The Oregon Scout.
.r
vol. II.
UNION, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 188C.
NO, 31.
THE OREGON SCOUT.
Ah independent wccklv Journal, Issued evo y
Saturday by
JONES & CHANCEY,
l'ublleliors and Proprietors.
A. K. .loses, 1
Editor, J
J U. Ciiaxcey,
I Foreman,
HATES OP SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy, one year J1 CO
Six months 1 Oil
" Three months' 75
Invariably cash in advance
Hates of advertising inado known on appli
cation. Correspondence from all parts of the county
solicited.
Address nil communications to A. K.Jones,
Editor Orcati Scout, Union, Or.
Lodge Directory.
OllANt) llONDK VAI.LKV LOIIOK, No. fid. A. V.
and A. M. Meets on tho second and fourth
Saturdays of each month.
O. E. REM,, W. M.
C. E. Davis, Secretary.
Union Loikib. No. 3!). T. O. O, P. Regular
inectlnKS on Friday evenings of each week at
their hull in Union. All brethren in good
standing arc invited to attend. Hy order of
the lodge. S. W. Lono, N. 0.
O. A. Thompson, Seey.
Church Directory.
M. E. Council Dlvino service every Sunday
at II a. m and 7 p. in. Sunday school at 3 p.
in. Prayer meeting every Thursday evoning
atC:30. Ukv. ANDEitsON, Pastor.
Piilsiivtf.iuan CiiiJiicii Regular church
services every Sabbath morning and evening.
Prayer meeting each week on Wednesday
evening. Sabbath school every Sabbath at
30 n. m. Rov. II. Vkhnon Rich, Pastor.
St. John's Episcopal Council Service
every Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m.
Ruv. W. R. Powell, Rector.
County Officer.
Judge A. C. Craig
SheritT A. L. Saunders
Clerk U. K. Wilson
Treasurer A. P. Renson
School Superintendent J. L. Hindman
Surveyor E. Pimonls
Coroner E. H. Lewis
COMMlSSIONEllS.
Ceo. Aekles Jno. Stanley
Stato Senator I R. Rinehart
ItKPriESENTATIVKS.
P. T. Dick E. E. Taylor
City Officers.
Mayor D. B. Hees
COUNCII.ME.V.
S. A.Pursol W. D. Roldloman
J.S. Elliott Willis Skiff
J. II. Eaton G. A. Thompson
ltccorder J. R. Thomson
Marshal J. A.Denneyi
iietisurer .1. iurruii
Street Commissioner L. Eaton
Departure of Train.
Regular' east bound trains leave at 9:30 a.
ru. West bound trains leavo at 4:20 p. m.
IMtOI'ESSIONAL.
J. R. CRITES,
ATTOKNIiY AT LAW.
Collecting and. probate practice specialties
Oflice, two doors south of Postofilce, Union,
Oregon.
R, EAKIN,
Altomcy at Law ani Nctary Public,
Office, one door south of J. II. Eaton's store
Union, Oregon.
I. N. CROMWELL, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon
Ollice, ono door south ot J. R. Eaton's store,
Union, Oregon.
A. E. SCOTT, M. D
Tins pormnocntly located at North Powdor,
where will Answer all calls.
T. II. CRAWFORD,
ATTORNEY AT ff.AW
Union, - - - - Oregon.
D. Y. K. D BERING,
!liyf!lclui nml Surgeon,
Union, Oregon.
Office, Main itrcct, ncxtdoorto Jones Rros.'
tarloty store.
lt:sidcrco. Main ilreot, second house south
of court t'ouso.
Chrontjdlsoasoi a Epcclalty.
AfiW. and Counsellor at Law,
Ukiox, Oheqon.
Ileal Estate. Law and Probato Practice will
receive special attention.
Office ou A street, rear of Stato Land Office.
n. F. BURLEIGH,
Attorney (it I:nv, CCrul B'sf-ite
mid Collecting: As iil.
Land Oflice Business a Specialty.
Orilco at Alder. Union Co., Oregon.
J ESSE llAHOESTr,
J, W. B1IELTON'
3HELT0N & HARDEST!,
ATTORNEYS AT I.A1V.
Will prnctico in Union, linker, Grant,
Umatilla and Morrow Counties, ulso in the
Supreme Court ot Oregon, the District.
Circuit aud Supremo Courts ot the United
States.
Mining and Corporation bualne a. ipe
kalty.
OUlM in Union, Oregon.
VICTIMS OF TRICHINOSIS.
How the "Wcltzrl I'nnilly SufTer nt the
Trinity llonpltnl.
The Weltzol family father, niotlier
and four children are still at Trinity
Hospital, on Variek street, suffering
with trichinosis. They are all very ill.
and at least two members of the family
are not expected to recover. On
Thanksgiving they gave a birthday par
ty at their residence. No. 78 King street.
Mrs. Woltzel boiled a ham, and the
meat was made up into sandwiches and
eaten by most of the thirty people pres
ent. The next day some of tlnnc who
had eaten the ham wore taken with vio
lent purging and vomiting; others be
came sick on the fourth day. and one
not until the eighth day. The symp
toms were the same in each case great
pain in the region of tint stomach and
bowels, accompanied by vomiting end
purging. Doctors went called in and
they pronounced the di.eae trichinosis.
None of these have died and several
have almost entirely recovered. Tlio.se
who were taken sick fir.st sutlered the
least, while those in whom the disease
did not make itself manifest until the
fourth day are still very ill. .Seventeen
persons in all were attacked. Of these
eight are in the hospitals, seven at Trin
ity and one at the New York Hospital.
The disease is very rare in this coun
try. In some parts of Germany the
people are in the habit of eating raw
pork, chopping it up line and making it
into a sort, of salad with spices. There
trichinosis is not uncommon. In other
parts of Germain' the suggestion that a
sick person is suffering with the disease
is taken as itn insult. Trichinosis is
caused by eating pork in which trichina)
exist, and which has not been suflicient
ly cooked. The meat must be subjected
to a temperature of at least 150 all
through to kill tho parasite.
The trichina is a little white worm or
"wiggler," so small that it can not be
seen with the naked eye, and is suppos
ed to originate in the rat, though some
medical authorities hold that it is also
natural to the hog. However that may
be, hogs got tho disease, and their Hesh
becomes filled with these parasites. So
tenacious to life are the trieltinte that
they live and flourish so long as tho
pork is preserved from decomposition.
A ham, for instance, which has been
smoked too huridly and not subjected
to ti suflicient heat, will preserve them
for months. Other animals may be im
pregnated with the disease by taking
into the stomach meat in which the
trichina' exist, and it is Indicvcd that it
is in this way that it is conveyed from
the rat to the hog.
The development of trichinosis in tho
human body furnishes an interesting
study, owing to its rarity in this coun
try, and the cases now in tho hospital
are being carefully watched by medical
experts. There are several kinds of
trichina! known to exist, but tho particu
lar parasite in question is usually found
coiled like a snake; hence its full name
of trichina; spiralis. There aro male
and female of these and tlic young are
born alive, not being hatched from eggs
its is the case with most parasites.
The trichimu being taken into the
human stomach in insufficiently cooked
pork, the meat is digested, leaving
the parasites at liberty. They then
grow rapidly until they attain a length
of from one-sixteenth to one-eighth of
an inch, and within three or four days
begin to reproduce, each female giving
birth to thousands of young. The
young trichina) atttain their full growtli
in about seven days, after which they
bore through tho small intestines in
which they aro born and lodge them
selves in the nearest muscles, whence
they spread in time to till tho muscles of
tho body. They find their way into the
small muscles of tho ear, impairing tho
hearing or into tho muscles of tho eye,
until tho patient is compelled to hold
that organ in ono position to escape
pain. They lill tho muscles of tho arras
and legs until tho least tension or move
ment causes torture, and tho patient
lies with his legs and arms drawn up
to relax the muscles of the heart, but
they arc frequently found in the muscu
lar tissue of tho lungs, where they cause
bronchitis. Tho fatal termination of
the discaso is usually tho result of
bronchitis brought about in this way, or
of parasites boring their way through
tho muscles of tho entire body.
When they begin to propagate in tho
stomach or intestines irritation and in
flammation follow, causing the vomit
ing and purging, and this continues,
accompanied by intense pain in the
abdomen, so long as thoy remain there.
If taken in time they may bo driven out
by powerful emetics and purgatives,
but this must bo done within a day or
two. Glycerine, or a solution of car
bolic acid in glycerine, given in caj
sulcs, is considered a succcsful remedy
at this stago of tho disease. Tho
trichina) propagate only in the intes
tines. If not driven out or destroyed
there they soon bore, through- into the
nuncios of the hack, and it is here tnat
the first muscular pains are felt. Hav
ing once entered the muscles they are
beyond the reach of medical skill, and
any attempt to destroy them would be
more likely to kill the" patient instead.
All that can be done is to relievo tho
patient, leaving the disease to run its
course.
After six or eight weeks of this bur
rowing tho trichina dies, and a little
capsule forms about it much like a
cacoon about a caterpillar. This is at
first a soft, membaneous sack, but
afterward changes to a chalky cyst.
Doctors sometimes find these cysts
while dissecting, showing that the
persons had trichinosis and recovered.
Dr. Clias. K. Hackley, of No. Gil
West Thirty-sixth street, is treating
the Weltzel family and carefully wateh
injr each stage of the disease. Tho
patients were taken to tho hospital
last Tuesday, which was over two
wfoks after they had been taken sick.
The trichina,- had by that time entered
tho muscles and were beyond the reach
of medicines. Under these circum
stances the doctor lias confined his
treatment entirely to the use of opiates
and to reducing the fever. Sleepless
ness is one of the most marked symp
toms, and opiates aro therefore neces
sary. This sleeplessness is accompan
ied by high fever and pain, the mus
cles being swollen and tender to tiio
slightest touch. In most cases tho
temperature reaches 105 s. To reduce
the fever Dr. Hackley is using a new
remedy, anti-pyrine, a product of coal
oil, which so far lias proved very suc
cessful. This is given internally.
On Friday last the doctor cut from
the arm of one of the patients it piece
of muscular tissue about tho size of a
pin's head, and, upon subjecting it to
a microscoping examination, found a
female trichina contained therein, tints
proving that the diagnosis already giv
en is correct. He declined last night
to state which members of tho family
were not likely to recover, its they
would bo certain to hear of it and tho
knowledge might have a bad cfl'ect.
The fever and pain, he says, will un
doubtedly continue until tho trichina)
becomes encysted or death relieves the
sufferers. New York World.
Fear in a Dissecting Room.
"Doctor, does it not sicken the stud
ents, or do they not loose all feeling and
veneration for tho dead?" "Some may
sicken for a while, but they gradually
grow accustomed to it, and thou they
give it its little thought as yon in your
daily avocation. I have seen tilings in
a dissecting room that have mode me
tremble, case-hardened as I am. In my
second year of student life, one evening
we were all in tho dissecting room,
waiting for tho demonstrator to call our
numbers, apportion us in squads of four
or five around the room. There wore
some twenty bodies lying on the tables;
some were covered and others were not ;
there were white and black, male and
female, old and young. We were as
signed to one of tho covered tables, ami
drew lots for choice of position. 1
chose the head, and then we uncovered
tho body; it was that of a girl not more
than 17, anil she could not have been
dead more than a week. Her long
blonde hair was clean and in two braids,
tied witli light blue ribbon. She must
have been handled very gently, for the
ghouls' hook had left no mark on her
fair white skin, and tho ribbons in her
hair were another proof of that. Tho
boys all paused, I saw a silk band on
her neck, and on touching it found a
locket, which I opened. In it was an
old lady's sweet face, which seemed to
chide me with her kindly eyes. On the
other side was tho inscription: 'May
God so deal with them as they deal with
you, my child. Motiiki-.'
"Well, we did not dissect that night.
Nor was that body dissected in our col
lege." Cinein nati Enqu ircr.
The Latest Society Whim.
The latest craze which has struck tho
Washington bello is tho carrying of
canes. A fow weeks ago a young lead
er in society returned from England
and tho next day she surprised her
friends by appearing on tho street with
a cane. It wasn't tho ordinary dude
cane, but a nice little stick with a shep
herd's crook of hammered silver. Some
times sho swung it and at otlior times
she struck tho ground with a sharp rap.
There is no question that this created
a sensation, but there is a great deal
of difference of opinion as to whether
the craze will strike in or not. So fur
not more than half a dozen girls have
mustered up courage enough to appear
on tho street with canes. Tho proba
bilities are that tho erazo will not ex
tend to that point where it will serious
ly interfero with the ordinary every-day
happinsss of the modern dude. From
a Washington Letter.
lie ilcep wrcurely who bu nothing to loee.
After th$ act, WUni;)U Ingrain"!-
SMART WOMEN DETECTIVES.
Clever Work Which They Do In This
nnd Other I'IUoh Where ii tnn
Would Pull.
The manager of a well-known detec
tive agency was asked yesterday by n
reporter for tho Matt and F.rprcss if lie
ever employed women to do any work
and whether they made good detectives.
He said lie had occasionally employed
women. The reporter found a women's
detective agency, located down town.
It is managed by a woman who hits
boon in the detective business for about
twelve years. She is well known to
many lawyers and her reputation for
firsl-o1as work is excellent. She is of
middle age. of rather stout build, and
has a pleasant, attractive face. She
was dressed in black.
"I called to get a reply from you to
tho intimation that women do not
amount to much as detectives." said the
reporter to her.
"I have no reply to make," she said.
"I do not sock notoriety of any kind.
I do my work as well and as carefully
as I know how, and my customers ap
pear to be satisfied. 1 have done work
for sonic of tho best known lawyers of
this city and have had somo important,
cases, but it would be unprofessional
for me to tell you about them. 1 am
not afraid to take hold of any work in
my line, and have done most all kinds
.of it except that connected with divorce
cases; such kind of work I will have
nothing to do with. Do 1 employ wo
men to act as detectives? Yes. several;
though as a rule I do the most of it my
self. When you want work done most
to your own satisfaction you must do it
yourself. To-day there was a man in
court who wits arrested through the
work of this office, and I have an im
portant case on hand of which I shall
bo glad to give you particulars tit tho
proper time, but more than this I do not
care to tell vott about my work or my
self. "Tho woman whom 1 will speak of
had an important case that involved the
finding of a mother and her child who
had gone West. The parties who want
ed to lind the woman and child employ
ed her to discover their whereabouts.
It was very necessary to learn this in
astiit that was pending. The oppo
nents to the suit know where they had
gone to and had sis their counsel to of
the leading lawyers of Brooklyn. Tho
woman detective decided to take the bull
by the horns, as the saying is. She ar
rayed herself in deep mourning and
called on ono of theso lawyers, repre
senting herself as tho widowed sister of
the woman who had left for parts un
known. She told them that she had
important papers to send to her sister,
and talked .so plausibly to the counselor
that he gave tho whole filing away, tell
ing her the place to which tho woman
and child had gono and all about his
side of tho case. No sooner had our
detective got out of sight of this law
yer's ollico than she started in all haste
to find tho woman, not oven going
home to change her apparel, Sho sent
a telegram to her husband that sho was
obliged to go out of town and started
for Indiana (I believe that was tho State)
on the very next train. Sho found tho
woman and child in tho place she went
to and tints accomplished her titsk most
successfully. Another bright operation
of hers was in obtaining information
from or about a household which could
only be obtained by a person inside tho
house. Sho nlfected the Irish brogtio
and made application at tho liouso to bo
engaged its cook. Her services as such
were accepted and she remained in tho
household several days, long enough to
obtain all tho information that was de
sired. Then she quit, tolling tho people
that sho found the work to hard for
her. -New York Mail and Express.
Somewhat Indefinite.
"Have any troops pasted this way?"
said an ofllcer who headed the pursuit,
as ho rodo up to a cabin in tho South
during tho war. and addressed a sharp
nosed woman who stood in tho door
way, with her jaws tied up.
"No," said tho woman, in a painful
drawl; "I ain't soon no sech. Whu'
bo you tins goin'?"
"You don't mean to say that you
haven't seen any soldiers going this
way?"
"Oh, yes, I've seen sogers, and quito
a passol of 'om too. They went by
rcnl peart. I reckon you tins ain't got
no doctor along with ye, have yo? I'm
jest about ready to drop with juinpln'
toothache"
"Yes, there's two or three surgeoiiH
coming tip in tho rear."
"In tho which?"
"In tho rear."
"What's that?"
Tho tail end of tho column."
'Well, now, for the land's sake! And
bo thcyridln' back'ards?"
"WboP"
Turpi' doctors.'
"Of course not; but how many regi
ments did jou say went by?"
"Where be them doctors anyhow,
mister? I've got to git this 'ere tooth
yanked out mighty sudden now, or I'll
go lioppin' crazy.
"I told you they
How tnanv soldiers
were in tho rear,
do von think there
werer
,9"
"1 reckon there ain't no flag nor
notliin' on it. is they?"
"On what?"
"On that kerridge."
"What carriage?"
"'flic ono yo said them doctor pus
sons was in."
"I didn't say they were in a carriage.
1 said they were in the rear."
"Well, now, see here, mister; what
kind of a waggin is that now? 1
wouldn't miss 'em for a mess of greens,
for I jest must git this tootli jerked
dreadful soon, or I'll lose, all the sense
I ever had. Is them doctor people got
unicorns on, or do they just wobble
around in common duds?"
"Yes, they aro in uniform, and
mounted, but "
"And which?"
"Mounted."
"What's them?"
"Good heavens, woman! Won't you
never stop and answer a question or
two for me?"
"Mister, 1 jest cain't do it till I feel
cold iron aginst this tooth. Couldn't
yo gallop yer critter to one of them
doctors, and fetch him along in a good
peart hurry with his pulleys?"
"No, my good woman, 1 can't be de
layed, but if you will tell mo what I
want to know, I'll send a man to find a
surgeon for you. Now tell me how
many soldiers have gone by?"
"La. sakes, mister. 1 didn't count
'em, but that' was quite a heap of 'em.
I reckon they ain't ntoro'n about two
looks and a leap or so from here now.
By joggin' yer critter middlin' lively
.1 reckon yo niought soon overtake
'cm and sco for ycrsolf."
"Did they have any artilery?"
"I didn't sec no signs of sceli, but 1
don't know jest what they had in their
kivcred waggins."
"They had cavolry, didn't they?"
"Not as I noticed, but my tootli was
distractin' me so't I reckon niebbe 1
didn't seo everything."
"How many men do you think they
had?"
"Pshaw, now, mister, I didn't count,
'em, I tell ye. My tooth was a jiunpin
so jest then I couldn't a begun to doit,
but thai- was quite a powerful sight of
'em. Fust thar was a walkin' kunipny,
and then a cannin kunipny, and then
along kini a kunipny on critters. 1
reckon yo couldn't spare a body enough
eofl'eo for a mess or so, could yo?"--Ligc
Jlrown in Chicago Ledger.
The Death of Alphonso.
Queen Christina lias given proof of
unusual fortitude in theso trying mo
ments. She closed her husband's eyes
with lier own hands, and with the as
sistance of t ho physician performed tho
last sad offices so often left to strangers,
and then, after wrapping tho dead body
in its winding sheet, she covered it and
the IhmI with a profusion of flowers, and
kneeling beside it retnaijieil in constant
prayer until tho arrival of tho baby
princesses, who had been sent for litu
ridly, with tho vain hope that thoy
would arrive in time to seo the King
alive. When thoy wcro brought in the
Queen took them in her arms and held
them tip, so that they could seo him,
but tho little ones, accustomed to an
immouso deal of romping with their
boy father, who would piny with them
for hours, seemed much disappointed
at linding him asleep, ami after asking
why there wcro so many llowers on his
bed, quietly climbed down from their
mother's lap and left tho room on tip
too. It was then that tho Queen first
lost all self-control. Madrid Cor. New
York J'ost.
Senate Furniture.
The senate is rather luxurious in tho
lino of furniture. Of course the country
likes to have the members of the senate
made conifortablo, and tho senators
evidently intend thoy shall bo, for thoy
lay aside $10,000 of tho people's money
for furniture alone. Tho furniture can
not bo in very bad condition for it had
$7,000 expended upon it last year. In
prder Unit tho great and general publio
shall havo the benefit of tho printed elo
quence of tho senators, $2,600 is appro
priated for tho mora matter of folding
their speeches. That is only for tho
manual labor, but for pasto ami paper
it takes $4, COO additionr.l. Tho bills of
tho special und select committees of tho
senato who have been passing pleasant
summer vacations at tho expense of tho
Government under tho guiso of investi
gating this or that topic, have not ull
been handed in. Thcro are $25,000
ready and waiting, however, and it Is
not probablo that much, if any of it will
go a begging. Wash. ' Cor, Jlostoti'
Traveller.
THE FESTIVE FLAPJACK.
How Coolted Itefore Tour ICyeft, nnd
I'.nten hy tho Thouwind.
'Revolutions sweep o'er earth like
troubled visions o'er tho brow ofdrcam
ng sorrow," writes a man of geniu?.
This is poetical. There in nothing
poetical, however, in tho revolution
which tho writer proposos to discuss,
l'licro is no poesy attaching to tho pan
rake either in contemplation thereof,
in contact, therewith, or in its mastica
iion or digestion. Tito pancake lias
figured in poems, but is not in itself
poetic. It lias also lwen known to lig
lro in domestic broils, although broii
ng is out of its line. It is generally
baked. But the pancake of to-day is
lot tho pancake of a decade ago. There
tas been a revolution in tho manufac
ture and consumption of tho suculent
lapjack. Everybody remembers the
lld-timo pancake. It was prepared
aiystcriously below stuirs, and tho diner
it cafes and lunch rooms didn't know
whether it was whittled out or cast in a
iiold.
Tho latter-day idea, however, throws
ill the light possiblo upon tho prepara
ion of tho pancake. At nearly every
cstaurant window tho familiar figure
)f a white jacketed, white aproned and
vliite cappetl cake baker is seen facing
lis griddle with his pancake turner in
lis hand, and watching with eyes of a
lonnoissour tho sizzling circles of white
latter. This idea of baking your pan
Mikes before your very eyes grew up in
;lio last few years. The first griddle
mt in a restaurant window, ns this his
torian is informed, was located m a
'"lark street bakery lunch room, near
Vdatns street. It attracted largo audi
jnces throughout the day, and it was
icccssary to install a colored gentleman
ls engineer of this apparatus in order to
lido Ids blushes at the attention which
le attracted.
Rival caterers were not slow to ac
cnowlcdgo tho popularity of tho ven
ture. It pleased tho public. For it
ibolishcd secrecy. It showed that tho
itmost cleanliness was observed in tho
linking of cakes, and tho celerity with,
which an order was filled wius also grati
fying. So tlie gas heated griddlo made
ts appearance all round town, and the
lining publio commenced to eat cakes
it noon and at night as well as in tho
morninsr. Tho original griddlo soon bc
jtuno inadequate, and another was rig
fed and manned in tho establishment
.yhero t ho griddles aro now only equal
jo tho demand made upon them.
This lias been the history of tho pan
;ake in all tho cafes ami lunch-rooms
ibont town. Where one order was giv
5ti tliroo or four years ago fully two
iiundred aro now prepared. This seems
ahetioincnal, but it is vouched for by a
restaurateur who knows whereof ho
ipoaks, and whoso jingling money-bags
jertify that his remarks aro worthy of
;ho fullest credence. His namo is II. II.
Kolilsaat. In four lunch-rooms man
lged by himself and his brother in tho
business district, a rough estimate puts
,lio number of cake orders lillctl in a day
it 1,000, which mako the number of
rakes baked nearly five thousand. Buck
wheat leads in popularity, with wheat,
3orn nnd rice cakes following m tho or
ilor named.
Somo of tho lunch-rooms influcnca
ninsciilinity in favor of cakes by placing
before their customers a potlto little fe
male liguro, prettily dressed and of sur
passing good looks, as tho wlolder of tho
baton at tho griddlo. Tho protticr tho
trjrl the better the cakes taste,
of course, and her nimblo fingers are
kept constantly busy in filling orders for
"pinto of wheats," or "ono of buck
wheats, and havo 'em well done," as
showered upon her by tho hurrying
waiters.
The first institution to do any cooking
fn the sauio room with tlioir patrons was
a well-known oyster hottso in tho neigh
borhood of Clark aud Madison streets.
Hero all orders woro filled in tho room,
In plain sight of guests. It was an in
novation and didn't particularly recom
mend itself to restaurant men, who
wcro slow to tako it up. It Involved
too much cleanliness and caro.for ap
pearances. But it caught tho public,
uid others adopted it. Then followed
the window panciko-baklng scheme, tlitl
growth of which litis been extraordinary.
It is hardly necessary that tho largely
increased consumption of pancakes has
thoroughly exploded tho long-chorislied
idea that this nrtiolo of food was un
hcnlthful and deranging to tho digestive
organs. Chicago Mail.
The Right of Way.
"Bobby, you musn't play so hard with
your little sister," mamma wss saying
reprovingly, nftor little Ethel had been
picked out of tho mud-hole.
"Trains got to run on timo, ain't
theyP When I'm playing train, an'
my tram's got right o' way, It ain't go
in' to stand around for any second-ban'
freight, and tho freight is going to get
dowiifromnhe,tik..Ut,e.alli1-l
Bobbj In a minute or two after.
1