PORTLAND OREGONIAN. SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 16, , 1906. AN TUMf ' TO LD lOopyrighi, 1006, by the Xetc Tort Herald Company AU Rights Reserved. THE last time we -were at the farm grandpa told us the story of the cave. He said that when he was a little boy his grand father told him the story, and , said he was certain that such a caTe was on the farm. Grandpa used to look for it when he was a little chup, and because he never could find it made up his mind that it was only a story book care after all. Since the wind blew down the tree which had grown up in front of it and let Eggy fall into it grandpa has made lots of trips out there and found plenty of things to prove that it was really the cave of the story. He said that during the Revolutionary War a party of Continental soldiers had been sent by General Gates to take the news about the defeat of Burgoyne over into the New England States.'" They had stopped In the very house which was the beginning of the house grandpa lives in now, and after telling the news to the women, who were the only ones there, had filled their knapsacks with good food and started away. They had not been gone more than an hour when they came hurry ing back and told the -women that they had discovered signs of some of Bur- eovne's Indians and did not like to leave them there in the house nlone. One of the women, who was grandpa's great-grandmotlwr, said she would take her people to a cave on the farm where they would be safe. She would not let the" soldiers stay to protect them, because she said the good news the soldiers had, to tell would make lots of farmers join General Washington, and that was worth more to her than being made safe herself, so the soldiers saw the women to the cave and went on their way. . Grandpa says that soon after that a little landslide must have covered up the mouth of the cave and allowed the tree to grow over it. which was kuocked down by the wind the day before Eggy fell into it. Grandpa' has some old copper dishes which Jie found in the cave and which he feels certain sure were left there by the women when they went back to the house. Of course a story like that set us kids to playing war. We played the war of Troy, and it's ever so much more fun playing it than studying it. We made the rope swing under the oak tree in front of the house Troy and drafted Tow ser, grandpa's hound, to be the wooden horse, which he liked all right until Eggy stabbed him with an icicle, and after that he played his own part at a snfe distance. We didn't have enough kids to go. around, so I was Achilles and Ulysses; Eggy was Hector and Priam; Pussy had to play borh Helen and Taris. First we had the fight between Achilles and Hector, in which I had to chase Eggy three times around the city that is, the swing and that part of it Towser de lighted in. The people of Troy came out of the swing and gave us our arms long icicles for swords and short ones for spears which were all right except that Achilles had to stab Hector with the butt of his sword, owing to the fact that the wooden horse bit off the point in the early part of the enBageuient. We had just finished the slaughter of the people of Troy when grandma called us in to dinner, and Mary, who was there, said that the new teacher was lucky that we had a game which made us remember the names of the characters. When grandpa heard about our battle of Troy he said he guessed we'd have more of a real fight if we went out and caught a turkey he wanted to send to my dad for Christmas. We did. I'd never caught a turkey, but I've dearly wanted to ever since I saw my first live one, which was when I came here. So the girls and Eggy and I went out to the barnyard, where the hired man pointed out the turkey grandpa had se lected for dad, and we made a plan of battle. Eggy and I were to chase him up to the girls, who stood at the barnyard gate. They were to hold him in check until we brought up our forces, and then we were to fall on his flank, compel his surrender and tie his legs. When we told our plan to the hired man, whose name is Si, he said it beat anything he ever heard of. It did. Si said that turkey was a grand bird. It was. Well, the girls took their places, and Eggy and I began to manoeuvre to cut the grand bird out of the flock, but either he didn't want to leave the flock or the flock , didn't want to leave him, for they ran in a bunch and beat that three times around the "n ails of Troy a mile or two. Si sat on the fence to encourage us, he said, but the other things he said didn't have so much encouragement as humor. Anyway, Si fell off the fence, laughing. Then we called in Towser, and he un derstood at once what we wanted, and got the grand bird separated from the flock in no time. Also he got some of its tail featheTs, which did not improve its temper at all. Hut we drove it toward the girls, who, seeing it coming, screamed aud ran into the barn, with master turkey after them, and Eggy, Towser, the hired man and me following. Finally, just as we thought we had it cornered, it flew up 1 1 ...... ,i t IliUcfTElATCD ts- vw-sfvdt . 4 iv..; (COPYRIGHT; 1906. "BY ' THE NEW YORK HERA1 DCO )r?Jm, j J? Nss, Z&F v .Y 1 . V; 7 t is mm. Ms- m 1 1 :t t, ii ill ii 4&& a' iSEE, XF THE!. XCE- ' TE XSiaCJVEL. IT! TJCfVCISO THE. 3-XreL How the Black Snake Avenged Her Children. OICE time I was forced to spend Sunday at Old Fort, in North Carolina, where the mountains loom liiKh above you and the country Is wild and rugged. I did not wajit to stay, but I was after ward glad that I did, for I saw a snake story with my own eyea, and I chal lenge the world for another like it. Siutkes bave always been cbarmingrly mysterious to human kind. A nun will declare himself haughtily indifferent to a snake story and yet after a few minutes of listening- will lose himself in Ills eager neas to hear It through. -It Is because snakes really do perform wonderful things, ' as the cropping up of an occasional news paper article will testify, and everything that newspapers publish may be regarded as solemn truth. J-lere will be found a rattlesnake or a king snake in the centre of a city, here is a reptile which Is coiled about a hawk and Anally brings him to earth from a lofty height, there Is a snake trained to catch rats about a residence. there is a. rattler Lhat has found its way into a stove and allowed itself to be baited and another that was discovered on a front porch harmlessly toying with a little child. So the tales go with infinite variety, and all are read breathlessly and hooted at as "but snake stories." At Old Fort I had a travelling friend named Moody, who was a .partner In my loneliness. We wandered about all the morning and looked at mountains and rocka and trees and flowers, and,, becoming very tired, eat on a log to rest. W.e were co tired that we were foolish and told each other wild tales of Indians who long ago roamed the mountains threatening deadly attacks upon the fort built near by to keep them In check. Not that we knew any of the tales to be history, but they answered the purpose of amusement pretty well. Moody grew enthusiastic "Sup pose there were now a band of savages," said he, "creeping from behind that big rock!" I held my breath and looked. Suddenly there was a rustle near our feet and we both started. It was not an Indian, but a snake, a blacksnake, whdoh grleame in the sunlight s he drew his ionjs bodx through Jh 4rte4 leaves and., twigs on the ground. He was- moving Slowly away 1 ram us. Moody sprang to his feet and exclaimed, "Let me find a stick. I'll kill him!" But I grabbed him by the leg and pulled him Pack. I was too fired to work the rep tile's destruction myself and did not care to delegate the sport to any one else. Entirely unconscious of the commotion we made, the snake raised his head and looked deliberately about him. Then we became interested. Our Interest might have taken a personal turn had he moved toward us, but he -pursued his way in an other direction. In a lltUe while he raised his. head again, after the manner of the boa constrictor In "Swiss Family Robin son"; only he lacked the impressiveness which came with thirty feet of the boa's length, and our . snake was not large enough to swallow one of us, much less -a Jackass. He was evidently in search of something. " .Moody had another paroxysm, and ner vously stooped for a stick. I laid, a force; ful hand on his shoulder, and commanded him to desist. I wished to see the ad venture through, and pleaded with him to be reasonable. He subsided somewhat, and for half an hour we watched the snake. following him at a respectful distance. There was no abatement of interest in tils quest till he reached a log and slowly crept over it. For a moment we lost sight of him. Then there was a movement, and we saw our snake dart up and down again with light ning speed. A wild, noisy flurry followed. and we ran forward and reached the log in time to see the snake raise himself once again for a stroke, and fall viciously upon the neck of a huge rattler that writhed. wsangled, hissed end shook his rattles noisily. The fight was a glorious one, and we knew that our black was destined to be the victor. He lashed the rattlesnake with his tail and duns' to his neck with a deadiy grip. For five minutes the struggle lasted. The rattler quivered and lowered his -rail as a sign of defeat. The black slowly loosed his hold and moved off Into the woods, ieaviiag' his eaemy to die in . . . j It was the hour of triumph for the black snake, and also for Moody; for, in an un guarded moment, he seized a stone and sprang toward the victorious reptile ano martyred him in the full flush of his achievement. Then he mutilated his body with stone after stone. I felt helpless In the presence of such unrestrained blood- thirstiness and muttered wearily: "I fee sorry for you. Moody." I was determined, however, that Moody should do nothing to the rattlesnake, and prepared to protect his dying frame at all hazards, for I wanted his skin. He was rare specimen, with six good rattles and a ibutton, wnicn indicated that his years upon the mountainside had been seven, and that the victims of his deadly bite had been legion. When he moved his last I lifted him carefully about the middle of his body, and we went down to the hotel. .The hotel man knew the way of snakes and interpreted the whole affair, with the wisdom of a seer. . He told -us that the rattlesnake had been robbing the nest of his black brother, as an examination of his stomach would show. We ripped him open carefully and found no fewer than ten lit tle blaik snakes, upon which he could have rested luxuriously for a week, free from the distress of hunger. - An TJnprogfessive Institution. "One of the most successful clergy men In Philadelphia," remarked a col lege professor,- "was proud of the fact that he was always addresed as plain 'mister and that he possessed no de gree which entitled him to the honor able name of 'doctor. "An elder entered the clergyman's study one morning and handed him i marked paper. The item stated that the minister had been honored by his old college - and that now he could at tach D. D. to his name. " "Well, well,' muttered the pastor, not without feeling, for he loved his college, 'my old school is a little be hind the times, and still believes In cap ital punishment.' " i wiiiiijri-r.j-vj vl """" ''-'4 ''i-SJ the barn stairs and wo flew after it. There we did corner and fall on it. You would never know from eatinjr turkey how strong a grown bird of that tribe is in the excitement of the chase. In our struggle we all rolled down the stairs, and it was some time before the hired man could untangle us, for Towser had the bird's tail clinched, the bird had my trouser's leg clinched, Eggy was hug ging us all and there was a great deal of fuss and feathers. But dud has the Wrd now. After dinner we went down to the pond to see if the ire would hold, but it wouldn't. It held Towser all right, and he harked at us to come on so joyfully rhat Egy and I tried once more. I say mce more, because we've tried that ice very day for a week now, and each time we found out that it wouldn't bear us up. Of course it, isn't much fun to go into ice water up to your waist, but the hot cider and doughnuts grandma gives ns to pre vent a chill after we have rubbed down -md put on dry clothes is really worth the trouble of the nib down. My Tintype Girl. In fluttering show of summer l.ices, 'Neath the shade of a pretty parasol, Shinrs the swertest of possible taws From the murky mirror against the wa!l. 'Twas there I tucked lier. witlx pride and pleasure. . When I cast my lot In the city's whirl And owned, poor verdant, but this one treasure My tintype girl. Ah, dear, meant only for sweet beguiling, I fear you have grown most worldly wise With the sounds you have heard and kept on smiling With the sights that have passed before your eyes. When over the wine cup's crimson glow ing. While you watch the smoke of our pipes upcurl. We bend to the cards, with look how knowing My tintype girl. Yet your honest gaze shines on as clearly As those nights when we tripped thro' Virginia reel. Or we talked (and I must have loved yoa dearly I knew Swinburne by heart, and I read "Luoile") How it all comes back I recall each feature Of that face with Its wonderful pink and pearl, . . And the name what was your name, pretty creature My tintype, -girl? RUTH HALL. XNT GCPa. SrreTJGG-T.K.. WE 1DIXE:D DOWr THE The Horse : in the Light of Tradition. rv (EJCAIiLJNG the verv Jntofestinz arti-ihorse of A IcranHpr th nt Tj,.hai,.. IJcle.in he Hjeraijj from a professor in would at night, on hearing a blast of the 1 the Smithsonian Institution, wherein trumpet from the soldiers on guard, show he said that the dog was th most in- ing :the approach of the enemy, run at teuigent or an animals, possmiy he may not great speed to his master's tent, and with know that Smichsoh-himself, the founder; hj3 teeth grab the sleeping , monarch and shake him untllr he, sprang into the saddle and galloped "toward the enemy. Also how the great Caliph, iHaroun al Raschid, In the eighth century, in march ing toward the forces of Queen Irene of of the Institution, was a ciose' student of animal life, especially tne horse, of which, he was a most enthusiastic admirer, be lieving it to be the most intelligent of all animals, and in his letters to Lord Gran ville, published by the Royal Philosophical Constantinople constantly had a number. Society, who was also greatly interested of trained Arabian horses thrown forward in natural history, hSj relate now thalaracauta which, iron lima to time rUtxn&dlilrel JS.91T. Jngland. elerxTm&s. YhoseJjOOC to camp and by a peculiar whinny and neigh and the pawing of a fore foot re ported the proximity of the enemy. Again he relates the experience of the Portuguese explorer, Albuquerque, who lived for many years in .tne oixteentn century on the Island or t. tteiena,- where he and the natives taught the herds of wild horses there not only to dig potatoes, but to husk corn and shell peas. But to come down to the present day. the writer,, who spent the summer in the Berk- shires, was told by a very Intelligent sands of life had nearly run out, that one day on leading his horse down through a lano to a brook for a drink tne animal sud denly halted, and, turning its head around, graboed up with Its teeth one of Its hind shoes which had Just dropped off, and. holding it in its mouth with the nails dang ling from it, backed up against a stone wall and clapped it on to Its hoof and with few violent kliks nailed It on again. The clergyman was so astonished at this proceeding, especially as he had only the lav -before had the horse newly shod, that in going back through the lane he stopped at the spot where the shoe came off, jnd there found growing a bunch of moonwort. He then remembered reading years ago that in. Europe. locally in Devonshire and Hertfordshire, and also in Normandy, the plant was cailed unshoe-the-horse and that it possessed the wonderful power of open ing locks if a leaf was put in the keyhole and of extracting nails and unshoeing the horso when trodden upon. This curious property of moonwort is re ferred to by one of the minor English poets of the sixteenth century as follows: Horses that, feeding on the prasoy tillla, Tread upon MooDwoort with tneir hollon- heel, . Though ltely shod, at niffht Co baref.iot linm, Their -master musing wherp their shoes become. Oh, Moonwort. tell m where tUou hld'it tL smith. Hammer and pinchera thou unshod'at them with? Again, the dog In ancient times is no where mentioned as being especially Intel ligent, but was considered a low and In ferior animal, and the expression in the Scriptures is well known, "Is thy servant a. dog that he should do this thing?" while in Egypt as early as the ninth dynasty the horse, as is mentioned by .Herodotus, was worshipped as a deity, as was also -the cat. it being a capital offence to kill one, and its body was mummified and laid away In the tomb to await the resurrection ' 1