, H. B. Scudder. Capital, f-100,000 Surplu*, •87,4100 A. W. Ebolb. Chab. Cabbbhtbb, President. Vice President. W. L. Btbihwbs, Cashier. DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. lots and Sells Eithange at Keisonable Rata. PAYS INTEREST ON TIME DEPOSITS. Do Ton Wait a M Meal? IP SO, CALL 014 Kay, Fay <fi Yung, RESTAURATEURS CrOBMgBLT BTllrllE a I, Th* *xceilent reputation of thi* Rest.ur.nt la b.iug maintained by the present proprietor*. MEALS 25 AND 50 CENTS. Open all Hours, Day and lift Sight is Priceless If You Have Defective Eyei —GO to— T. G. REDFIELD For Spectacles, Eye Glasses The only optician In the county whsr* yoe can have your eye* raeaaured on tboronf h aciantitic principles, lenses ground. II necessary to cor rect each particular case. No vtaual defects where glasses are required to complicated. We guarantee our fittiug to beabaolslely correct Oar instruments for measuring vli.i. defect* ar* tb* beat aci.nce ha. produced. Get Our Prices on Watches and Jewelry Before Making Your Purchases. T . REDFIELD, OPTICUS LSD JEWELER. Hop Roots IN ANY QUANTITIES, DELIVERED F. O. B. AT PUYALLUP. $4 AND $5 PER 1,000. C. H. ROSS & CO. The Yakima Herald. FOR SALE I BY Fechter & Ross. Birgaii LonL This v\n; Toir • olnran | a y S-* Somtlhing RtpleU Too Wut. With Offer* That BUILDING SITES Will Lots 6, 6, 7 ami 8, Btar i block 128, $000. ..... c! bin 1 and 2, block Iflvrslipatin , m\,ttM. rxcxXXXTXC^CCCiS Lots 1 and 2, block _. H 46, $050. Thty ls"u DWELLING HOUSES For c«|j,l Lot 5, block 84 — 6 room bouse with water. Ijllft new, cheap and on ' i easy terms. Lands Lots 13 ami 14, bk „ i 128, —gsosl sn«J roomy SSS SS^j house, $1,000, terms City «My* ' Lot 8, block 111 — sud large 2-story house, a good residence iv a Country j location. PrmAri. ii A DOUBe and two i roprT'T | lotg wegt 0 - Uie traL , k . n : cheap aod on easy l| terms. Ea«i 'j -_ Terms r^zxz^ j LAHDS If y Ten . seres hops — *** j poled and bearing; v. < hop house, press, etc. "m Will pay for itself the ■oner first year. Ten acres in section Ob I 36, township 13 range ! 18. Cheapest piece on fil v | the school section; im j prored. •"' Railroad land—3o6 f.nnlr. 9****. W tOttt tWttOB. taaaatt * ***- a -| road contract. Proprrll Selah Valley Lands s —$40 and $60 per acre. We Long time. „ Thirty-five acres, all Iti improved, house, etc., a , i il 2 1 .* miles from town, ..(■(•DDimodati* | tfaoo. fgg One hundred and ! sixty acres, well im 2^. *j^r^-*s^S*c| proved, near town, $00 per acre. Fechter j . & ROSS j IHSURASCE °P-JOsit*s We are agent, for lakiraa Ii Fire i Li,e and Acci' ii dent insurance. Our National jj companies are prompt is and reliable. Call and Bank j aw us. • THD "EXCHANGE," 0. W. JOHNSON, PROPRIETOR, (SUCCESSOR - TO -«M. - G. - WILLS.) HIADQUAKTXRS FOR TBI Celebrated: "Harper": Whiskies Th* flseat llqsor sold in tb* Called St*tes Contfortabl* qsartera and courteoaa treatment sre b*ld out to tb* public a. Inducement* for patronage, and tbe most popular snd purest make, ol flu* Wines, Liquors and Cigars ar* alwava to b* had at tbe bar. Don't forget tb* plsc*. Wills' old atand. Yakima .venue. . o GREAT BARGAINS —w Boots, Shoes ' AT— LEE'S SHOE STORE FOR CASH. ID T IMlyers Telephone 4B 1M ul Transfer Bit. WOOD FOR SALE. NORTH YAKIMA, WASHINGTON, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1893. •Jtow-Ay* -ypwv Bvooct?- I had a malignant breaking out on my leg below the knee, and wascuredsound and weu with two and a half bottles of |9K| Other blood medicines had failed BEES to do me any good. Will C. Keaty, ' Y u ,s»iil-,S.C I was troubled from ehlldho<*d with nn as* srravntesl case of Tetter, and three buttle* ol fe*S3F3i cured moiH-iinniieiiily. fjgJKltfß Waxla'rMskb, mSatmasat __ ■kaaaSM.T. Our book on Wood Bad Skin Diseases mailed tn.. gain Bruu-io Co., Atlanta, Ua. (listeria For Infanta and Children. Castorla promote* Digestion, and * overcome* Flatuleucy, Consti-atiou, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Fevorlshnesa. Thus the child ia rendered healthy and Its aleep natural. Caatoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. " Castorla I. no well Adapted to children that I recommend It as *up*-rior to sny prescription known to me." H. A. Archer. M. D., 11l South Oxford St., I;ii.uklj n. N. Y. "I use Csstorla In my praclici*. ami find it specially adapted toafft-ctiiitisof eh lib en." Alex. Romsthon, M. D., 1057 Ud Aye., New York. "From personal knowlislfire and obserTßtfon I con say that Castorla U an excellent nieaii-lne for cbllilren. serine: as a laxntiv,-ami re'ieiliis* the pent up bowels and BSBSrs] system very much. Many mothers have told me of Its ex cellent effect upon their chllilren." Ua. O. C. Osooon, Lowell, Mass, * Tax Cbbt.cb Cokpakt, 77 Murr»y Btreet, N. T. vi:.aui:; J "Aphrcditine" assa ■* Is Fou> o* A ft\P^*^ finite** POSITIVE r~^-**il WAHAICTM JbWtW * A) toci::ott.'ivform /<_> JJ \*Zf ' .... I'vo lidhoi-.j I* // J oranjrdliorderol V AX, >;\*>'r thSEoticrativoor. A± i *//'^ I 'Xj^v>K wh'-'-l'cr aritiui- / '/ y ;. --'*--' -■ fi.imtbcc-iccssive/ »**^' BEFORE nasolStlmnlanta, AFTEFI ' Tobacco or Or-ium, or 1 liroufli youthful iuj!sprt> , tlon,overim!'i'"crc3,di* ,aucnaa I/issof Brain Jrower. Wukilvin■-,,,1\*.-::i;r<!wn l'alnalntlia bafk.set i.na'i U'r ii nen.llyttei la, Nci \ ous I'ros tratlon, Nurturnai Vr.ni ulcna, Le iforrhna. l)ix- Blncss, M'.-iik llemory, I scf lviw*randlmpo tcncy.w! / hllr.- !--tc It 'tenlrailto prematura c.d sire ar.J laasnity. t*rlcs -Ti.iio a bo^, 6box«*a for | voo. K"nt b» ;r ".''.O'-. roceipt of price- A WRI lil-.x t VA.I ANTES 1* plven for every l,l.Coon!i-r*-'.-.-,vc ', • ii^nnil themoncy II a I'rntiancnt «• i I.not sfnetra. We bars tbouiandsnl lerlmnnlsli i>nmo d and youne;, of bothsosi'S,«.'..it i ' • I'l-.'ii jierriianently curt-d bytheuseofAphroil. '.:'■.. i irrularlrco. Addrcal THE APHRO f.iEDICINE CO. Wusuaii hrauch, Wiz. 27. f osilaho. oa Bold by H. 11. ALLEN', Druggist, North Yakima, Washington, A. L FIX <fi CO., REAL ESTATE AND I j>rSTJI* 4LTVCTU. V. O™mVAv Leu:. eßloCk KORTH YAKIMA. PiFiUv-TaKuu Nnrsery! A.T MOXSE. See What I fan. Get Prices for Cash, (heap 200,000 Apple, 1 «ud 2 year.. 125,000 Petite, ltaliau aud silver Prunes, 1 rear, 3 lo a feet. 100,000 I'each, Pear, Cherry etc. ICO.OOO Blackberry. Currants. Raspberry, etc. 50,000 Peach iv uormaut bud. 60,000 Prune iv dormant bud. 26.0110 Al Concord liranes. 10.00J Roses, ornamenlal Shruba and Trees. 10.1..0 English Hedge Thoin. 10,0>X) English Walnut. 1.000 Black Waluut, 5 years, 10 to 15 feet. Will make prices that cannot be duplicated. Warranteu true aud free from any iuaect peat. J. M. POLE. IMPORTANT • TO FARMERS AND BREEDERS- I bave a select <i - ss of m*res In foal to su A No. 1 Mambrlno trotting atalllou. Also Geldings and Colts. Those who are desiroua of buying *t alow price will find it to their advantage to enqutr* at my larm on the Ahtanum. Georße Dorffel. BtUfiU wsm All ilStlAlli. Tj| Best Cough By rup. Taste. Good CM El In tup*. Bold by dnjgflst. 3*4 _ McDERMID BROS., Contractors and Balers. Etslruates furnished. Repairing and tßroltig ***tly don* Shop on First St. north of A. BAB DISCOURSES ON LOVE. She Thinks It Hast Be Chained With a Wedding Ring to Be True. 11l Idi-iltil II > Mm- MaoiA* llrr Is irrini- « mi tempi fur Ihe *o-l illnl . iirisin.il Ncleiare, und Stays tlmi Sinn la I ii'klr. Reversing tbe speech that made Adam famous, 1 want to say that it was a man who tempted me—to rush in to ilefend mankind. lam not sorry that I did it, for it has proven to me what a lot of fie mis I have, and it has also shown to me how little one cares for ar, enemy when the an mint can be balanced. But this time it is a woman who is tempting me. She has written to mo the most «le lightfully persuasive letters, trying to in duce me to say siiiieUiing about love; that is, to give my opinion aliout it. I should personally have yielded to her, and she would have had v little book of her own, wiih my compliments, but w lien .mother woman, who says she is a Christian scientist, says that I am afraid to say what I think, I rush wbere angels nnd politicians fear to—into print. The wiiuihii who believes in Christian Krieiice shows how little she kuows. to begin with, because the very name, "Christian Science," is a hull that does not belong t.i Ireland. Christianity must have faith for us foundation, and scieuce ileiiiiinils prouf, and the combination of the two words is idiotic. From the stand point of Christianity she wants lo lie all things to all men, and, from her scientific outlook, she wants to put the science of medicine entirely out of the field. Love will do a great deal; but love, unbacked by medicine, won't take me through an attack of pneumonia, or set my fox ter rier's broken leg. What would that fox terrier think of me if I should telegraph to a Christian scientist to pray for his leg, and then let. linn howl with pain all night, while she was getting her mind firmly on bin? Bosh! That part of it is all nonsense. Give us all the Christi anity possible—(he world needs it. When it means love, kindness, consideration, patience and charity, but don't try to mix Christianity and science. They jar. But to return to love. Tho tendency of every ism is to have queer notions about love, and to make very glib speeches about the beauty of free love, meaning by that, not the love which is given without money and without price, but the love which has become so coarse and materi alized that it lacks soul, and that the mere outer shell of the woman is to be tossed around and belong first to one man and then to another. That's pretty plain speaking, but it is the truth. And it is what all this nonsense about affinities and a love that is greater than mere con venlionalties and a love that doesn't rec ognize the bonds of the world mpans. No matter how pretty, no matter how clever it may be put, it is always the same old sorrowful, dreadful story. A.l ESSAY OK LOVE. Would you chain love? asks my writer. Yes, I would. As far back as we can find a picture of love, he .only hovers round like a buttterfly, until he is really caught, and flien he is chained, perhaps with roses, perhaps with ribbons, but always in some way. Now, the way to chain love to-day is with a wedding ring. Then he is yours, and all you have to do ia to keep the naughty dimpled boy, and see that from a boy love, be grows into a great manly one, made beautiful by per fect affection, and ready to put about you the protecting arms of sympathy and possession. That's what I tielieve in do ing with love. And it is a treatment the little rogue likes. Every now and then my heart aches for some woman who hasen't realized this, who, because she was imaginative, bocause she waa believ ing, and because she was ignorant, list ened to all this fiddle-faddle about love making its own laws, tlie desirability of doing away with the marriage law, and the beautiful heart unions that would re sult. Well, she forms a heart union, so called, and after a little while—after the first blush has faded —she finds hersell wondering why, if the man loves her, it wouldn't be just as well for him to rec- oguize conventionalities, and marry her, because she doesn't like to have her women friends not speak to her; she doesn't like to feel she is ostracised; and, even though he don't believe in it, if he loved her, she doesn't see why, simply because it is the custom, he won't make it all right for her. IS MAN A SINCERE I.OVKMAKER? He never does make it all right. Man is the most conventional creature living. He loved her well enough to want to get possession of her, aud he was willing to use any argument lor this purpose, but, having gained what he wished, he doesn't love ber well enough to be considerate of her, or not to weary of ber. And she, poor soul! Well, sometimes she antici pates the day of parting, and Bays good by to him. 1 know one woman who said it just before she fell into the river; und who knows whether that was accident or intent? Sometimes the treatment she has received from the world and thi. man driven her to a dreadful trade; and where she used to talk of love, she now talks of money; but much oftener, snd this is greatly to the credit of women, she is driven to caring for herself, and get ting along as best she can. Oh, no. My Christian Scientist, you are mistaken. Love must be chained or else it isn't love. It's a naughty little boy called Desire, who isn't willing to have the golden circlet put about him; and it is just as well to remember that the motto of that same wicked little boy is this, snd the whole story is told in it: "Possession is satiety." THI lIANOKKOIS HABBlrll MUI. Sometimes love takes another form, and this, my dear little Southern girl, seems to be the one in which lie has come to you. Don't trust him; be isn't love, he is lust. He sppeara as Benedict, ths married man. He whispera to you of a marriage made in early youth, of uncon genial, tiresome hours spent with his wife; he whispers, oh, so seductively, hit li"!iih never met a woman befure who so appealed to his heart and his brain. He knows how to be patient with you; how to say sweet nothings to you. and he seldom makes mistakes. Socially he is a success, and you are fi.ttt4#ed by his attentions. lie has more monet than Ihe younger men, whose intentions are more honorable, and, therefore, he i-un give you more of the pleasures of life. All this may be very nice, and th" heart of Benedict, the marrieil man, will trot out to meet other hearts juat as long as their cases ure the bodies of young and pretty wosien, and be will be faithful just as lung as you can amuse snd interest him ; but if you lose some of your charms, if you develop a few pains aud aches, jiißt so certainly does Benedict, the mar ried man, "seek for a young and more charming woman. And eventually, ao much is mankind given to observing the proprieties that Beuedict, the married man, takes back his miserable, timeworn heart, and lavs it at the feet ol the woman who bears his name. Usually, for only women and liod know how to forgive, she takes it up joyfully and welcomes it back home, as was tbe prodigal son bo long ago. HAS THE HEST OK IT, AFTER ALL. My dear, the world is wicked, so they say, but the wife has always the best of it. She first has the love of the young man. Once or twice there nniy come to her the idea that her husband looks with pleasure upon some other woman, but, with tbe wisdom of the serpent, she knows if she waits quietly he will return to her and find her the veritable joy for* erer, satisfied in thinking that she under atanda him and knows his ways. When old age appears it is true that neither is a novelty to the other; but when one is old one iau't seeking for new things; one wants old friends aud old loves, and there comes at this time a deal of affection be tween husband and wife, the result of many yearß' acquaintanceship, and, beet of all, of that strongest bond in the world —the parental one. It may be that about them are their children's children; it may be that all this affection is centered on one little grave; but it is there, and that Is tbe reason why, putting aside even the moral and social obligations, the wife has always been and always will be, pray Ood, the strongest among women. LOVK, SI'NBIIIMX AND PEACHES. The girl who wrote to me said she didn't want me to preach. I wonder if I have done it. If I have I am unlike most preachers, for I believe what I aay. Love is said to come like a thief in night. I don't believe it. I believe love, like a perfect peach, is the result of careful training; of plenty of sunshine and of no cold, biting frost; that it needs to be cared for and protected alike from too great heat, or too great cold; too many showers or too fierce a drought; but al ways it wants care, and given this care it will be as perfect a specimen of fruit as ever a gardener dreamed of. Neglected, it will be tasteless, shapeless, lacking bloom, and without the intangible some thing that makes either love or a peach worth having. My dear girl, you are quite too anxious for love, and you are not willing to test it, and see if it is really love, aud if it is worth the train ing. You arc like most of the dear, de lightful women of our own country ; you are in too much of a hurry. Someliody said that womankind will never have reached the great art of repose until she is willing to appear ignorant of many things she really knows. Voltaire said the wisest woman he ever met told him there were three follies of man which al ways amused her : The first was climbing trees to shake the fruit down, when, if they waited long enough, the fruit would full itself, the second was going to war to kill one another, when, if they only waited, they would die naturally; the third waa that they should run after women, when, if they refrained from it, the women would run after them ! Now, if you will juat reverse that last, we can all agree with Voltaire about that woman's wisdom. Catarrh Cannot be « urril With local applications, as they cannot reach tbe seat of the disease. Cartarrh ia a blood or constitutional disease, and iti order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quasi medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, snd is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combineil with the beat blood purifiers, acting directly on tbe mucous surfaces. The perfect combina tion of tbe two ingredients is what pro duces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F.J.Cants* & Co., Props., Toledo.O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. (Mm eoppEi^ J^lY««D^^-l»*^, J=l%**>~^ +** H-ZEIsVPah? ("tUARANTftn. i in Diamond Necklace. In connection with the French Panama scandal should be recalled that other great French scandal, which fillt>d all Kurope over one hundred years ago and contributed no little lo swell the Bits and increase the horrors of the French revolu tion just then abrewing. Bince no refer ence has been made of tlieold soandal, it is ■lelermined here to supply "a long felt want." In 1713 ths napoleon and messiah of all fraud, Caglioatro, had duped.all Eu rope exi-ent Kngland, where he failed), and had reached and ensnared Cardinal de li'.tiaii. when the Countess Lamotte- Valnis nee Vatoia—a desrandant six gen erations off of Henry 11, by his bastard son, Henri de St. Remi—27 years of age, poor, a sort of milliner, not pretty, but somewhat attractive, saw her way to fortune—as she Imped, to famo without furtune, as it turned out —and became the .Inper of Dtiper Caglinstro, snd duped de Rohan, or, at least, snatched from Cag liastro the prey he had won in the cardi nal. Cnrdinnl de Rohan had been embassa dor at Vienna, and had received the dauphinesse, Marie Antoinette, at Stras buri;, but he had been recalled w : the instance of the pimm Maria Theresa, and had unfavorably impressed Mnrie An toinette, so that wln'ii she became queen, upon the death of the ilissolute Louis XV, he found himself in utter disgrace with king and queen, and unable even to procure an interview. Perhaps psrtly moved by thiret for a liason with a beau tiful queen of the proud bouse of Austria, but chiefly by the courtier's desire for place, power and court favor, he moved all Franco to regain his lost position, un til gaining queenly favor became a mono mania. Just before the death of Louis XV, the i-ourt jeweler, lin'lnner, had planned the making of the finest necklace the world had ever seeu. It was intended for the king's mistresß, Dubarrv, aad was .allied at $-100,000. The smallpox in the person of Louis XV killed the only fool mad enough to spend $400,000 in a diamond necklace for mistress or queen. Furgot had found a way to pluck tbe goose without making it cackle—his defi nition of tho true art of taxation—but the goose had been plucked until it had triumphed over the true art of taxation and begun to cackle most vociferously. Marie Antoinette looked at Biehmer's necklace, but the French court, tbe goose cackling, the revolution brewing, the devil to pay and no pitch hot—needed money more than diamond necklaces— needed as Marie Antoinette told Bti-hmer, "Line of battle-ships more than diamond necklaces" fur the war with England. r.ii-luiii'r cried hia great wares in all the courts in Europe. At first a matter of pride, it became a matter of financial life or death. Both motives combined to make his desire to dispose of ths neck lace a monomania. "Let me sell it you or let me drown myself," be said to Marie. "I cannot buy; a third course is open to you—break it up aud sell tbe magnificent diamonds; and as for drown ing you can do that at any time without my permission," said the queen. Break it up, pride in it would not allow; sell it he could not —the only fool of that folly was dead and Dubarry on half pay— drown at least be did not. * Here were two monomaniacs — one athirst for a woman's favor, perhaps from mixed motives, chiefly for place and power and courtiersbip; the other ahung ered to dispose of the thing be made, with that intense interest every man takes in bis own creation, turned to monomania. Both, in pursuance of their respective objects, were boring all France, until both were known aB common bores, to be dodged at every corner and alley. Both were in the plastic atate of dura bility. Countess l.amotte, with her small pen sion, millinery of small profit, was just then flying back and forth to de Rohan's quarter of France, seeking to regain some part of her dissipated ancestral estates. She had some sort of access to the royal back kitchen and to Marie Antoinette. She got wind of the diamond necklace; perhaps had some knowledge that Marie wanted, but wouldn't buy. She had heard of de Rohan a monomaniacal seek ing for queenly favor, knew his ricbes, and found him the dupe of Cagliastro, j beset witb Cugliostric magic, Egyptian masonry, theosophy, spiritism, mind reading, materialization of the departed, and all that "rot" of the utterly akeptical fools of this world, who deny all good and believe all tomfoolery—or deny the tomfoolery that besets and taints all good with superstition only to believe all tom foolery on tbe side of bad. Why shouldn't de Rohan be her dope? And so she made him. Carlrle aptly makes this milliner one who linked this ADDRESS: SAN FRANCISCO. CAU hook and eye, de Rohan and Bcehmsr, with t'ieir resjiective monomanias. With messages from de Rohan, and even with forged notes, so skillfully done as to deceive an old courtier—with a monomania; with even a midnight meet ing in tbe Versailles garden— a lady of shady business, Mills. Ellira, who de scribes herself one with a "moderate cus tom," very like the queen in stature and appearance, personating tbe queen—an interview aptly interrupted and tbe sim ulate queen hurried off witb a "Come, quick I quick I"—a rose dropped, howsver, with a "You know what that means"— s rose prized by de Rohan and kept in a costly cabinet. Patiently, slowly, this princess of fraud, who out-frauded Cagliastro, works her wiles, excites her dupes until tbe diamond necklace is sprung. Then comes the nice, critical test of her art. She delays, makes de Rohan fret, the queen coquette, Marie, will—the necklace?—yes— wants Hi ves—hesitates-is afraid. • At laat she will, and a contract between de Uohan and Boebmer is drawn up and signed—first payment in sis months, de Rohan, surety. It is returned with marginal note, Marie's hand-writing: "Bon: Marie Antoinette de France." The "De France" is vulgar, smacks of ths low position of the forger. Always some thing in fraud does so exhibit fraud as not tbe real; but tbe inflamed dupes here, as inflamed dupes always, overlooked it. Bon, then, the necklace is delivered. That eve de Rohan takes it to the fair go-between and diabola ex machina. Most timely tbe queen's chief valet en ters in the queen's uniform—being ths very forger, in fact, perssnating valet; and de Rohan delivers ths necklace. And, whisk, tbe forger is off to Holland, and Count de I.ait.otte is off to London, the great necklace broken np and sold — queen, de Rohan and lin-bmer never the wiser until six-monthly pay day and no first installment. But the fair duper brings £3,000 from the queen aa interest —queen sorry, but a little involved—as truly the French court is—csn't meet first payment, but will pay interest. Bcebmer must have payment: creditors, bank ruptcy, private devil to pay and no pitch hot—as well as public devil to pay and no pitch hot In all France—goes to court, interview with the queen, de Rohan sum moned, arrested — but believing them genuine, with dishonors canon and law of honor, manages to hsve the queen's notes and rose casket burned. Cagliastro arrested, fair go-between arrested, nine months' trial, all Europe filled with scandal, queen in tears, reputation un jtibtly ruined with all France at a critical period, when all of down-trodden France believed anything of a court so long snd so traditionally vile, and when Marie's reputation was most needed by her and by Louis. Tbe trial resulted in tbe acquittal of de Kuban and Cauliosiro. The first was a dupe of a fool, but he had done no crime. The second, doubtless to Ida own dis gust, had escaped being in the one gigan tic fraud that dwarfed all his great achievements. Tbe fair go-between was branded "V" for Voleuse (thief), and condemned to life imprisonment, but escaped. No other scandal in tbe world has approached this of the diamond neck lace. Allowing for changed times, tbe I'anstna scandal is but tbe outcropping of that corruption which has always been excessive in France, involving court, princes, kings, queens and nobles as no where else in the world. Curiously, woman, sensuality and pas sion have figured little and almost not stall in the Panama scandal. Cuiiously, woman as an object of passion, sensuslity snd Intrigue for love's sske—so called— did not figure in tbe diamond necklace scandal, even at that superennial French era. What fruit the first bore, wedged in with other influences rushing toward and absorbing all into the revolution, we know. What tbe Panama scandal may do, or be the cause of doing, is yet in the future. The fact that M. far not, the ex ecutive and responsible head of ths pres ent government, is free from any taint of complicity makes tbe outlook now only for purification and reform. Had he be come involved a change in the govern ment would bave inevitably occurred. Tbe reader who desires to go into this ' most romantic of all scandals will find the two Cagliostro papers and the dia mond necklace of Thomas Carlyle mat ters of verity and history surpassing any I novel, although rather scenic pictures than direct narrative. Choice Seed Grain—Wheat, Oats. Bar ley and Corn for sale at the North Yakima Roller Mills. 6tf All kinds of real estate bought and Bold by O. M. McKinney, in (he Syndi cate building. Mf NO. 10. Jos. R. Banks.