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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1908)
i I i j A WA our little 6lrl$;s .loeir your Little Stories ni JOAQUIN MILLEH. chubby hands, over the. rosy mouth' with its row of pearl just In time; and with jut littlo frown ; . the story-teller went on. . , -Gues I've got you,' said the Dear1. ' 'Spec' you have said the lamb. 'Bui you better . not eat me.1 . - " . , -"'And why had I better not eat you? Humph! i Come, get ready to be eaten. I'm hungry. . '"Oh; please, Mr. Bear,' said the little lamb, 'if . you won't eat me I will take you to where there la big Popwopsuj. And If you have n't got enough after you eat the big Popwopiui you can eat me. "And.oh, Doti what is a, " Just in time Pudge got her two hands over her mouth, so the story did,'. not euitt have to be told over from the first. X "Now this was a very ignorant .bear, and. did not - Know wnai a ropowpsus was. "iv o more pimples i "But li know a great deal, and said it was, a bargain; and) . pine-tree, the bear muttered to hfmieiyhajjie, eould; '? eat them both and not half try( .."There you are, air, said theflamb7pointlngTtQ? i a great high heap of gum thatjhadioozed Jfromthej '., tree. 'Help yourself.' ;' rr"- - ' "Now this bear thought this must be. delicious food indeed; so, pretending to know all about -it he gruffly bowed his thanks to the lamb; and reach- , Ing up, he opened his great red mouth, threw his! arms about the fat wax Popwopsus, and hugging it) tight, greedily bit off its sticky headl ' "Well, you should have seen that bear's mouthL And jaws! And feetl Gum! Gum! Nothing but oo you, nor anyDoay.eise, : (cnucmea , iside to herself. . ke veiw lffnorantoeoflei Jit'nretended .to 11 0 J 0i fl V '"V4s1llRlJl ' issM Ml .5 Y up on the middle fork of the one sr and beautiful river of. Oregon, wedged down deep between two great black mountains topped with trees and ' cloads and snow. little log house nestled close bv the bank of the foamy river, alive with shiny fishes, A narrow, shady road ran close b the door. Back of the house on the hillside wa a clearing, set thick with apple-trees,, peach-trees and the like, end loaded down; while the air was full of busy bees, and every one of the great aark trees up and down the steep mountains was niuslaal with the song of birds. Dot and Puss and Dimples and Pudge these were the names of the four little girl who lived in the log house, but where they got their names no one but their father could tell It was ten miles through the thick woods to the next house it was quite at far to their first neighbor in the other direction i and as this was sort of -- stopping-piece for the very few travelers who vent ured on horseback over this portion of the Oregon Sierras, I drew rein at the door and shouted: "Hello the? bouse t" In a moment four little girls blossomed in the door rosy, round-faced, brown-faced, unny-halred hearty, happy. Beautiful? They looked as if they might have escaped from the upper world and slid down the great saow-peake to that littlo home by the beautiful river. I "Might I stay?" There was a welcome to the tired stranger in every "yes," as four pretty mouth opened in chorus. Dot, the eldest, a strong, self-reliant little girl of ten years, led my horse to the stable across the road; Dimples led me into the cabin; Puss, brought water from the spring; little Pudge brought her apron full, of chips from the wood-pile in the back yard; and all four were soon bu. preparing supper. The father came home, a weary man, tall end strong, lonely-looking and very silent, and swung his gun and game-pouch on the great elk-horn over the fireplace. We had supper by the firelight; Dot with her little hands kept piling on the pine knots til) the gloomy little cabin wa light as day. . After a hearty meal on wild meat, Indian corn. and fish, the little girls cleared off the table, end then grouped about it with their books. But no, they could not; read. They wanted to hear about the great big world-4he world that was to them like fairyland. I told tbetn many wondrou things, the half-sad and very silent father fitting all the time back in the dark and alone. By and by X asked them" to tell m something of . their books. And how learned they were. They .knew much indeed of books. Buf their geography was mixed. All history, the "Arabian Knight," novels of all kind, all these were jumbled In their little heads together. Yrtheir mother they aid in whisper, as. they glanced back at 'their father, had ; taught them ever so much, They had never seen, schoolHouse or a church. Once they had been fa camp-meeting. .Yes, mother when she was young woman had eome from a far-off country, from Boston,hdl married, settled in the wood thert away from all the world, and, only last year, bad died. Seeing hi children were now a sad as himself, as they thought of their mother, the man re, came forward, kicked the fire till it biased up more cheer fully, and suggested to the children that they should tell me some stories in return for mine. "And oh, Jet's make 'em up ourselvesl" shouted Puss, as she clapped her dimpled hands and hitched up her chair, as did all the others, with their elbows on the table and their bright faces all 8 once as merry as the May "Certainly," answered matron Dot, wwe will make em up all by ourselves: end you shall tell the first; only don't put in any bogy-map or ghost to scare little Pudge." And with that Dot put an arm about Pudge and drew her eloe to her side; while Puss smoothed down her Jjttle gingham apron, hitched her chaif againf and, clearing her throat,' gravely began: . '' v ., "One upon a time in -Aribiiv in Arabia where where all the giants are born and brought up and educated, there wa a great giant who had no castle. So this great giant fie got up and took his club " and set out to walk and walk tUi h could find a great castle, where he eould put people in and lock m up ind-hem adearJem;VVHr he walked -and he walked ahem. And he was barefoqted and he had no shoes at all. And he was bareheaded arid his hair was long ahem, ahem. And he walked and he walked till he came to a great high mountain,. And he went up to the top of that high mountain, for he thought it might have a castle on it But he found there only a great big flat rock on the edge of a great steep precipice, with ahem with a rail-, road running along in the valley below. - Yes, the the-ahem the Erie Railroad I Well, he lay down on; the flat rock and went to sleep, and In the night he waked up and went down in the valley to get something to eat Forfor like all great end good giants he wat ahem always c hungry, - : Well, he ' found "V milkhoqse, and he drank up all the pan of milk, end he ate up all the fresh" butter, ahem, ; and he couldn't find any bread, and he hurried back to his big flat rock on the mountain above the preci pice, for he was getting very tired. And he lay down on his back on the big flat rock, with his hands a-holdin tight on his head.Jor he felt ahem very queer. Well, by and by he heard "a rumbling -' oh. such a rurnblin'! And he was, oh, so certain , 'bis bead was foingio break open! And ahem he held tight on to his head with both his big hands. Then he did n't hear any rumblin'. any more, and all was still; and he went to sleep. Ahem! .But by and by such another rumblin' oh, such a rumblin that it made the mountain shake! And he held so tight on tQ hi head that he almost screamed out for pain. And then he listened. And then he began to lugh. And he let go of his head and he laughed and n laughed and he laughed. For what do you think it was that rumbled so? Why, it. was n't hf head at all. It was only the Erie Railroad. Yes ahem yes, and he laughed and he rolled and he rolled and he laughed till he rolled right over tht precipice, and he fell ahem and fell a hundred thousand feet, and he landed with his neck in tfie fork of a tree, and and ahem diedl Yes. And if you can go to foreign countries and find the Erie Railroad, and find that precipice, and stop the train, and get off and measure how high that tree is, you can tell just how tall that giant was, for, for ahem for if his foot could have touched the ground Me could have stood up. and it would n't have killed him, you ee" "Oh I oh, Puss!" "Oh, Pussy 1" cried Dot and Dimple. "I s glad he's dead, anyhow, for I don't liffe giants," said littler Pudge, as she nestled closer to Dot; and, the father again came forward out of the dark and poked up the fire. "And now, Dot, it's your turn," said Dimples, as she reached over and buried a hand in the cloud of yellow hair that nestled on Puss's shoulder. - "Yes; and I'll make it short, for Pudge has yawned twice. And remember, now. this is a story that has to be all told over again from the first if any one asks a single question. So don't one of you spj;ak or I'll never get through to-night. "Once upon a time in a far-off country there was a flock of sheep feeding on a sloping hillside above the sea. On the great black mountain back of them there wa a forest of pines, and in thi forest there were a hundred thousand bears.", "Oh, my! So many?" "Once upon a time in a far-off country there -was a flock of heep feeding " "Please, please, sisser Dot, I won't speak any more pleaded Pudge. "Well, then, don't. Pudge, because, you see, every time anybody speaks I have to go Tight back to the beginning and tell it all over from the first. This is on of that kind of storie, you know. But I can go ahead this once. Well, the flock of sheep went liding their noses along on the ground very fast, and a little Umb got very tired and lay down by the aid of a rock a gray rock, I think. Yes, it went to sleep there, while its mother went on wjth the flock, with her nose on the ground, nibbling grss. After a while the lamb felt a cold nose moving up and down on the back of its neck, and thinking ft was 'its kind, good mother who had come back with the flock on the way home, it lazily opened It eye and looked up. And what do you think it aw? A great black bear!" v . . . "Oh I And did it?" Btit Pudge clapped both And you should have seen that little lamb laugh! He just (tuck hi little fists in his little sides and very'j'foreign (country! p and here little Dimples topped,rolled up; her? dimpled hands in her coarse 'apron as.if.they had been cocoons in silk, and began itall.'overagain. She did this two or three times Jn her" great embarrassment, and at last, after assur ipgU over, and over, again that it was in a very; very' foreign country,' and was very nearly crying with fright, she meekly held her head to one side and managed to go on. "Once upon a time, in a very foreign country, there lived in a great coal- til' tP "and you should have seen that little lamb laugh?" danced up and down for delight. "And the bear pawing at hi? own teeth! And gnawing at his paws! Oh, my I And he rolled over, and the leaves stuck fast, and he began to look as big as an elephant. And so the Umb pitied him and said: "Come, I '11 take you back to where I found you.' And o he went back down the hill, and the poor bear hobbled and rolled on after. "But pretty soon they met the sheep. Then a big ram with great bent horns bowed to the bear, An4 the bear thought it was all right. But, I tell you, whenever a ram bows to you, look out! Well, the ram all bowed to that bear, and then they began to come. Tump! Bump! Thumpl And over that bear went, heels over head, till he rolled into the sea and was turned into a great big island that wa all surrounded by water." " Oh, my! Who ever heard a lamb talk! Now don't b'lieve that t'other story, tool" said Pudge, . "Pudgey, Pudgey! But now Dimples; and then little Pudge." - "One? upon a time in a foreign country a very, mine a man with a leather nose. Now this man was a Norwegian, and he had a. name that was so long that it took a man a day and a half to pronounce it, and " "Now, Dimples!' Oh, Dimples!" "Well, Dot, I Ml pronounce it if you like. It may not take a day and a half, but it will take some time." "Skip the name, then, and hurry up, for Pudge is very sleepy." "Well, then, they called him Old Leather Nose. And whenever anybody called him Old Leather Nose there was a fight; for he'was very, very sensi tive on that point. Now this was in California. "After a while he got sick; and the doctor, who. wa afraid of him and wanted to get him out of the way, told him he had a certain kind of disease. And it was a Latin disease that was even harder to pro nounce and longer than his name; eo we will skip the Latin disease, although I know it and can pro nounce' it very well, sister Dot. m "Now the doctor told Old Leather Nose that the only way to cure him was to plant him in ' the; ground in a deep hole up to the chin, under a great pine-tree up on a great high mountain, and keep? him there, with only one pipe to smoke, till the Su rose in the morning. i ' "And so the doctor took ten mrn. and thur ran.; ricd Old Leather Nose from the Norwegian coal mine up on a high mountain somewhere in Florida where there are a great many ferocious walruses and they planted him up to the beard, and gaveJ him a pipe to smoke. Yes, and when they began! to plant him he took off his leather nose and laidj it carefully down on a chio bv the side of '! 1 "And did it cure him all well, Dimples? Did If, Dimples?" V . , "Pudgey, dear, the walruses came down in the night and ate his head off smooth with the ground,; And that's all." . "Oh, how dreadful! My sakes alive f But hejj tum'd to life again! he tum'd to life again! did n'k i he?" ' . "Yes, littlo Pudge, but that is another story. And j don't go to sleep just yet. It's your turn now. Only! a little one, dear, and then papa will put Pudge irt1 her little trundle-bed." . : 1 ; "Once upon a time in a in a " And the little : fists dug and doubled about the great, dreamy eyes,s and tried to push away the mass of curls that' cur-1' tained them, and with much effort the sleepy little , girl got through with this little fragment of a storyl,: "Once upon a time dey was mice an' mice an' mlcOj Oh, my, such a mice in a fur furin tuntry, ; An,' s man he goed a fousand hundred miles to brin' a, 1 fousand hundred tats for tQ tatch 'em. Anhe do, . an' he dit a wadon an' dey brln' him tats, An dey j brin him a fousand hundred tats. An' he put 'em i in a wadon, and' he start for to dp for to tatch ern j mice. An' he tame by a bouse, an' de dog bark, a a j de tats back up on de wadon look like a load oTiay. f An' an' oh, my, I is so s'eepy! An an he tameT; j by a tamp-meetin'. An' de tamp-meetin' ? sin' ec hymn; an' den er tats sin' a song, -too. " An den ct ; tamp-meetin' have to stop an' den an den er " And the little round face bowed down and bur, ied itself in the folded arms on the tabe. The silent j father came forward from his now very dark cornexy and taking the little sleeper from her sister, placed j her in the trundle-bed. In a few minutes one more i was beside her, and two in the little bunk over the; trundle-bed. The father and I were oon in bed. in the adjoining room, with the door open between, j And when he thought I slept, he rose np softly,5 wept into the other room, drew "out the; trundle-bed noiselessly, and kissed his four little motherles i girls, with only God to see him. Then' he stepped ' to the door, drew a great bolt across it, and, taking his rifle from the rack, set it in reach at bis bedsl ready to defend hs babes. And then we slept THE PORT OF BOTTLES. B T Dr. EUGENE MURRAY-AARON. It is a common thing for officers or sailors on sea-going vessels, and especially for passengers, whose time often hangs heavily on their hands, to write some message on a paper, inclose it in a bot tle, cork it tight, and throw it overboard. Usually the paper contains a mere memorandum of the name of the ship, its latitude and longitude at the time, the date, the name of the captain end of the writer, with perhaps a humorous metsag to the finder the Whim 'of an idle hour. But possibly the writing may convey a more serious message, stating that the ship has sprung a leak and is about to founder, compelling its passeiigers and crew to take, to the small boat. Very rarely has such bottle been picked up by a passing vessel in time to rescue the survivors. , If the bottle has been securely corked it may float long time on quiet teas, and may be carried many hundred of miles on an oceaji current. Such a waifdrop" pedinta Ihe Gulf Stream off the. coast of the United States, has" been picked up many month? " afterward on the1 shore of Ireland Scotland, or Norway, When ocean storm come the angry. waves dash the frail bottles on floating spars or projecting ' rocks, and the greater number are doubtless broken in this way. There are a few "dead spots" in the ocean, however, 4,to which these tiny glass vessel ', may bewcarried, and where they may float in security 's for an indefinite time. " . , i An officer on a Brazilian ship describes. uch a spot in the Caribbean Sea, which he says ought to be called the Port of Bottles. It lies nearly midway between the clUe of Cartagena, Colombia," and Kingston, Jama jc,' and bou due east of Cape One of these had been droped In the ea three years before from a yacht in the Grand "Cayman. He adds: "I noticed a lot of other driftwood in the same pot, and I am confident that no end of bottles could be culled from the place. Hundreds are dropped overboard every year, but very few escape being knocked to pieces unless they happen tp find their way Jo soma such a still place as I ) have described." There are a few other-similar dead spots in the (.ocean, and It if possible that bottles might be picked up in them which had been floating securely for many long years, What . messages of merriment, what tale of dis tress and doom these frail glass voyagerf might contain, who may guess? - BT " CHARLES BA.TTELL, &OOKI8. A teacher whose spelling" unique . Thu wrote down the "Days of the Wique'': The firt he pelt "Sonday," - -Xh, second day-, "MundarW And now a new teacher they jque. A WTTLE GENTLEMAN. I know a well-bred little .hoy who never lays "I can't"; He never sya "Don'f want to," or "You've got to," or "You iha'n't"; He never says "I'll tell mama!" or calls his play mate "mean." . . A lad more careful of his speech I'm sure was never seen! Gririai a JDios. "Jt is out of the steamer tracks." he says, "snd He' neyr ungrammatica! he . never the action of the great currents going. one way and '"ain't'; ' . another has left a space of stagnant water without ' any real movement at all. s Anything that gets into 1 the dead spots is apt to,stay there, unless driven out by sorne big etorm, and will simply drift round and round,1 gathering sea-grasj end barnacles.", He picked tip there three bottles floating together amid 1 the drift, one empty, the others with papers inside, . mentions A. single word of slang from him would make fit mother faint! ' 1 . :- 'And now I'll tell you why it is (lest this should ; seem absurd): , 1 He's now exactly sijdmonths old, and cannot speak . a word!; t Hannah G. Fernald. S- Adhere' s. vin that tub Ust Wtheu barns drooping revet," AlMh dainty brown pipe hidden under U Jew jortnny Sfll4 84dly, It jnay fee- Ajoke, il mu4 1 do feer m ; the vine-feirieimoJtel small elf with a 'confident winWV k wrerijl ta-himpaAe c evil may think I trutVhave pijftP, butInhere ' do dVt!re, jereest And . finest, -we iia or balloons?'. o travel threugh aky unto jusj.wjy noons ; cflnd all the ve bubbles the UirylJk I!" flre only' what mortals c&ll ctwdrcft.y: cno4 9 &henlo flns- La 1 r w - CofyrjgMl? th tcnt&y Company