fox the Tormi. "Oh! Pad.lj, pUmr "I tm alrawl 1 couldn't, nick. Yon omit mnrmber that you are only a little man, and that bmnoho u very fnnky." "1 know, dad, but Tom got a pony (or Chriatmat, too, and ha can rid anywbtre b cliootn." "You furgt tnat Tom it U, while you are not yet tm. I am willing that you ahould ride when William can go with you, but you mutt not go ajoti." Bo young Dak Wilmer tried to be eon tented, although there waa a tore pot down deep in hit heart. All 01 hn chume rode, and not one of tfiem had to hare a horrid man trotting along behind. It waan't ritiht that he ahould be treated like a baby, when he waa fully at tail aa Tom and the other fellow, No one could guess that he wai nearly three yeara younger. He went aor rowfully out to Broncho atall, and put liii own curly head aire i nut the eoft dark mane of the young thoroughbred. For teveral weeka after hie father's man date had gone forth Dick turned a deaf ear to all of Tom entreatira, and endeavored to forget the neat little footman while dath tng through the long, winding country road. But a day came when all of Dick'i good resolution! were thrown to the wind. It waa Saturday. Mr. Brown, hit tutor, had juat left the houee, and the leaaun booki were put away until Monday. So, with a free tieart, Dick bounded downttaira, buckled on hi high riding boots, slipped into his heavy coat and aet hit scarlet cap well back on hie curly head. Mr. Wilmer had gone to Washington on business, and Mr. Wilmer waa out calling. Dick knew by eipeiienot that it would probably be dark before she would return, and it waa too lonetom in the house. Even Mr. Brown, who bad been expected to tay, wa telegraphed for, aa hi wife waa taken sud denly ill. So when left atone Dick ran down to V U liam' room, over the stable. His hand waa on the knob, and he opened his mouth to call the groom. Juat then Tom's mock ing voice cried: "Go on, baby; call your nurse!" Dick wheeled around, hi deep blue aye all ablate with indignation. "I am not baby, and you know it, Tom St iraer." "Then why do yoa always have him," pointing a disdainful finger toward the closed door, "tagging after you? When yoa are a man youll have a keeper, I sup pose." "I won't have you talking that way tome. I'm not a baby, and you know I don't want William and I only have him because dad said I mutt!" cried Dick, aturdily. "Don't yon ever expect to have a mind of your own I dare yon to go to-day without him!" taunted Tom. "Dad said I mustn't." "William isn't there; he went out juat as I came in, so he can't go, and you know Henry is driving your mother' horsee." "What shall I do, then?" Dick stood for a moment debating. It was a glorious day, cold and clear, except for a heavy bank of clouds slowly rising in the north. It was tco lovely to stay stuffed up in the houee all the afternoon. "It won't hurt you. Ill take care of you, and we'll only go on the nearby roads. Come on, Dick," tempted the visitor. "I ought not to," aaid Dick, slowly. It was to hard to refute, for he wanted so much to go. "Do at you like," aaid Tom. '1 am go ing." And he carelessly threw himself on tne waiting pony. Just at that moment a low, sorrowful whinny came from Broncho's atall. That decided Dick; he would not be gone long, i-H Ire would be very careful oh, very oarel'ul. At first his conscience pricked him a lit tle, but once out in the toft, warm tun ahine, and (ralloping twiftly down the long roads, he forgot hit scruples and never be fore had he enjoyed a ride so much. It was strange that neither of them noticed when the sun tank behind the clouds until they ' were completely covered with a soft while veil of snow. "Come, Tom, let's hurry home," called Dick, fiigntesed at the thought of the hour. "it s jully now I am not going until the ground gets covered," laughed Tom. "1 tell you it's goir g to .be a bad storm. I am going home now, Tom, and you can come wnen you please." Dick wheeled his horse around as he spoke, and galloped in the oppoMte direction. "Hi, I fay, Diak, come back!" called the older boy, but ha was already out of hear ing. Tom shrugged his shoulders and rede merrily on. It was dark when Mr. Wilner rtaiheu home an:! found his wife in tears', and nearly wild from anxiety. It was bitterly cold, and already the anowiall waa quite cup. Uetween her sob Mrs. Wi.raer told Urn that Broncho had just come nome wna tie mojd.t ii.rr.ed. Mr. Wilmer did not hesitate an insant. Tnere wan only one boy with whom Die could have gone, and very soon the anxious father was catechising Tom Stinier. "Dick hasn't got home yet?" Tom asked, a ten iiied look coming over his faoe, "So. Did you make him go?" Tom locked down. There was no use in denying it. Suppose Dick was lying hurt yr fioztn in the woods. "Yes, fir; I asked him to go, hut I didn't think it would hurt," said Tom, eloivly. "Ccme with ma, air, and show me wnere he left you," commanded Mr. Wilmer, iternly. It was not an easy task, for the blinding snow made them almost lose their way in ;he moat familiar roads. Hours were sjicnt in the ticarch, and Mr. Wilmer, Mr. Stinier, their pervanls and the neighbor lonki'n nn- lil they were discouraged. Suddenly a joyful yelp from Dick'i dog, great mastiff, brought the half frojen nd t.-,;:ttter, and tne dim lanicrn light ihed a faint red glow upon a small (igure, ying hail buried in a drift, while beside him, with head drooped, stood the mastiff. Tenderly the father lifted his unconscious boy and carried him home. No one suffered as mud as Tom during the doctor's con notation, huddled up in a little heap out ride Dick's door. Hours wore by, and still no ound from the room. At length the door softly opened, and the, kind old family phyicia:i c-.me oat. "Why, Torn, what tre you doing here?" "Is he is he dead?" sobbed Tom. "No. my boy; he is very much alive, and in a few weeks he will he a well as you are. Was it you who took him?" "Yea, doctor," aaid Tom, manfully; "1 despite myself for it; he didn't want to go, and 1 taunted him into it. Iam much older than he is, too. Don't you think he will always hate tne?" "I think, on the contrary, that you and Dick will be betUr friend than ever. You save learned the the way of the trans gressor is not aa enviable one," remarked tb old doctor, aagely. And the doctor's prediction came true, for- in their boyhood, university and man ' hood day Dick Wilmer and Tom were n-parable.-N. Y. Tribune. THE CATFISH AND THE CAT OF POCHUCK WHEN th man who alleges that his residence it over to ward Pochuck cam this time he seemed laboring under an emotion which he w aa endeavoring ti suppress. "If newt from Pochuck," aaid he, dropping into hi chair and mopping hit face on hi sleeve. "It's news from Pochuck, and it' great. But I wouldn't 'a' believed it. Ho, air, I wouldn't 'a' believd it." "And I won't I" taid Bald J, the land lord, quickly and positively, "But I teen it!" (aid the alleged Po chuck citizen, reproachfully. Yet doubt ttood revealed on th landlord' face plainer than th wart on a crook-neck aquaah. "You believe there' holler itumpa, don't you?" aaked the man. The exittenc of hollow (tump couldn't be denied, even by Baldy, the landlord. "And a to jailer cat," the man went on. "There ain't no doubt about jailer cats, it there? And jailer cat hat kitten, don't they?" taid the wan derer from over toward Pochuck. "Not if their name i Tom, tbej don't," aid De Witt Green, of Jollj Farm, who i bound to have thing kept atraight or know the reaton why. The Pochuck citiaen having ettled that point to th atitfaction of all, it wa admitted that thr could be no doubt that jellow cat had kitten. "And there' catflth, ain't merer the man asked. "You'd think thre wa," aid Baldj, the landlord, "if jou'd be here tome time when I've been fishing for 'em!" Some folk would have wondered' whj nobodj aaid anjthing after that for quite a tpell, and whj even the man from Pochuck educed: but the land lord didn't eem to notice thi behavior. "And aa to familie of young cat fish." aaid the man, after awhile. "Sech thinir hea been heard of, hain't they?" Of eourae theT had. Certainly. "Catfiah and their joung Uvea In water, don't they?" asked the bearer of new from Pochuck, intent on set ting himaelf trair . No one had anj record of catfiah livintr more than a day or 0 on o - - land. "And nobodj that ha read about Xoah and the flood ha anj doubt that water gits high, now. and then?" asked the man. The fact waa well known. "Well, then," said the Pochuck cit izen, with a look of triumph at Bald v. the landlord, "I seen 'em all!" "When did TOU see the water?" asked Baldy, the landlord, malicious ly, and ' Farmer Bill Leonard, who lives opposite Goose Pond Moun tain, said: "Shame!" and Farmer Green aaid? "Tut, tut, Baldy!" The man who stakes hi word on his home's being over toward P chuck cracked the thumb on his right hand and three finger on his left, as if defiantly, ana saia: "Them's the news I've brung over this time, and I wouldn't 'a' believed 'em. First place, I'd been down to a Sprout Hill stone frolic. If jou've never' been to a Sprout Hill stone frolic it's a leetle hard to give jou all the n'ints a Sprout Hill stone frolic has. "When I got home from the frolic in the evenin', Uncle David looked me over and I ee he was kind o' begrudgin' me. " 'I see it was a hummer,' sajs he. "I said it was and I went to bed and forgot to milk the cows. Next morning I thought I'd walk over to the river to see if the water had fell much, 'cauae it had been uneom- promiin' high. I ee that it had fell j consider'ble, 'cause a big holler i. stump that had been alL covered with water was showin' sbove it for more ; than two foot, but the holler in the stump was full o' water jit. "I sot down to rest a spell, and as I sot there what should 1 see Dut a catfish raise up in the water inside that toiler stump and peek down over the edge o' the stump. I never seen a bigger catfish than that one. and I've seen some all gozzlin' big ones in them Drownded Lands waters. "When the catfish seen how far below the top o' that stump the river had got, it looked scared, I tell yon, and it dropped back into the holler. 'That catfish has been hatchin its young ones in that stump, not tliinkin' about the high water, I'll bet a hoss,' I says, 'and it has been ketched there unbeknownst to it.' "I hadn't more than said it, when up to the top came the catfish again, and she had her mouth full o' joung catfish. She give a flop, and out o' the stump to the water she went. She released her mouth ful o' young ones, gethered herself together, and sprung back into that tump. In less than ten seconds out she jumped ag'in with another mouthful o' joung ones, released 'em and back into the stump. "Five time that catfish went in and out o' the holler stump before she got all of her young ones out safe, and awaj she swum, the whole big litter of kitten fish finlerin' along in her wake. "This was interestin', and I sot there wonderin' on it, when down in to a dead tree that lny out from the bank into the river maybe ten foot or more a yallrr cat came trntiin' She was the vallerest cat I ever 'ee and the little kitten thnt waa fc'ie. In' rights at her heels wasj jest as jailer as the cat was, "The old cat prnnced out on ti the log as fur as she oMl git. am. that brung her close to the water She lerooched down, and tha kitten squatted on the log Jest behind her and said nothin'. "There's golnVto be some doln' here,' say I. 'I feel it In mj bones,' I ays. "And sure enough. It wasn't long before the (loin's begun. Thej start ed in with the old cat jnbbin' one of her paws down and snatchin' somethin' out o' th Water. As she rix her paw I see It waa full o' somttli!n' that wiggled anil squirmed like all possessed, tryln' to git away. When tha cat sea what was that she had she spread a Notice. My wife, Julia Cyrus and I huve ('liortitod for all tinio to cunio, and I will not be roejHin(illo for her in anyway, or any debts she may con tract. " V. II. Cyhus. TO CUHK A 101,11 IN ONK DAY. smile all over her face. Hr paw was full o' joung catfiah, and If there Is one thing that creep or flies or twlmt or run that cat like better than another It's cat fish. "The old cat picked out a couple o' the fish and passed 'em back ti her kitten do the log, and gobbled the rest o' the handful herself. They tickled her palate so that she dabbed both paws down In the wa ter and brung up a mess o' jrouni; catfiah in each one, and her and the kitten got awaj with them and smacked their Hps, "Then I looked a little closer and seen the old catfish that had rescued her family from the hnlrer stump. She waa lajin' bj the leg. lookln' scared, and I seen thst most of her family o' joung ones was missin'. That cat,' savs I, 'la swoopln' that catfish's familj off the faee o' the earth, so to speak,' says I, as lure as wasps astingln'!' anys I. "The old catfish haon t jest got on to what was goin' on y it. but when the jailer cat on the log reached down and scooped out another handful of the satflsli familj and divide up with her kitten, that old catfish actuallj turned white around the gills. - She seen it all at last, and with one all-wollopin' slash of her tail the jumped onto that log like a britrhj cow goin' over a barnyard fence, and Je-e-e-willikens borax! maybe she didn't swat that yaller cat! She swept that jailer cat off o that log as if she hadn't been nothin' more than c feather. Then the catfish stepped bsck Into the water and waited to se. The yal ler cat scrambled back on to the log, and her dander waa up as high at it could git. Oh, but she waa mad. "She prnnced up and down the log o minute, and at it ag'in she went, scoop in' out young catfish and scatterin' 'en, to the winds so fast that I see there wouldn't be one of 'em left to tell the tale unless tile old catfish got her sec ond wind pretty quick and done some thin'. "And she got her second wind, and riz up ag'in that yaller cat ag in most exilaratin' for to see. Seems to n for five minutes here wasn't nothin' to be seen on that log but a whirlin' streak o' yaller sort o' mixed up with a whirlin' streak o' black, and cat cussin'. Merciful man! I jest bail to plug mj fingers in my ears, I couldn't bear to hear it so! "When the whirlin' and back-tnlk quit, the cattish waa back inithe vvMer. There was catfish hide stretched here and there on the log 'most enou;li to make a raddle, and enough yr.licr had scattered about to stuff it with. The yaller cat was sort o lickin' hersell here and there, and the cattish wus glarin' at her. "The kittin' was standin' on the lojr with her back 'way up, and her tmi swelled like a roliin' pin, and she win spittin' away at that catfish fierce a; wildcats. Tne last one o' the cattish', family had been swept off the face oi the earth. "The catfish, seein' thnt the old cat's kitten was still left, made up her mind that she'd put an end to the cat's fam ily and sort o even things up, h. si.e sprung back on to that log, grabbed the kitten, and swallowed it, whole and alive, right before its mother's eyes. "Jumpin' back into the water, the catfish turned and stuck her big head out, close by the log, and as the ;ld cut was tearin' her hair, as you might boy, or leastways what little she had left, and was mournin' and miianin' for her lost kitten, the fish opened her mouth from ear to ear, bo as the cat could hear her kitten cryin' 'way down in the catfish's depths. Say! I could hear that kitten cry myseif, nay opt ' on the bank where I was settin'! "Well, that voice of her kitten was ; more than the bereaved yaller cat 'could stand. She pounced square on I top of the catfish and they both went ! down together. j "I didn't see nor hear nothin' more : of either of 'em for maybe three min- utes, and I made up my mind that the ' cat had gone to join her kitten, when I see a ripple on the water, and the next minute the jailer cat come to the top. "She swam ashore, and she had the catfish in tow. The catfish was dead, and considerable clawed up. j "The jailer cat drug it out on : shore. Then she ripped it open with her claws, and out stepped the kitten, big as as life and twice as natural, it 'was dazed a little fer a spell, but soon 'got it's bearin's, and trotted away with the old yallercat as if nothin' hud happened, and I didn't see 'em no more. "There," concluded the man from Pochuck, "them's the news I've brung 1 over this time. Don't jou believe 1 'seen 'em?" j Baldj, the landlord, lit his cigar butt, put it in his mouth and said: "Yes, I do. But jou wouldn't 'a' seen 'em if jou had tUyed awaj from the tone frolic." Thi view of the case seemed to af fect the man from Pochuck so that he 'got up quick, and without even inquir- U i tli.r. v .r. nn rw.int ..iiiihd here in anj waj reaembling those of the kind he said he had run against at Sprout Hill, he turned hi lac Po- taeurjrd, if , I. Sub. Take Laxative liromo Quinine Tablet. All druggitt refund the money if it tails to core. E. W, Grove' ligtiature ia on each box. '.'5c. horn" ebon Notice. To all pennons owing for shoeing at C. L. Salomon's- you are notified to cull and Buttle one half of the amount duo, with the estate of the said C. L Snlo' mon. Signed; Naomi Salomon. Admintratrix. COl"CiHHAND COIiDH iN CHILD KKN. Heeomiuendatlon of a Well Known I'nicaf Physician. Uarkc Foster & Lehman Proprietors. A Complete and Choice Line of Beef, Veal, 'Mutton, Pork, Bacon, Larel, and Country Produce. Main st. 1110, onp. 'Phone 31. I use aud prescribe Clmmbcrlitin ' Cough Kemcdy for almost ull obati nate, constricted coughs, with direct results. I prescribe it to children of all ages. Am glad to recommend it to all in need and Becking relief from colds and coughs and bronchial alllic Hons. It is non-iiarcotio ami safe in the hands of the most unprofessional A universal panacea for all mankind. Mks.pMaby K. Mki.indy, M. 1)., Ph. D., Chicago, 111. This remedy is loritle by all druggists. Estray Notice. Grizzly, Nov. 6, 1002. Came to my jiluce about th middle of October. One red three year old cow marked with split in right and underhit in left ear, branded big circle on right hip. Owner will please call and pay charges and remove same from my premises or the animal will be Hold atcordipg to law. H. L. MoNTUOMKKV. j. Jf. jCippman & Co, Manufacturers of Furniture -AND DEALERS IN- I Fine Undertaking Goods, E Carpuls, Stoves, Ranges, Load, 'Oil and Glass, W Lumber and Building Material. n W Goods sold or cash and on the installment plan. fl PRINEVILLE, : : : 0RE00N. j The Oregon St-mi-Weekly Journal, a Democratic newapapur, ever fair and al ways free; lt4 copies In one year for only ?1.5t) to any addresH. The Journal, J O. Box 121. Portland. Or. Gyms' Jewelry Store John Cyrus Prop. i Dealer in Silverware, Jewelry, Watches Clocks. Optical Goods, Sewing machines etc Repairing done by W. H. Cyrus. Prompt attention Siuon mail erdtrt. Prinoviiio, . - - " Oregon. Columbia Southern jffotel L.jt Shaniko, Oregon. Lumber. For all klndsof rough and dressed lumber. Kiln dried flooring! and rustic, gojto j A. H. LIPPMAN & CO. The Finest Hotel in Interior Oregon. Rates $1.50 and $2.00 per day. J. M. KS.XXEY, FroprlHor. "Vhe fircc Jfotct." Get Your Job Printing Done at the Journal Oilice With a new outfit of type and machinery, Svc line up with the very lest printing houws in Oregon turning out job work of the highest standard of excellence. :::::: SALOMON JOHNSON & CO. :( SUCCESSORS TO C L SALOMON) .DKALEHS IN. GENERAL : : : MERCHANDISE New Firm! New Goods! Call and see them and examine their stock You will be pleased with their prices i rr! H'!- 'vf H'!" rn-fN rrs r-t.-f-s mr m-r- rn,