Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1896)
-w OFFICIAL PAPER ! FREQUENT AND CONSTANT Advertising brought me all I own. A. T. Stewart. MY SUCCESS It owing to my liberality in ad vertising. Robert Bonner. 1 - " 14.1IMU I'll I1U4 t ill! I'MtM IM THIRTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY; MARCH 3, 1896. J WEIKLT rfO. P0( ) SEMI-WEEKLY NO 419 1 .- -iLii. ! - SEMI '.VEEKLY. GAZETTE "UBMBHSD Tuesdays and Fridays HI PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPASK. OTIS A. W. PATTERSON. PATTERSON. . . . .. . .. Editor Business Manager Al M.SO per year, $1.25 for six months, 7S ots. lor three inimtns. Advertising Rates Made Known on .Application. - ICYCLES Are the; Highest of all High Grades. Warranted iupertor to any Bicycle built In the world, regardless of price. I)o not be Induced tpjiey more money for an Inferior wheel. Insist on having the Wavirley. "Built and guaranteed by the Indiana Bicycle Co. , a million dollar concern, whose bond leas good as gold. -'::- ;' 211b. SCORCHER $85. ' 221b. LADIES' $7sl Catalogue free. , M ; , JNDJANA BICYCLE CO., ' HOMER H. fiALLOCK, iHDUNAroui, lMD.t TJ, S. A. qHia PAPKll is kept on Ule at E. fi. Hake's 1 Advertising Agency, M and 8S (Aeronauts I Bxohanm. San Francisco, California, whore cou. I rncta for advertising can be made for It. aetSfc SIMMONSN REGULATOR ELEPHANT FICTIONS. Impossible Stories Told About . the Animal's Memory. .., Highest of all in Leavening Power.--Latest U. S. Gov't Report Ula Sagacity It Greatly Exaggerated. Says Prof. Lockhart He la, However, Good-Natured Beast If Prop erly Treated. 0. R. & N. LOCAL CARD. .k r.V... , t'i3 :".:i' S: i!;V .Vita Train leaves Hepp"er 10:30 p. m. dally, except Sunday. Arrives 0:10 a. m. auuy, exccpi mou- dWest bound passenger leaves Willows June Hniil'lli m emit bound .1::10 a. in. Freight trains leavn Willows Junction going east at 7:24 p m. and 8:47 a. m.; going west, 4:30 p. m and 5.58 a. m. OPriOIAL DIHEGTOBT. United Btates Officials. 'IS. 1 i MILLIONS I'l esident Vice-President ......... k)ooe'ary of State ileoratary of Treasury. . Secretary of Interior.. Secretary of War , Secretary of Navy Posttnaster-Qonaral. . .. Attornev-tJtneral Secretary of Agriculture. ..Gruver Cleveland I .... Ad ai Stevenson I ...ltinhard 8. Olney ....Jehn G. ('arlielB I Hoke 8inith ..Daniel a. Lnmont ...Hilary A. Herbert .William I. Wi son .;. Jmlsnn Harmon ..J. Sterling ilurtou State of Oregon. Oovernor. . . Heoretary of State Treaenrer Knot. Public Infraction. Attorney General Senators,......., Congressmen Printer.... Supreme Judges .W. P. Lord H. K. Kincald Phil. Hotorhan O.M. Irwin , C. M. Id'eman U. W. McBride 7 J. H. Mitchell 1 Ringer Hermann " I W. B. Ellis . w. n. lieeas Bxan, iniHire, , Wulvertoo vv. n ( ft. S. B F. A. M.i t C. E. Wu Sixth Judicial Klotrlrt. Oircnit Judge Etephen A. Lowell I'roseouting Attorney John U. Lawray Borrow Conntj Official. ' lolnt Senator A. W. Oowan Unnrannntntive J. 8. HlXlthhV I 't,innHr.Tndif b JllltUB Keilhlf I ' ' Comn-.isiiioners I . B. Howard I J. M. luluir. - flerlr .T. W. Morrow RhurilT H. W. llamnotoii " Trfv.nr.,r Flank Oil Hum I AwMwr J. if. Willi. " Hnrvevor.- Uwi. Lord I " rt(hMil Sop't Anna llalsiger I " Coronor '1'. W. Ayers, Jr I RKi-PNcn town orrioxna. .Thoa. Morgan C mn"iltnii O. K. Farnewirth. M. LinhtMithal. Mia PatteriKin, T. W Aysrs, Jr., . u U UAmw V J Ulnnnm. u"' ' ' . V J. M.I lock p . F.. Lm. Ft"l.nn I viJ r A"""" " ." " A. A. Boberta PreeiactniBcera. pa E. L Frenland Conl.le. N. 8.WheUloDe I'nltcd HlatM lnd OtHrera. n . T if. 1 1 i u .' K.irla'-t a" R. 1U.M BCT f no mnu IWIt' I 1 ' It H..hliin. ' Bwlver I KAWUNri POST, Nvl.IL O. A. R. M-u at Lnington, Or., the laat Batarday nf art month. All veterans are Invited to joio. i-. 11 u,, ii ma. W. Hurra. AH Intuit. tf ( otomaniUr. I TSi U. S. GOVERNMENT i PAYING , . , A MONTH To peraons who erved In tht wars of the United States.of to their Widows, Childfen, or Parent. Do Vou receive a pension ? Had You relative in the War of the Rebellion. Indian or Mexican War on whom you depended for support? ' ' 1 11 J THOUSANDS' ARE' ENTITLED , , UNDER THE NEW LAW. , , To teeeive a pension, who now do not. Thousands under the new law are entitled to an Increase' of pension." The government owes' i to you and is willing and Anxious to pay. Why not' present" your claim at this present time? Your pension dates from the. time you apply. Now Is the accepted hour. tWrite for laws and complete information. No Charge for advice. 4 No Fee unless successful. . ,:. . . 3 .--;-,. iv-'-- The Press Claims Company PHIUP W. AV1RETT, Ccneral Manajer, .,r , 618 F 5treet, WASHINGTON, D. C JT. B. ITU Company it controlled by nearly ens thoutand leading swr paper in (Kt United Stale, and it guaranteed by them. 'Z. Zjm Caw s&A Ww .wiw M THE BEST SPRING MEDICINE Is Simmons Liver Regulator don't forget to take it The Liver gets sluggish during the Winter, just like all nature, and the system becomes choked up by the accumulated waste, which brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague and Rheuma tism. You want to wake up your Liver now, but be sure you take SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR to do it. It also regulates the Liver keeps it properly at work, when your system will be free from poison and the whole body invigorated. -: You get THE BEST BLOOD when your system Is in Al condition, and that will only be when the Liver Is kept active. Try a Liver Remedy once and note the difference. But take only SIMMONS Liver regulator it is Simmons LIVER REGULATOR which makes the difference. Take it In powder or in liquid already prepared, or make a tea of the powder; but take SIMMONS LIVER REGU LATOR. You'll find the RED Z on every package. . Look for it J. H. Zellin A Co., Philadelphia, Fa. THE ; OWEN ELECTRIC BELT Trade Mark-Or. a. Owe ra , FOR MEN AND WOMEN .The latest and only sclenting and practical Electrlo Belt made, for general nee. nroduoln a genuine currant of electricity, for the cure 01 ainaae, mai can Da readily felt and re itbcu mna in loan time eru- both in Quantity and power, and applied . . . , ..V. .. y part of the body. It ean be worn at any mood, he makes a terrific roar with his during working hours or sleep, and , throat, which aounda like distant thun. WILL POSITIVELY CURB Errors and extravagances Oriental, classic, medieval and modern supersti tioncluster about "my lord the ele phant," as he is called in India. There is hardly an animal about which so many fictions extot or which is so little understood. The popular opinion is that the ele phant's memory is as : retentive as man's. Stories are constantly floating about to this effect. The lost one I met with asserted thut an elephant had killed a man who, 20 years before, when a small boy, had given him a piece of to bacco, or had in some way maltreated him. Of course this story is preposter ous. In the first place most elephants love tobacco, and instead of killing a man for giving him a chew, he would be most likely to trumpet a welcome and caress him every time he presented him self. But as to his remembering any body for 20 years or 20 months even, it is sheer nonsense. There is hardly an animal who3e memory is so capricious. An equally unaccountable fiction is that there recurs a period each year when a gland swells on each side of the animal's head about six inches bi.ck of the eyes, and which emits a watery dis charge of unpleasant odor. At such times the elephant is supposed to bo a very dangerous creature. As I never knew an elephant to be especially disa greeable when he had a cold in his head, I am inclined to class this with the other ridiculous and absurd yarns so often repeated. " 1 ' -i ' It is commonly supposed that the elephant is unabli to give definite ex pression to his feelings. This is a mis take. He always expresses his pleasure in one way, by blowing through his trunk. 1 The noiBe made is exceedingly shrill. When in want, he expresses it in a low note mode by the mouth, and when in anger or when In a revengeful l,IKi :'.t M Ab&OWTEEY PUCE persons with cold hands make lighter ' me. He never vorks, all he docs is bod cakes than others, irenerallv sneakinc: ''der me " Tor this reason a china rolling-pin will be found preferable to one of wood. Liverpool Mercury. "' ;.. ' Salmon Steak. Steep for an hour or so four middle-cut, good-sized sal mon steaks with a glass of sweet oil, salt and pepper and the juice of a lemon. About half on hour before serving, broil them light brown over a charcoal tire, and garnish with quartered lemons and serve with a bowl of tartar sauce. Boston Budget.' CrumbB spread over the tops of dishes should be mixed evenly with melted butter over the fire.' This is 11 better method than having lumps of butter dotted over the crumbs after they tire spread. When the sauce bub bles througli the crumbs on top of & scallop dish the cooking is completed. The Cook. ' " - ; ' ' , ,,,! Egg Dressing for Salads'. Take the yolk of one hard-boiled egg, one teai spoonful of sngar, one-half teaspoon ful of salt, one teaspoonful-of made musturd and one tablcspoonf ul of but. tr. Cream the Ingredients and add gradually two tablespoonfuls of vine gar. Chop the white of the egg fine and add It to the salad. This is especially desirable for cabbage. Housekeeper. GOING UP-STAIRS. ' He Aeeom- TFACTS amis e e e FACTS ! r: iiiim'iw .1.1 0C CAM BCt 121.00 worth of dry and groceries and thss have enough left ent of 1 100 00 to purchase s No. I Crescent Bicycle. This Is 1 Srst-elass machine. Why then pay 1100.00 for s bicycle that will give 0 better service t si niiFtntiATis.n LI) HI HA uo a EN KH A L IIBB ILITT UATIU HACK NKH VOUS3 UI9EASES VaHICOCELH KIKXI AL. WB1KREII ITilOTKIv(IV K.IONBV I11SBAIES WITHOUT MEDICINE -lloctrlcltr. eroserlv eotilled.-Is fast ukln tne Place 01 aniga for an fit cures in aeemlnsiVnoVj other known means haa failed. .Jam.... T, 1. a.. . I eurrs In aeemlngly hor'MtaJsV'S.a w LUMBER! iiti niV ro nai.K ALL KIHDH Or OH YY draeaad LointMr It miles of Ueppuer. ail what I known as the 0OOTT A-XXTTVIXXjIj. I ria t,ow rtiT. aooou, - CLCAR, MOO IT M I TF DELIVER!!) IN MFP!t, WILL ADD 1 IV un per l.'i'i leM a1lllniial. The above quotations are strictly for Cash. L liAMUJON, hop. national W o( mwi WM. PEWLAM0. ED. K. BIHHOP. freaMeaL Cekl. TUSSiCTJ k CENER 11 SINKING BCSBESS v. e aaSj mivim wmm ' ! CRESCIMT corchaf," weight pounds, only t. Ladles' and OaBU roadsters all the way from te I. FFDPVK f i 'Boye' Junior, only M With pneumatle Ura a good asachlna. " V 5 "Our pedal." Meo'i M; Ladles', M. f g CDS tftk '. r" -1 ' l, awla trow 'U-.A II 1 " p.r1,lScrul,IL I'ertw: 4 ADDtKSS . f, i .rBin.re l.j rhiM-. "it", -1 1 WESTERN WHEEL-WORKS, fervSM'" CHICAGO AND NEW YORK, . I. J FERRY'3 P-j " 1 Vh SEED ANNUAL VJ ' Snr !. lUiatful af ValuaMe W . 9 w w w w wf a . ewfc Srw ay ij J i THE PiTTIRiOX m fcs lK XjX ; HlORROW AND GRANT ?iVi"ivT. t Any sluHl.h. weak or diseased orcan nav by this means be roused to healthy aoUvliy before It Is too Ule. Leadln meillral men nae sod reoommsnd the Owen Uult lu their practice. OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE Contains fulleat Information regarding the care or acute, enronio ana nervous omeanes, prices, and how to order. In Enillsh, German. Hwcdlih and Norwegian languairea, will be mailed, upon application, to any address for eeuls postage. Tki Owen Electric Belt and Appliance Co. sis emri as ohlt rarroaT, The Owea CieeUte Celt tUy, 201 le 211 tuts Street CHICAUO. ILL. The Urtett Electrlo Bell CslablishatMil In tht Wt! COL LECTIONS If ads oa fsvoraUe Term. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD nKlTNKK. tf OREOO!! Oalirio-lliiros Staac Line a. r i BUBXS-G3HT0K STHBEURE H. A. WIl'.laMS. P'OB osTAnionunss I..,m II tne Iilf al n. ra eoj ar rive al OutarN 43 tnnr. Sinale Faro $7 00. Round Trip $10 00 famse traUM 'i eae p awaO- nunss-CASYOs t -I'll H.i.V" " VHE INTER OCEAN Most Popular Pepatllcan Newspaper of the West And Has the Urcest Circulation. TERMS BY MAIL DAILY (wilHovt Umdty)... te e eryesr DAILY (with feaday) 9. rr year The Weekly Inter Ocean ($1.00 , - rxx txax.. ............... I y . ' Lr-n.m4 T ra. Mart. mm4 e4 all 1 'aV Um wu4 w steeia.TS rtra. i Ova ori is oeiv U, . rv Own h4 ew ' aa tMS bM aaaJ (Me.! e yWaa, 4tfc eWrt.1 Um. We (. 1 ""- e Ch b. W4 bll HUM tmw. . . . ; . .. m k j A KM iok. i. 1 a4 C.A.SNOW&CO. e e. ftmm BmS. ! a UJDUTm.aM tnCfr'aS'', finillal nil SWrs N he a am I ha aisi tV TRI prrm OCCAl ttMwe aas t rw Haws fms mm etfmm M uun uTiaaitaa. ta a inn J-en mmi pour Wle I i r asa f Wtt. y, WMiia. tania J ' 1 1 wuiaa ii;ffIVI,laa AMwva, WaaUifU. U ti, lot Ui l pvtae ar. der. He never mixes these sounds; they always stand for definite states of feeling, and are as well understood by the trainer as are the deep, slow-drawn and far resounding snores heard at midnight in the elephant's stable. The elephant's wisdom has so often been extolled that "sagacious as an ele phant" has passed Into an axiom. In point of fact an anlmrl will cross a rot ten bridge full of holes If you will permit IV fP 1,0 S9- Even in his wild state, though posSfs-w. - . -i...,i,M.hIch Is capable of guarding it aguimtrrnitu dangers, the elephant readily falls into pits dug to receive It, which are only covered with a few sticks and leaves. Its fellows make no effort in general to assist the fallen, ss they might easily do by kicking in the earth around the edge, but fly In terror. It commonly happens that a young elephant tumbles into a pit, nrnr which its mother will remain until the hunters come, without doing anything it help It not even feeding it by Uirowlnjr In a few branch es. Wbolo herds of elephants ere led Into locloeures which tiny eould break through as easily as if thry were made of cornstalks, aud which no ether ani mal would enter; and single onee are caught by their hind legs being tied to gether by men antler cover of tame ele phants. AnlmsU that happen to escape are eapturra again without irouuir, even experience will not bring them wledoru. I do not think that I traduce the elephant when I any that it la. In many thing, a stupid animal. Itrgsrding an elephant bring unable to express with hie countenance feel liijfs of affection, fesr, desire , I think all thoae who have awn Itoney simulate drunkrnneaa at Troctor'a pleasure pal ace. In the antomline, "Krom Cafe to Police Station," will readily acknowl edge lhl error. It la really wonderful how rouch facial expression an ele phant really haa-vt lib a fare skeleton ao Imperfect; that Is to say. Its feseaj bunre are ru'lioieniary, wmie the mouth, all of thw lower hulf of th face, hi conrt-slrd beneath grvat mu Ire at fay-hed to the beee of the trunk. Bulla spili of tl-st, and with his ears un rurLrd and his ftroboaei pendant, an rtriihaat s eouoU-nance U full of rhar artrr. The truth about the elephant Is that, trrsted kludly and ronsldcrately, be la a great, giwid natured beast, hn, f'r his mastrr, will perform any rnmltirle labor or fiat. They are rry afftB ate and eioredlnjrly Joaloua of atten tions from thrlr ma.ter. Therw are rogue" elephanta, of roure-, but they lr aeldom me I lth esrept In large l.erda, and her sttrndants An not un Jrratand bow to treat the brut a la their rharge-. Y. Jouraal. To Do This Gracefully la to ' pllshed.' The woman who rinds herself at the top of a flight of urairs, breathless and xnausieu, gusping ana Dlcwlng In a distressing rummer, has undergone' an .iwful physical strain. The heart a.id ihe stomach havo been made' to do double duty, that of the lungs and their awn combined, with more often only one-half of the room required to do it in, from the. compressing fpce of the I stays. Consequently, o of the ir-- graceful actions thn a woman called on most often Hlustrar trans formed, hv ne lenorance of a few rules of physical culture, Into one Of the most tiuiinroua and sorry s!irbu Imsglnsble. The woman who clutehes her skirU in front niidwsv between the hip and the knee be.-.ds ber body from the hips ?Amfrnt.Jn bow and drags up, labor louiiiy exiiiuiauiiK uv. ....... -i. t every step, ,s maklnir a fool I Mi snd a ridiculous mistake, for which she suf fers severely long before arriving at the top. One of the handsomest picture paint ed of feminine benuty is that of a love ly woman sjtrendirg a fine, old stnlr- (ass. Her slender figure is gracefully erect, her lovely fsee on the column like throat turned half over her shoul der. The arms are bare, and droop with perfectly natural grace to her knee a, where the silken skirts are daintily lifted to allow the free play of tiny, slipiH-rcd feet. The My la In the act of ascending, and seems to Host up ward, the personification of grace It self. ' One Imagines that he ean see her rslrh her silken skirt at either knee, lifting it Just to the an kit, expand her chess, hold her shoulders well back and her arms down. Then tha slender body rests aouarrly on the hle, not dreg glng forward, and, standing per fee-1 erect, she glide urrward, easily and grarefully. Chicago Inter Ooeao. "What have you got to say about this, Hans?" A toll German lad with light blue eyes hung his head in shame, Swung one foot backward and forward, pulled his cap nervously, and said in a low, timid voices" " -''" '"' ' 1 si "We was in Iofe, you know, and she went back on me two or three times alrettj . When I haf vork she lofes me, and when I haf no vork she lofes me not." ' "Weli.you had better transfer your af fections somewhere else, ofr it you bother this woman again I will send you ta the bridewell. ' Do you understand?" , "Yes, chudge; I vill say to her right here: "(jood-py, Lena, you vill never see your Hans again. " . . So they parted. ? , ;. J : - BOLD AS A LION. IsoOe Justified by Audacity of aa East , : Indian Beast.'. . Apropos of the death of Maj. Sand bach from wounds inflicted by a lioness while hunting In Somaliland, reference may be made to an interesting article n Scribner by Capt C. J. Mellls. Among other things Capt. Melllss gives a striking Instance of a lion's grent audacity. An English officer was shoot ing recently in Somaliland. One night, when he was in bed Inside his tent, a lion sprang over the rough thorn fence which it is usual to throw up around one's encampment at night. Tnstesd of picking up one of the men or ani mals that must have been lying nbou' asleep inside the fence, he wouV' and rone but the sportsmanJ'ind seised made a dash lntoJy- by the hand, him fortunBtfc)on(jei.fui piece of luck. Then, by0s; chftnged his grip for the .Jlder. he ersobed the pillow nsteaa and so vanished with his prise. The pillow was found next morning revero. hundred yards distsnt In the Jungle. r'Hi Ukevlew TheAVcckly Inter Ocean AS A FAMILY PAPER IS MOT EXCELLED BY ANY. ,tt It has aewttHef alleaenet Sa aae e la tmemttf If I ,-, i II lit totisi .irmainauHt,Ml Me awe. VJ H IliUltaasy laatwataeeaanfliA II rotTTKAlLV ry I rntHICaj. 4 tew Ss ml.n raw a e,. w raw eS4.es mmm ee eS) Mve a I M ease gives tkwes IMS faa 04 inewosiu. IT 13 A TWELVt-.PAOE PAPER. Twn wrt en r piueiro r srrwe asm connrscut, it rr or i.i t t tnr n . ssoi wtria, m ieiiis. orii r to trie m riii or in riurxn Or mat u.(,1s Inajs Ay pAttm fASlrtlK East. H Is la mnm wMs taw saw at Saw Wees swtk le ewMISse mm t tvewlaea. rw.MMMiMlk)-4.tftai WeeSIr tarOe e Ss 0,T Ufl Dot. U txm taae. TIE NTER OCEAN. CbUafa 4 Fkie' Dur.Aiui or mi: mi. The Urne luk'og sn4 enMrtini ls4 dVnl In eravwa. Hl.f. aall-rlieuoi, srwi otlnt dM.e i4 U. ekis ss Itwtantly alls' at.tlvl ( in.Uil.in s I e el tmwnL W-nr very 14 wre hsve b rmanertttr rw.l ly IL ll is e-ually UpoI f: f IU liir I il w srvl S far. it h j alf M are ti'ti i a, rKaf--l Kafla, rhil- Mains, fr-M kiU, aivl (hemM anre eyas. of sale by dr.r)C Si ten IS twf log. Tr Irr. f4ie feadlllea Te Jer. lU arajirf whala Ixtf M fwv U w hen in bad oritldL um. lose, I r-uiiiwr sm vfrwitiuga. Tat sa'e te ('. k lwel. d'SiUls w.. U th liase M arH le Wawlly v.-.: it iimimI eeiape t4 j .... u u. tt m H C brh ff f a Me , a H on - wv-v a.iMa"e -f a -eret" re U sa4 l. Ike V' t-e ' I,,.,.-,, a. .t I .-'. WpS f4 e. aa ) e t'!-. ?Mi ifl l trieaa. Thf. LwcAnmt Insurance Co. AI Its r:e HVtlLAall i . Thy aUT "lM",.'H' j" U"'- "A?tf Tb rf ita ett. vt a me el lb ttMSra.kl; UagtU le I3..V) sad lb rewnler (.rirw fcl ib Weekly Oregnelsa to ELM. Aayaae toriMs M Ib Oa'" s4 eayieg fr year le ade.ftewrea ! t,h Ite ft.'le al eki ..v -iaa f I' t. lf.Hah w. I. e .,,i, i e-'ee KM is lt J a 4t a "'4 e !- a fe rmt&lOE rWAGMENTt. If ye rmsnea a eery earner lh B shelf at tbe top ls a ttee trtxigb made lo fli it and AH this with sm bsrdy Miaf sbd Mower ptaets, Tbey will last a lurg lime sad add greetly to lb Kaaety of the room. Urnall pUrr f toilet Soee which re toe lutie le b ad may b eUiis4. : Make a Lag ef Turkl-h tAwelibg slul awvee Inrhes a'piare snd put Into It al' IIwp seiall plKwe ef snap. WMe It la Ihrea-rper Irri filled sew up the end SB'I a lb IriMf as tf It were a eaks ef aoap rsm Tnl with Voevh'4 Ttt tyrr lusat aa smusI. Iy tstb aJi le aawter before at'litif drwaaieg , aed t!ta flnliti with A rVUaUly fwa bd t3- Iff brvkee into twpersM eaee dabe or ltiy ae. snd uead eetil th w l.iue ere est, Ul preset e or atttliit.f ai'ireac uas eke trf jd li.te wsier N. Y. I)ff. T rtiste fee'ry e-eaefiny. It Is Irapovtael IKel It aa"M tf I Ww li ttIM. St H at ILa ke!i alrfmld t I ewwi. kHasSeaWwdyta . WATER SNAKfc blUHTS EEL. TerrlAe C aaaawt Wkkk fUally Cee4 ta ' the Cat's Kaeapw. "Did you ever knew that there la deadly antipathy between a common eater snake and an eel V Bated! the fishermen, according to the Indianspo lis fVnUnel. "Well. I never knew It until an ripee-leece I bad In witnessing a light between Ihe two. personally, I have tit greatest dread ef eels, rut mere afraid ef them than I im oil snske, and you can Imagine my tltng r.n when I hsppen-d to hook one on one of my flshliiff estwditions. IwsssfrsM to touch It, and alt ! eould do was le let It dsngle In tbe alt. I eould not get II off my book, and I wss meditating wbst to do. when slt'ifvthrr enaoticed I allowed the slimy ebet to drop Into the water. le moment t saw a b f water anake rusks a dive for It. At the first lung It rsugbt the neck o( the rel eouarrly between his teeth, ami I eould see It sink Its egty looklrg ra'g Into lh ee-l's flesh. wailed aaakiua'y tOe the dvrk1mrtte. With: lie ft bold sull on lb eel's keek the snske. quick as It tehae to lU wrspid lie aiauoua bmty around Itasntsg nlal' neck In an effort le soneese It to death. The body ef Ibe eel was tuo sleek, bow. wr, and the snske's rolls, defpltt a'l II roulJ do. wou'd slip down Into the .water. Tlee and lime araJa It trWd le jaoeeete the life net ef Its saurm st. , Mver fores lastant rvleaiBf luhol.lrrt lb awl's nark, but lb body ef U la trr wee loo tUk for It sad ever llete It would slip down, finally the tmk brokered tb eel ied f tn4 its res spri." An Aecommodatlng Justice, A Philadelphia mntristrate, who re cently distinguished himself by hold ing court in the street to nesr a cnao toiieernlng two men who were brought to his house while he was at dinner. broke his record one Sundny recently by leaving tllS tie, utlone in church to hear a case out in the street and then going back to resume his interrupt ed prayers. Two men were arrested In the ICth precinct one Sat unlay night for a slight breach of the peace. Next n orning they were willing to pay their fins and wanted to be rcleaaed at once. They were token In the patrol wogoe. to the magistrate's house, where it wss learned that he was at church. The vsgon wss driven to the church, and the Jtid) was quietly called out. lie heard the ease, Inflicted the usual flnee. which the prisoners paid, then dis charged the men aud went bark to bis pew. SOURCES OF CONTAGION. The Breath af llrh rereane Leea with Deadly Germs. A little frill, six years of sire, wss taken by her mother Into a atret car. The car wna crow, led, and a delicate- looking man lifted Ihe little one to his kiines. rihe ast there a moment, then slid down and clung to ber mother's aklrtu. A Iter they had left tbe car, she said : "Mamma, I rouldn'l sit there; that msa breathed In my far snd msiW me sick." For tlsys afterward she complained . . .. . . . .. . .. . teal alio coiim not get mat tirramui teat rut of ber mouth. In due time she was allocked with typhoid fever and died. There was no question whstevrr le ihe mind of the physician that the mas who took the child up wss in the first stntres of typhoid. Ulieing that this llaeeae could be transmitted by Ibe breath, be look pains to make ei perl men la. A sufferer from typhoid breathed a number of llewe Into eg la veaarl rontailill.f sWrilised water. I'rom Ibis water iiliiura wrre made, and tha tree typhoid UeiUI detrloped la eaor ruoua ej 'tan' Hire. ll la grn-'rally swppoaed that typhoid U due to rvittatninatrd water, but SI permienta of this sort hae mada It fer ula that tl I rva'b. eaerially If threw n out euddcnly aa by roughing. Is likely lo lie laden with Ihe deadly germs. Iadd, physicians ens bream Itif well eaiia Red that lit lung aie roe suntly at work trying to rsttari from .he blood and throw out all polauBeee Ingredients, Tb la being tbe rase, those who Inhale lb breath ef a person suf fering from stiouat any diae are llahla to rewrite tb germe snd been me Inferled with the earn n.eJedy, N. Y. Ulfer. HANS ANO UNA. etee I Haf Xe fe as 11 ate ," Bay Htjagrawa. 1 1 waas Jree to pel biai aotnew br ae h imAd e sneay Jd Xre, I-rglia.ef tl VsrkH ssrw, t Jesurw Kereim w,f she spjewed falntt llane Msle.n. who she threrg'd with Uisg dordilt aay lb 1.1. g J luraaJ. "V. haf baa be b a 4(r eaid Ut )sU . . i " eil b roteee pf mf f e! It Uea kxi km bvdJ p f;A tvdert Al lmm S. tea Slag. Mis b'g l.rae enndearwftda to Uke part In a bow lint evening of Ib "IWlal Urol hers." i Ikrowaaltsll wbkhbiU aoth'nf . Ae the prlttr I sear e ghted, b aslai "itill. bow many la HT" I'slnfsl sit' tie At last lb preside at metre a rteepf at effort a4 aaya,wltk B deep bow "four klf be. two e the j,iBS-ebbw:"-rird fju Th a.erlaae f tW TaS CbSiffa ef Ik IM fsntTS f oar lw re's a tttistsV ba toed. ty sr. '.s ot.l. M't l a y. Se' dm roust sbowa tn se an' ewlf tifibt a-. the (lrk..ttt'l, rtiM"? "n U j we) l'a.i4ii.k t iw-!. 1 ! "a I