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THE YESOYIAN TERROR, Yirid Description of Great Ernp Horn Which Rivals Pom peii's Destruction. The Famous Italian Novelist, Marlon Crawford. Tell of the Terrors of toe Bif Volcano History of For aoer Eruptions. The whole -world looked on, awe struck, at the recem fierce outbreak of stupendous and .devastating force in the Bay of Naples. The eruption of Meunt Vesuvius is believed to be the most destructive since the days of Pom. peil, A. D., 79. The whole story of the eruption of 1906 is a sorrowful tale of stricken vic tims, devastated vineyards, rained hemes and terror-stricken, flying; peo ple, and it is hard to realize that the same scenes have been enacted there so many times before. Pliny, the noted ancient historian, described the eruption of Vesuvius in the year 79, in a series of letters to Tacitus. This letter described a dark cloud rising in a single pillar from the crater of the mountain and from this a column spread, and upon it rested a great roof, built by invisible carpen ters. Resting ever on its single pillar, like a great mushroom, this roof shut out the sky from all those wide acres extending sixteen miles away. The light ashes of the fire from Vesuvius descended like - snow upon Pompeii, burying it to great depths. Hercu laneum was drowned in a sea of vol canic mud. Those who have read the letters of Pliny find similarity in the description written by the noted novelist, Marion Crawford. There is probably no other American living who is eo well ac quainted with conditions as they exist in Italy. He has taken up his per manent abode in the Italian hills. The VESUVIUS IN life, customs and mannerisms of the Italian have been pictured by him in stories which have made him famous. in his cabled description to the New York Times Crawford stated that the recast eruption of Vesuvius had been grumbling for many weeks before the outbreak which did the Incalculable damage. Snaoka Two-Miles High. "An enorsMus volume of black smoke rises to a height of two miles above the crater," he wrote. "Incandescent masses of stene are thrown up 3,000 feet. A continuous southeasterly wind carries the ashes over Naples, which is s completely enveloped In darkness that for three days our communications by sea have been cut off. "Flssaree have opened far below the cne, emiting many streams of lava, ee of whloh has completely destroyed te town of Boscotrecase, which had 1,000 inhabitants. Another has reached the outskirts of Torre del Greco. Others kave destroyed thousands of acres of fertile cultivated land, with farmhouses aid stoek. "The great cone of Vesuvius col lapsed with awful thundering and flames, and the cable railway, the ob servatory aid the -large hotel near it were all tetally destroyed. The lava carried vast masses of burnt stone and sulphur its surface like dross on melted lead, and nothing was visible toward Boscotrecase but endless acres of dark scoriae, broken here and there by the greemlsh curling smoka of sul phur. "At eae fint we found a great pine tree, tern up by its roots and turned to Mack charcoal; the air was almost unbreatkable; the heat intense. The faces at the people who crowded upon the edge of the arrested stream ex pressed terror of exhaustion from re cent panic. Feeble Attempts of Man Useless. "When the stream of fire threatened Boscotrecase soldiers dug a wide ditch acress its patch in the hope of divert ing Its course, but the molten stream advanced like a colossal serpent of fire, turning Its head to the right and left as a snake does, but keeping its general direction toward the fated town. It was not till It reached the first house, sending up great showers of sparks, that the people finally fled for their lives. "I saw men, women and children, and infants whose mothers carried them at the breast or in their aprons. Dogs, toe, and cats were on the carts, and sometimes even chickens, tied togeth er by the legs, and piles of mattresses aid pillows, all srhlte with dust under the lurid glare. We ourselves could hardly breathe." This dispatch corresponds exactly in detail te Pliny's letters. The same flaeUag eveuataln and shaking earth, the sane sUAinc smoke and ashes, the same terrifying darkness and the same heirless, distracted crowd stretching vaia hands to their gods for succor. Originally Vesuvius was In the form of a single oone. Later eruptions have roken dewa the southern aide of the original crater, leaving the northern semi-circle, which Is called Monte Sosams. A smaller central cone had grow up within the ancient ruin. It is this laser oone that had Its top slews ot. ' Before the recent eruption the height of the mountain was about 4,000 feet lira! fer -,St i Ml In prehistoric days Vesuvius was probably twice as high, the top having been blow off. centuries before the eruption that destroyed Pompeii. Since the year 1631 Vesuvius has never been wholly at rest In that year 18,000 lives were lost The clouds of steam that came from the rush of water into the hot mass below the surface condensed and fell in a boiling rain that scorched everything with which it came in con tact The very sea drew back the skirts of its dark blue robe and then swept forward again far beyond its old limits. The last of the great convulsions be fore the recent one occurred in 1872. Then, like this one, there was a great lava flow, together with throwing up of burning rock and the fall of ashes upon the surrounding country. Vesuvius is one of a group of similar mountains in the Mediterranean Sea, its comrades being .Etna, Stromboll and Vultano, which last gave the name to all mountains of this kind. That, In turn, was called after Vulcan, the god who made the armor for the fighting deities of the ancient world and forged the very thunderbolts of Jove himself. His workshop was under Mount .(Etna. There the inhabitants of the hillsides heard him shaping great masses of iron with his terrible hammer stroke while the nameless slaves of the forge, dimly imagined creatures of that old day, blew the gigantic bellows and held great bars in place, while the master worked. The Greeks with even their learning, did not Inquire Into the scien tific reasons for the mighty utterings of the mountain; they knew what the awful roar of those volcanic mountains meant And our wise men, with their figures and books, know little of what is going on In the fiery caverns under the earth's thin crust Nature soon heals her scars. Al ready, we are told in dispatches, spots of green have appeared on the black ened sides of Mount Pelee, and It will not be very long before the olive and the vine and the clustering villages will find their way back again to the slopes of Vesuvius. C ERUPTION. TO RENEW OLD MISSION. San Juan Caplstrano Will Live Again After Long Years of Silence. All who have heard of the picturesque old Franciscan Missions of California will be interested to learn that San Juan Caplstrano, the most poetic of all these ruined structures, which contrib ute so much to the foreign look of "our Italy," is soon again to be made the centre of religious activity, and that after nearly a century of neglect its buildings are to be restored to their original estate. This mission is on the railway line between Los Angeles and San Diego, and by reason of being visible from the railroad is to Eastern travelers per haps the best known of all California missions, except Santa Barbara and San Gabriel, which are among the regulation eights for visitors to South ern California. With the restoration of San Juan Caplstrano and the re sumption of residence there by the Franciscan Brotherhood, it, too, will no doubt soon become a tourist resort The first year of the American In dependence saw work begun upon this ancient edifice in what was then a vast wilderness, inhabited only by Indians. The site is in a lovely, sequestered val- THE QUADRANGLE ley, which, beginning back in the can yons of the coast range, winds among grassy knolls and great treeless hills out to the Pacific, upon which It opens, three miles west of the mission. With the aid of the Indians, over whom the padres exerted both temporal and spir itual dominion, the Franciscans estab lished here the most pretentions of all the California mission churches. In stead of being constructed of the cus tomary adobe brick of the country,, it was built of stone, laid out In the form of a Latin cross, with a great, cloistered quadrangle adjoining. ' Here, besides administering to the spiritual, welfare of the Indians and gathering them into the fold of the church, the fathers set them to the care and the cultivation of the land, which yielded great wealth of cattle, . sheep, grain, N grapes and olives. . 1 - 2if ill Destroyed by an Earthquake On the morning ot December 8, 1812, all without warning, came a great cataS' trophe. While the church was crowded with kneeling worshipers a- shock ot earthquake visited the valley and top pled the great stone tower over upon the roof, crashing through which it buried the congregation beneath the wreckage of beams, tiles and stones, and upward of forty human beings loBt their, lives In the twinkling ot an eye. This earthquake ranks in sever ity with that of Charleston, in 1886. So great was the disaster that, although the mission continued to be conducted f v f ami a MJW S THE OLD WELL IN THE COURTYARD. for twenty-two years longer, no at tempt seems to have been made by the padres to restore the church edifice, and it and Its adjoining buildings and cloisters have remained to this day an imposing and beautiful ruin. Touched gently by Time's hand, dignified In out line and rich in color, It is replete with subjects for the artist and is the ad miration of every traveler. With the restoration of the buildings the in tention is to create here a college for the priesthood as at Sa'nta Barbara, and to make of San Juan Capistrano an important factor in the work of the Roman Catholic Church in Southern California. THE EOVE OF AlARIC. Beneath the outflung branches of a mighty oak tree, a giant who had stood sentinel In that lonely dip on the wolds for twice three hundred years, two men were standing, their ligures made more or less distinct by the rays of a big, conical lantern of antique pattern that the elder of the two carried in his gnarled and blood less fingers, a figure strangely akin to the giant tree beneath which he stood. An aged man was Zachary Doy, his back bent by years of hard labor such as few of the modern generation of la borers know; a man who had been an experienced farmhand, while the man beside him, his master, was still a puling Infant. The old fellow set down his lantern on the iron-bound earth.. His quaver ing voice stabbed the silence. "Now, do 'ee harken unto me, Master Alaric." he said slowly. "I've served 'ee faith ful, you and your feyther afore 'ee, for nigh on fifty year, and I tell 'ee master, that what 'ee do purpose for to do Is again all right and reason. This yere oak tree the Klngscoto Oak, as all the country-side do know her for to be ha bin here as a land mark and a pride for longer than us poor souls can reckon. To cut' her down do mean, as I be right well as sured, that Kingscote luck will fail wl' 'un. If so be" Alaric Kingscote broke in upon his garrulity with a forced laugh. "If Kingscote luck could fall lower than It has, Zachary," he said bitterly, "you need have little fear that I would touch bark with' axe. Now, hear me, old friend. This tree represents the last thing upon the farm that can bring in the money I must have to tide over the bad times In store. The merchants have offered me two hun dred pounds for the tree. There's only one rotten limb upon It They'll come tomorrow with their carts and take it away." He laid his hand upon the old man's shoulder. "Get you home to bed, Zachary," he added gent ly. "You can do nothing here. I'ts 0 o'clock now. By midnight, with OF THE MISSION. luck, the Kingscote Oak will be down." The old fellow looked wistfully In to the handsome face of his young master. ' "Master Alaric," he said hoarsely. "I've fifty-five 'pun. three shlllln' and fl'penoe apenny laid away Ik a hole In the floor o'my cottage. If so be as that'll save the Kingscote Oak, why ' "Go home with you Zachary." Broke In the young man roughly, though hla roughness hid aa emotion almost too deep for any wordar-"Go home, andH God blees yoUi old mend. - Zachary thrust his roughened hand Across hie eyes. ?. Without another word, a strangely pathetic bowed old figure, he turned and shambled off across the field toward the stile tnto the lane that led to the little thatched cottage that had been his home for in I MM JtL so many years. He never once looked back. For a few seconds Alaric King scote stood looking after him, then, with a strangely fiercer gesture, the young fellow flung off his rough tweed coat removed the Cardigan waistcoat that covered the breadth ot bis chest and turned up the sleeves ot his coarse flannel shirt L At the foot of the oak lay the wood man's huge axe that was to be the In strument of death, that was to cut short the growth of centuries. r Alaric Kingscote swung the great weapon aloft, and the -cold starlight ran along the shining steel. Like some Viking warrior of old like the re-embodiment of one of his Saxon forebears, Alaric brought down the tool of destruction with a blow that gashed deep Into the corrugated skin of the oak. The doom of the Kingscote Oak had been proclaimed. As he stood braced up for the second stroke, the bulging sinews of his fore arm responding to the generous rise of chest and thigh muscles, a curious sound from behind him caused him to swing round with a faint cry. Then he lowered the axe with smn.ing gen. tleness. " Another figure had appeared' upon the scene the figure of a woman, clad in a cloak of fur that hid the contour of her form. "Damaris." The word fell from the young man's Hps like a caress. "So you've come," he said softly. "You see 1 am as good as my word. The Kingscote Oak must go. It Is the last link .between me and the work housefor it almost comes to that" It was evident that the relationship between these two was something more binding -that the ordinary ties existent between oasual acquaintances of opposite sex. Each seemed to ac cept the situation as inevitable. Then the girl went on, hurriedly: "You'll catch cold, Alaric, dear, If you stand still without your coat In this bitter cold. Let me hold the lantern for you while you work." She snatched up the light He, ! obedient to her injunction, applied hla weannn with ranawAri vitmr Tha ' lamplight threw a warm glow over! nis weather-tanned face and muscular arms. For a time he labored on, his whole being concentrated on the performance of his herculean task. After a space he paused to rest. "A great wound on the mighty bole of the oak showed how sure had been his strenuous endeavors. When he ceased she broke iuto quick speech. "It seems incredible," she murmur ed, "that you, a Kingscote, of the same race, the same blood as ourselves. should be forced to toil like this like a common laborer," The man came quickly forward, and flung his arm around her waist. Their Hps met in a kiss that could not be mistaken .for a mere cousinly salution. "Damaris Kingscote," he said, steadily enough, "let us be frank one with the other. What are the facts? I am the poor relation the blot on the family 'scutcheon of the squire, vour father. He resents my proximity; loathes the very Idea of our love; therefore he has brought his batteries to bear upon me and mine. All that he could do to ruin me he has done, and heaven knows that he had been successful enough. The girl's eyes brimmed over with tears. Alaric was quick to note her ready sympathy and, he gripped his axe anew, the silence vibrating once more with the ringing cadence of his rhythmic blows. Presently he rested once again. "Damaris," he said, "did you ever hear the legend that runs in our branch of the family, that but for some strange whim of chance I should have been in the squire's place today, the ruler of the destiny of Kingscote Glebe Farm? From fathee-to son the tradition has been handed down that Nigel Kingscote, the cavalier, juggled In some unknown way with the laws of succession that It was not the son of the eldest son who was your own fa ther's ancestor, but mine; that could the truth only be known aright I should Be reigning at Kingscote Manor in stead of being what I am-a pauper,, fated to cut down the family tree to raise a pitiful Bum of money that must be procured." Damaris stood speechless and Alaric once more resumed his heavy task. Finally, after long and weary toll, the end came. With a cry to the girl, Alaric flung down his axe and leaped backward. -His hand sought hers. Side by" side drawn apart from the tottering giant, they stood as though spellbound, the only spectators of the end of so many hundred yean of silent, strenuous majesty. - -And even as the mighty tree went shuddering to its tremendous fall, a crack as of a pistol shot, foreshadow ed its overthrow. , The noise came from the one rotten bough that the tree had possessed a huge limb some half-way up its stem, which now de taching first from 1t parent crashed down at the very feet of the wonder ing couple. - ; ''' ' ; Nor was that all. A haetalllc tinkle accompanied the crash. Damaris was the first to recognise the solution of the puzzle. It was a metal canister a long, time-stained box of rusted tin, closed at both ends a thing of mystery, of untold possibilities. She picked it up, and as she did so one end fell away. The canister contained nothing but a stained yellow piece ot parchment, upon which something was written In a close and crabbed caligraphy, archaic, hard to decipher. Alario swung the lantern up from the ground. . . "What is It, DamarlsH .he asked Slowly, laboriously, the girl read out Mia fhliowina imaslnK declaration: - "Mayhap a day wlU come when that which L Nigel Kingseote, no set, aowu here m writing. In the year ot Grace, 1647, and do hide In the hole of the Klnncote Oak, may be sets out in the dears light of day. And even aa Esau ot old did sell bis ttirumgnt, so do U NlgeV Kingscote.' head of the house of Kingscote, renounce my right and the right of those who come after me to be the true and lawful possess ors of the fairs lands ot Kingscote Manor. .' .'Yet not voluntarily doe I this, but for the life of him, my son. Know, than, that I must flee the country Cromwell, the regicide,, hath dcreed that I shall die.. Therefore, have I given my Infant son to my younger brother James, who will bring up my son as his own.- - "Thus it may come to pass that the descendants of Nigel, my son, may be passed over In the right of succession by the descendants of .Richard, the eldest son of my younger, brother James, who stands well In the eye of Cromwell the regicide and renegade. "And that this be true, and that Nigel,' supposed younger son of James Kingscote, of Kingscote Manor, be really the eldest, son of Niomi Ktnva. cote, eldest son of Alario Kingscote, father Of Nleel nrt Jamaa anil thorn. fore heir to the Manor of Kingscote, ua Hereditaments, messuages, and all that do thereto appertain, and his seed hereafter him if ha Hm should be any, I do most solemnly swear and protest in the presence of witnesses. To which I do' set my band and. seal this sixteenth A- nt March, one thousand six hundred anl loixy-seven. . Signed: Nigel Kingscote. in the Presence of Rnnnrt Mnlnwarlnv Knight Banneret of Main waring Hall, in the County of Berkshire, and Anselm Wolf, Priest." The parchment fluttered - crisply from the girl's nerveless hands. "Damaris,- cried Alaric hoarsely "Damaris!" Coherent speech he could not find. The girl raised her head. "It la triifi It. la trna!" alia saM brokenly. "We, father and L are the usurpers! Kingscote Manor is yours. and we are paupers!" Not paupers, dearest, but partners, answered Alaric,- and in his eyes there was that which told her how Kingscote love stood wind and weather as steadily as Kingscote Oak. Squire Kingscote now sleeps with his fathers in the little Berkshire churchyard. But ere he died his de clining years were brightened by the generous forgiveness of "the undesir able poor relation." A young and sturdy sapling oak now fourishes on the spot where stood the ancient tree- a true symbol of the lasting power of Kingscote luck and Kingscote love. Answers. , . 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New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
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May 11, 1906, edition 1
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