Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, July 24, 1896, Image 1

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    PAPER
A HOT NUMBER r-
A LARGE NUMBER....
Of Morrow County's citizens read
the Heppner Gazette. Not much of
an authority on agriculture or poli
tics, but true to the interests of its
neighbors.
Is the Heppner Gazette. Without
it the Heppner hills would appear
dry and barren. People read it;
business men advertise tit it.
FOURTEENTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1896.
WEFKTy NO. 700)
8EMI-WEEKLY KO 4601
OFFICIAL
SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE.
PUBLISHED
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
TBE PATTERSON PIMM COMPANY.
brwYioH RLCRUITING.
CONFISCATED " LLEPHANTS.
OTIS PATTERSON,
A. W. PATTERSON.
. . . Edito'
Business Manage'
At JS.50 per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 era.
for throe mourns.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
epHlSPAPKRiskept on file at E. C. Dnke'e
I Advertising Afrenoy, 61 and 65 Merchant
V I C! 1 nlf..pnia arharlimi...
I'lltilVIDI'U, uQiiiinuiB, nt.u.wvw.
thoU for advertising can be made for it.
0. R. & N. Local card.
Train leaves Heppner 10:45 p. m. dally, except
Sunday. Arrives 5:00 a. in. dally, except Mon-
West bound passenRer leaves Heppner Junc
tion 1 :11 a. m. ; east bound i:S3 a. m.
Freicht trains leave Heppner Junction Bfolng
east at 7:45 p. m. and 9:10 a. in.) going west, 4:30
p, m. and 6.15 a. in.
OmCI-A-Xi XJU3J3CTOTV3T.
Cnlted States OfllclaU.
(resident '.. Grover Cleveland
Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson
Keni-aOirv of Htate Kiohard 8. Olney
Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle
Heoretary of Interior Hoke Smith
Secretary of War Daniel 8. Laniont
Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert
Postmaster-General William L. Wilson
Attorn ay-n no ral Juilson Harmon
Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
Hovernor W. P. Lord
Peoretaryof State II. It. Kincold
Treasurer Phil. Jletschan
Hnpt. Publio Inst roctina O. M. Irwin
Attnrimv General C. M. Idleman
i it. w . iTiiu3nu
' I J. H. Mitchell
I Hinder Hermann
. it. Kills
Printer W. H. Leeds
( R. S. Bean,
flnnrftin .fllflr.ee F. A. Moore.
( G. K. Wolveiton
Sixth Judlclid District.
Circuit Judne Stephen A. Ijowell
I'r-oeecutiua Attorney n. J Dean
Morrow Coontjf Officials.
Secretly Carried On In This Country Dar
ing the Crimean War. '
In the North American continenit the
spirit of adventure 'is strong. During
the Crimean war I was an attache at
the Washington legation, and, as this
was about 40 years ago, I do not sup
pose that I am disclosing any secrets
in 6aying what then occurred. We re
ceived orders to recruit a force for
the Crimea. This was a fad of Lord
I'anmure, who was JSicn war minis
ter. Sir John Crampton. our minister,
vainly wrote to explain that this might
got us into trouble with the United
States government. The only reply
was the order to obey. So we did. I
was sent to New York to look after the
recruiting there. We had a ship in the
harbor and we found no difficulty in
filling it. A recruiter got Ave dollarr.
per man, and .the man five dollars, ac
companied with many promises of good
things. When the ship was full it was
sent to Nova Scotia, where we had a
governor an old soldier with the repu
tation of being able to knock any regi
ment into shape. The government of
the United States soon got wind of our
proceedings at New York, and at Niag
ara, where we had a Hungarian em
ployed to slip recruits across the fron
tier, The result was that the mem
bers of the legation at Washington and
the consuls at New York and one or
two other places received their pass
ports. What particularly amused me
was that the consul at New York had
had nothing to do with the matter.
But we had elaborated a far grander
scheme. We had found a sort of flli
STORY CF A RING.
It Proved an 111 Omen to All
Cause of Disoussion Between This
Country and Slam.
An American Missionary Who Acquired
Property and Got Into Trouble
with the Siamese Royal
Family. !
The late Dr. Marion A. Cheek, of Oak
land, who went to Siam some years ago
as a medical missionary, had some re
markable experiences in the "land of
the white elephant." He raised ele
phants for a living. That was one of
his investments in the Orient, and out
of it grows a claim his widow has for
$80,000 against the Siamese govern
ment. Dr. Cheek's drove of elephants
had become the source of a great deal
cf diplomatic correspondence between
Siam and the United States. Interna
tional difficulty, that is still in process
of settlement, arose over the 176 ele
phants, s ..
The story of Dr. Check's adventures
in the east reads like a romance. He
went to Siam a missionary of the Chris
tian religion. His knowledge of meet
eine stood him in good stead. He in
gratiated himself into the hearts of
the princes of the land as well as the
lowly natives, who saw in his remark
able cures of disease unfathomable mys
tery. ' Dr. Cheek was an American. Hi
overlooked no opportunity to better his
condition. He gained valuable conces
sions from the Siamese government and
established the business of logging teak
timber of Bangkok, the capital, The re
turns were so great that some of the
uustering general, who had agreed to" native princes in the interior cast long-
provuie us with several thousand men, ing eyes upon the profits the American
Senators.,
Congressmen j yy"
J-iirtr, Senator... ... ...
Kenreeentntive.
''ounty Judge....
' I'onimleeiorters,,
J. W. Beckett.
" Clerk
" Sheriff
" Tc-asni-er
Aiwesiior
" Hnrveyor...
School Bup't...
" Ooroner
A. W. Oowan
J. N. Brown
....A. G. Hartholomew
J. K. Howard
J.W. Morrow
K. L. Matlock
Frank Oillisio
J. r Willis
J. W. Rumor
Jay W. Shipley
U. F. VuUKhan
nfpnH towm ornoiM,
M,y. Thoa. Morgan
'. .i n llnrner. K. J
j r'urii'uru ................. - - '
Hlomim. Kmnk Robert. Geo. CoDer, frank
n;n;.m A rthnt I itifr.
u" ' V. J. Hallock
r E. L. Freelsnd
Mnr.1,.1 A. A. lloborU
Precinrt OSoers.
r..,-. tk. tma W. E Kichanlson
IWahle." N. B. Whetstone
Halted Stales Land OHicert.
rae nit.f.M. na.
t m, Hntrister
a" h' li,... .' Heoeiver
i a Anitnt na.
B.F. Wilson IWUtar
J.H. Kobtiuia Keoeiver
BXCXIKT BSCISTISS.
hAWLlNS POST, NO. II.
O. A. R.
M sets at Leiinnton. Or., tlx last BetunUy of
cfc month. All veterans are Invited to Join.
f'C. linna. (iEO. W. HHITH.
Atllulant. tf Commander.
LUMBER!
WTt R AVK FOR ALI ALL KINTW OF ON
t dnwaed Lumber. Is Ditlee oi Ueppner, at
what U kaowu as the
Bya.'WXaXXXjZj.
who were to be recruited m Texas and
the adjoining southern states. These
were to be commanded by the general,
l'he negotiations went off, because
while we were prepared to give him
the local rank of general in the Crimea
he insisted upon being made what he
called a full general in the British army.
To this we could not assent.
I could never discover what became
of my New York recruits. They were
landed in Nova Scotia, and shortly aft
erwards the governor telegraphed that
tuey had rebelled, and that he was go
ing to take steps to reduce them to a
fitting state of discipline. This was th'.;
last heard of them.
The governor was somewhat of ad un-
derhcaded man. We wanted (I forget
why) to have a ship sent from Nova
Scotia to Jamaica. We had a cipher dic
tionary, but I could not find the word
Jamaica in it, so I telegraphed the code
words for "jam" and "acre." This was
too much for the governor s intelli
gence. Again and again be teiegrapueii
to ask where the Bhip waa to go; again
and again I telegraphed back, refer
ring him to the code words for "jam"
' acre." Finally we had to send a mes
senger with a letter. London Truth.
Who
DRAMATIC COURT SCENE.
Confesses a
BOOTT
FIE 1.01)0 FEET, ROUGH,
- - CLEAR,
- I too
- IT M
IF tlKMVRRFD lit Hr.PPNIR,
fe.UU per I.UUU leet- eillltoual.
WILL ADD
The above quotations are strictly for Cash.
L HAMILTON, Frop.
0!
r.
WB.PEXLAND. KD.
r-rveUoat.
E. VIRBOF,
Cask ler.
TROSilCTS i GLUM BANKING BUSINESS
COL,L,KCTIONS
Ml oa Favorable Term.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT i SOLD
U EITHER. tl OREOOS
Ontario-Hums Staac Line
a. ? i
BilHS-SElllflllSTBBEUliE:"
" WWW I f t a. A m
M. A. WIL'.iAMS, P-ep
USTAUtOBVltSS
leaves Darrie Deilf al 6 p. W. tl
rlr al Ot.Ufin la ti ho a re.
Sinalo Furo S7.DO.
Round Trip 310.00
feylttemtk fee4ftl rt si4
liUitss CAsrox
e 1
m ih rv, ffiftvl(ie enl lt'w
aVMMMMMakVjMBaawMaMaMam
tia, lha t, epep- of
Ih Vel. Ifcefl-M'
If a 1 mms.sss f 1 rl H-
eV4T l.n V i f 'f !' ' ,
la I '. IV -et l- '
rtuiiis aa a-1 li'1-t.sl J.saal.lta W
fH IUb. a-IUaJ si-.
pHlsrswiuMMk
Crime Through Fear of
Ghastly Accusation.
Up in New JlamrwWre the officers
of the law have just used with effect
that very ancirnt test by whlcl- one ac
cused of murder Is suddenly and unex
pectedly confronted with some horri
ble proof of his crime. The oldest form
of this tent was to take the aecust-d
Into the presence of the corpse of the
murdered hunisn Ix-lng. The supersti
tion was that If the accused was tl
murderer the wounds would open and
LIixkI flow out of them.
The latent exnmple wns In the court
room t Woodkvlllr, N. II, where Milo
(irav was on trial for the murder of
hi wife.
This man Orav. fnrmrr of dissolute
!ife, married widow, a Mrs. Irew. As
he was unfnlUiful to her ahe took her
linby and fled from him. In Hi ptrmlxr,
1S'1, ahe derliled to go to California, Bin'.
on her way cams to i.ast iinvrrniu.
where be Sited, to talk to hlin alout the
child.
It in the afternoon Oray borrowed
a l'tirjry irom a man n anted jcituuud
Harry to take her ovrr to the station
it Hath arid put hex cm the train, lie
tam bark alone toward riikinirh'.
Mrs. Cray's relatives wotidrrH why she
never wrote to thrm. InpilrleB wet
Made; (imy is aueia-cted. Ilut there
wa no proof, and the niatter was for
("Often.
Oetober U last C.eutgr Ilrill, B fartnpr
livinifon the roai teiwerp I'-asl Ilsver
lull and Hath, found the akrleton of
woman under a heap of rubbish In the
cellar of hi house. With the akeletxn
were tb buttons of a ilmt, with bite
of (Ireayed cloth iiktigng to tbem, ami
an ftbumhurw of dark-brown hair. At
one the dead suspicion leaped to life. It
waa rememlirred that th Drill bouse
waa rmpty in Irtl. w hen (iray drove Ms
wife to tli slat loo. IW-rry poalUvely
lletiliHel the tiutfofi BS Vg liai
re, and toon Bcornpletr
new was rj'pel Bround
Gray,
Ha plrade.1 rot trulliy atx) the trial
ram on. At the proper tiine lb prosv
ertitinj' efVy-r aaaUbeJ a dark elolU
from B m.TSlerioua. tlaltte-like objeet
that stood w iibin B few feet of the pna
otwr, (ir$y leapt 4 bark w ilbB shnut of
ear and bermr. It was lb akrlrloo of
his Wife, ta (leiblree anekett tarttB at
blm. u fjesttlrsa Jaws opemns'
aprly at L.rn. He abouled out ll.at lit
WiHiliI r the w bole abrry.
The stove be loid wa Ixllrve.) by tee
rotirt Bh4 be got only tl yraTB la III
penitentiary lte4 of tb bapflri: be
erowH sufrlf bave f,i bad b not rnn.
ffsajwi wader Jet tlwww rireaetiieea,
( liUa- Jourr al.
was turning.
One of them suggested a partner
ship. Dr. Cheek was loath to accept
the proposition, but he decided that his
own welfare demanded that he joiii
hands with the dusky prince. Thedoc
tor had an agreement with his princely
partner as to the distribution of the
labor. Cheek agreed to do 'the actual
work. He went 500 miles Into the teak
timber district and hired many native
laborers. He likewise secured 176 ele
phants. The doctor had indifferent suc
cess one season. The river was low
and no logging could be done. The
prince became dissatisfied. He was ap
peased, thought Dr. Check, the fol
lowing year, when a double quantity of
timber was floated into Bangkok.
Then the trouble commenced. The
government took a hand. The doctor'
partner and prince assigned his interest
In the firm to the royal family. The
ruling powers were becoming dissatU.
ficd with foreign interests and their
extension in Siam. The excuse was
readily found for action. The failure to
mako a shipment of timber one season
opened the way. The governmen
stepped in and confiscated Dr. Cheek'i
plant, elephants and all
This summaty action ended the Cheek
logging business. The doctor returned
to Bangkok. He made several inef
fectual protests. Then he placed his
troubles beforo the United States mil'
ter. lie claimed the confiscation had
deprived him of business of great value
and a prospect of making a clean-up of
$100,000.
The long delay that ensued left Dr.
Cheek with little hope. After much
diplomatic correspondence, he succeed
rd in having some of the confiscated
property returned to blm. Hut a claim
of tso.miO is still unadjusted, and it
went to his widow as her only legacy
from the doctor, w ho diet at Bangkok
on July 4, 1H05,
The claim has been approved by the
United Htatea government for the full
amount, and the United State minister
at Bangkok lm been inslructed to re
quest It iwyment. Accumulated In
terest brinra it up to $100,000,
Minister Baiiett at Bangkok has made
rvcry effort t- bring the matter to a
focus. Th fiiamea government Is aaid
to tie desirous of submitting It to arid
t rat ion.
The w ill of Ir. Cheek baa Ix-en filed
and probated In Alameda county. Ilii
widow and two children now resiib
In Oakland. They have local counsel
who art) prenainfc the payment of the
claim to their utmost. riaa Francisco
Examiner.
Owned It.
It is stated upon what appears to be
good authority that in one of the parks
in the Spanish capital city of Madria
magnificent ring hangs by a silken
cord about the neck of the statue of the
Maid of Almodma, the patron saint of
Madrid. This ring, says Harper's
Bound Table, though set with diamonds
and pearls, is nevertheless entirely un
guarded. The police pay no attention
to it, nor is there any provision made
for watching it by special officers, be
cause it is not believed that any thief,
however daring, would venture to ap
propriate it to his own use; and when
the history of the ring is considered, it
is hardly to be wondered at that a su
perstitious people prefer to give it a
wide berth. According to the story
that is told of it, the ring was made for
King Alfonso XII., the father of the
present king of Spain. Alfonso pre
sented, it to his cousin, Mercedes, on
the day of their betrothal. How short
her married life was all know; and on
her death the king presented the ring
to his grandmother, Queen Christina.
Shortly afterwards Queen Christina
died, and the king gave tihe ring to his
sister, the Infanta del Pilar, who died
within the month following. The rm;;
was then given to the youngest daugh
ter of the Due de Montpensier. In less
than three months she died, and Al
fonso, by tills time fearing that there
was some unlucky omen connected with
the baable, put it away in his own treas
ure box. In lees than, a year the king
himself died, and it was deemed best
to put the ring away from all the liv
ing. Hence it was hung about the neck
of the bronze effigy of the Maid of Al
modma, where it appears to be.ns safe
as though surrounded by a cordon of
police.
SWALLOWED BY THE JUNGLE.
CHAMPION HARD-LUCK STORY.
Girl Gives Him Honey to Keep Jilts Him
His OUemma.
Cupid leads men into strange capers,
and many of these capers have an inter
esting financial side. A seven-dollar-a-week
porter in a large china store
came o his employer recently and
made this interesting confession:
"I'm in a peck o' trouble. I've been
engaged to a girl, you know was aw
f ul gone on her and blew in nearly all
my wages on her theaters, sleigh
rides, oyster stews and all sorts of
things. Well, she's mad at me and
wrote this letter to say that I'm fired.
Look at all this stuff she sent back-
photograph, $18 ring, $7 ring, $13 gold
chain, $5 locket wasn't I a chump?
But the worst of it is, we were going
to get married, and she was -giving
me her money to keep. I had $40 of
ner money. Of course, you know, I
thought she wouldn't want it soon, and
've been and blew it in on this suit
of clothes, and three sweaters: had to
look decent to go around with her, you
konw. Now, I have to pony up that
cash and I ain't got it. Will you let
me draw it on these here wimmin's
rinkets?"
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
MM
tf
ABSOLUTELY PU33E
WONDERS OF , SCIENCE.
BECAME A PROPRIETOR.
In One Tear It Will Bend Creepers One
Hundred Feet High Over a Clearing,
The stages in the onward march of
the forest over a clearing are most in
teresting. Perhaps two or three hun
dred acres, in one instance, had been
planted with sugar canes and fifty in
plantains, vegetables and fruit. There
would be a fair-sized dwelling house, a
water or cattle sugar mill, huts for the
negroes and a wharf on the river bank,
says a writer in Popular Science
Monthly. The planter decided to give
up the place, as he had an oiler of
more fertile piece of land on the coast.
Taking away everything portable, In
cluding the machinery of his mill, he
abandoned the rest, carrying away his
negroes, and left tho clearing to na
ture.
Look on the plantation a year later,
Already a thicket has grown up which
is only penetrable by the constant use
of a cutlass. After a great deal of la
bor you reach the borders of the once
tidy clearing. What a wonderful sight!
Alonir the line of forest trees a dense
wall of creepers rises sixty to a hundred
feet high, forming an effective vail to
the dark arcade beyond. From these
stretch out long ropes, twining vegeta
ble serpents and giants' fingers, all
moving toward what was once the open
space, home are hundreds of yards
long, rooting at tho joints, whence oth
er branches radiate and from the dense
obstruction we have cut through.
The creepers, twiners and acramblera
have not yet reached the house, but
nature btat work there also. . Hound it
was once an orchard of oranges, limes,
star apples and other tropical fruit,
with a few flowering shrubs. Mum of
these are now overrun with the blood
sucking lorantha vegetable leeches
hich are continually draining their
juice and evidently fattening on the
spoil. These exotic bushes and trees
have no buHlncaa here; they are In
truders. If man protect them and de
atroya their rnemlc they can thrive,
but If he abandon tliem they must per
Uh. I'erhaiM you are thirsty and look
for an orange, but among down trees
not a aingle fruit can be found, and
never will be again.
Sherman Tells Why He Purchased Prop
erty in Washington. '
"When I entered congress my pay as
a member was eight dollars a day dar
ing the session, and it was said we had
'roast beef,' but w? paid for It if we had
it," says Senator John Sherman, in his
"Recollections." "At the close Of the
34th congress the compensation was in
creased to $3,000 a year. During the 1
latter part of the war and afterward
prices of food, board and lodging were
considerably advanced.
"In 1864 I offered the proprietor of
Wilhird's hotel my monthly pay of $250
for board and lodgings in very modest
quarters for my wife and myself, but
he demanded $300 a month. This led me
to purchase a house In which to live,
a change which I have never regretted.
It was quite the fashion then for the old
families, who were In full sympathy
wiUi the confederates, to underrate
property (even thir own) in Washing
ton, on the ground thnt when the con
federacy was acknowledged the capital
would be removed and real estate
could, therefore, be obtained upon very
reasonable terms."
II
BILLY'S
Helped III
BRIGHT IDEA.
Is) Her Trmak
Tramp of Tender Years.
Sleeping In the own air 1 arrievous
and severely-punished offense in Eng
land, iwo little girls, one five years
old, the other two, w ere brought before
a liomlon police mngistrnte icerutly,
charged w ith sleeping out without vis
ible Dieane of snheiirioBcs, Ho rrlsncs
to commit tliem aud ordered them to be
let loose in the streets again, aa their
parents had nbandoucd tht-ni.
lie Charged for It.
Judge Ira Ferley believed In the jus
tieo of hi client' cause; he would not
enlist In it otherwise. At one time a
sharper tried to retain hlin, and wa'
smoothing over his crooked conduct a
well as he knew how, when the judge
astonished hlin by exclaiming: "I think
you hove acted like an Infernal scoun
drel, sir!" "Is there any charge for that
opinion?" "Yen, sir; fivo dollar!"
Mr. Ithodie Noah, of this place, waa
takeo In the nluLt with crimping pain
bd lb out day diurrboea tet In. Hb
took bait B bottle of blackberry eordial
but got no relief. 8b then tent to m
to see if 1 had riytbing- bt would help
her. I sent her bottle of Chamber
latn'e Go'io, Cbloera mil Diarrboe
Itemed; and tb first doa relieved bur.
Another of our teiiibbor ba.Pbeen sick
for almtit b week an I bail tried different
irmediet f"f diarrboe but kept getting
worse. I sent Lira Ibi asm remedy
Only foor dose of II were no, lire J to
ear biro. II ? be owe bis recov
ery to tbi wooderhil ffrolr. M'a
Msry Hihler, Hidney, Micb. For sal by
Coiiser k Krock, drngutsl.
They Compel TJs to Believe Almost Any 1
thing Possible. i
People are now familiar with the idea
of storingup sound for future use. so that '
a man's voice can be heard long after he
is dead. It has recently been suggested
that somewhere in the storehouse of
nature the sight of all that has taken
place is stored up, and that Moses got
his account of the creation from a kind
of kinetoscope which was disclosed to
him as he stood in the cleft of the rock
and saw the pictures of the procession
of events pass by. . As Dr. Johnson said,
we have seen so mueh that we are pre
pared to believe more. When people in
New York city can hear the roar of
Niagara, when machinery can be driven
by a water wheei 500 miles distant, when
we can see through boards and take pho
tographs of a fat roan's bones and the
money In his pockets, when we can
talk with our friends a thousand miles
away and recognize the tones of their
voices, when we can warm the baby's
milk at night by touching a button, we
must be obstinate, indeed, if we refuse
to believo anything. There is nothing
in the "Arabian Nights" as marvelous as
the things seen at the electrical exposi
tion in New York. And yet, says the
Baltimore Sun, if we apply tjie logic of
David Hume in his essays on the mir
acles to these things, we should refuse
to believe that a photograph of a living
man's skeleton may be taken. Hume re
fused to credit the miracles because
they are contrary to oil human experi
ence. It is a matter of curious sncculu-
tion, have we reached the limit of
knowledge of electricity, or are we upon
tne tnreshold of scientific revelations?
Will we In time discover that apartment
of nature's storehouse where she keeps
tne signta and sounds of past ages?
Very Clever UlrL
A young woman with a pretty little
voice, but with no great possibilities in
her singing, has laid out a course for
herself which is o decidedly khrewd
that it may well be worth noting. She
devote herself entirely to Hootch
songs, most of them the old ones of
Burns or Scott. Now, every listener.
except the severest musical critic whom
she could not hope to sat I. if y in any
case, is sentimental and likes to have
that sentiment catered to by means of
the ear. The singer has taste and wit
enough to eschew "Annie Laurie" and
"Comin' Thro the Rye," save "by re
qneat," when her compliance gives an
added charm of kindliness, (She hunts
up sweet old tunes and pathetic words
and after the most brilliant perform
ance of her rivals she scat herself at
the piano, and, like the heroine In the
lackadaisical novel, she charm her
audience by "running her finger over
the key" and kinging softly "ome
dear old song" or other. Ab, that la a
very clever girlt
BOLD AS A LION.
Simile Justified by Audacity of an East
' Indian Beast.
Apropos of the death of Maj. Sand
bach from wounds inflicted by a lioness
while hunting in Somulilaud, reference
may be made to an interesting article
in Scribner by Capt. C. J. Melliss.
Among other tilings Copt. Melliss gives
a striking Instance of a lion's great
audacity. An English officer was shoot
ing recently in Somaliland. One night,
when he was in bed inside his tent, u
lion sprang over the rough thorn fence -which
it is usual to throw up around
one's encampment at night. Instead
of picking up one of the men or ani
mala that must have been lying about
asleep inside the fence, he would have
none but the sportsman himself, and
made a dash into his tent and seized
him fortunately only by the hand.
Then, by some wonderful piece of luck,
as the lion changed his grip for the
shoulder, he graobed the pillow nstcatl
and so vnnishcd with his prize. The
pillow was found next morning revernl
hundred yards distant in the jungle.
I kjtesse I e vital we.
7 be Clin m r-1 three iavielin
t tbe furwi t'it t.Sev ta)!rw to tew at
t-.r vwl f lie f,rl la die
tr.e. t !) bff f be feast, U
wem-,4 rm th ff t!f. H twAet to r
sta tkey kjve Invlitxl .f ij.eit
,if,iii, et 4 Ike It,. r-1 jil Wf'ww
i; br be rri4, a a a
be Ut,vitct.t "i. r ir u N bir
f.i m - y, ",
GOSSIP Of AUTHORS.
RrsEI I reportexl to be In excellent
health at Dronlwoud Cools Ion In tb
lake country.
Outer Wkkdru. IIolmb left an ro
ute amounting to 171.117. Tbla I
null b nrwertv for a poet, but It tnuat
be reuiemoertHl that Dr. Hoi roe waa
an etDwrt In medkln a well a In
meter.
Mr. Ilf irt II arsiss l about to pub
lish another boo on AnwrWa
puclna. howlng tb pmrt Ukrn by th
merchant prtner of Augsburg 01
Kurvmbnnr In Almeida " expedition to
India In i.
fl.Tseis 8. GrabT, the yonnff arm of
Cul. Fred tit-ant, 1 developing a last
fir writing-. lie la editor, and pub
lisher, also, of th Junior Monthly.
which I pul.lished J'"ulb'
arjueil Willi U be attends.
Im. F.I'B ABU W II. mot Hi Tt.tw. B full-
bloated neg-m, and fiMrly snluUler
of l.llria to I ncriand. ks aaul to be the
foremost hrj-ro . !n.!er la th nrt4
n4 I ranch eiHiifht after earn tribe, Wir
to I be EnglWh BMst1n.
Leet MBinser of Bar f r4 Bbibl-
re tc with B bowel trouble.
Our 4oi"f 'e rmlie bl fwl'l, the
trte4 t'btilaio' Colie, Colf
e4 4irvhne fU4. wblrb gate
peed? relief. W regk'd Ma lb. Ml
saedbta evf bl mt I he Brl .J
r,we er,r-f.li0l - Mr. E. O. (Jregory,
re4riekstna, Ho. Tbtt revtalnif
the beat anedteio til tm the aerkt
f 4 veeateey, ' wea.pJ.aial, Bw'Wl
eai rtflef MemtBtB) IB fbtUrew, ll
I ,e te ! v feeii. fit I Wew
i I me sa l th He n
i 't.-i4 Ji,eiw.i,s are ! Ib-wwt. Mit)
m..lh.re I j feesel ll.eif eti.ee.
, slila.e f- (be fM
Mather
raeklag.
The Churchman ha given n Hilly'
ble. which la surely valuable enough
to be spread abroad. Ilia mother wi
going to the aeaabiirr, and while sh
was packing her trunk he waa pup
ping In about every fjv minute with
aotnelbing of bl that must be packed
also.
I'd Ilk to belp J no. mother," b
ald once, preparing to pitch bis Ashing
tackle In on bla motlier'a lace gown, i
'cause, yon b"k tired."
"Never mind. Hilly," said bla mother, 1
caU-hlng lb !. kl. "I shall reel after
awhile. 1' Biking la bard work bar a
tall prraoo, though, fur It make on
sWaip ."
Why." said Hilly, with hi band In
hi nnrkete and bis bead tm one aide
"why diiu t yow put tne Iruhae upfl
something? Hullo, I know; horaea,
Wumtea bonsro, yoa know, Itn it her; car
penter s biereea; there are aoin In the
(awineril. Ill brim' Vro."
Ab4 dlrerlty Uier be wa again with
B wrirelen (war OB bis be k.
'.ViHber i,'i mnilnf with rWm.'
be aMi. paot.og. "and well lift up the
trunks."
"Hilly leiy.'aai'lbisnvMber. strs rbt
Btng up bef tired bek, " I believ
fmr pln U B ovie "
Hare en-mch. the parking went uq
beaititfully after that, and at dinner
Hilly' another i! ) bal never
paxked an ea.ly Bh4 emiferUbly,
VHEN THE MOON IS FULL.
It Is aa I ei
at Here Aslrewosnitel
eaereave.
Ilid you ever aee a "full roiem?" Bska
B writer In the M. UjhIs !i public. I
know what yuur answer will be with
out waiting for It It is this: "Yea,
once every Hum 111 alnce I bare been
obi rnotigli to pay attention to such
pbi-rioii a." Yet I take the Hiltlia
lliat you are badly mistaken, and that
In all probability you bare never In
your life ItclirUI ll full ' "f
"silvery aWii-r world." Hy way of nlti
tion Irt tl ae what It lake to consti
tute b "full moon' In the etact sense of j
the term. A full niiein o-eur only
when our oLwitloiis alt.-n lent la on
hundred and eighty ilepn-e of loll 7 1
lode fnrni lite etin, l l Sol Blld tb
earth lieing In the erliptie. Hut th
moon orlnt I Iih lined to l!ie reliptl
l t) ti,r e of ft ve ili-rrees el'lil min
utes .rrtr-ti n eeenns. aul I there
fore hevrr "H the eeliplie e).iept tvbea
Bt It "Modes ' i , imin.'.
1 bl bring tt eae. what wa rail
the circular disk of Die trweiti (full
mount lacks eonslitrrable of an
esact elrrie. Iwiis1 wbat ktr.iie
ner lemi "in a leie i.f glolily,"
an-l ! ttevrr B t (ef t il'k ekrept
wlien' a full nt.ein" baf-peii ritly
as the time when I. una Is rr'Mslria' the
eeli .ISr, at w hi. h tii.e she nnit inn
sarMy t er.'s!ly rctpte4 tie of imr
lt f vr ri I iter le-inotn -r In ei.
'Iwl.i a ah srti ) of tuorh merit oa
1 1, ishk ,! jev t, ej ; "Ue Iberefur
eorvlu-le llott f el full M.mrt ih
bavlriif B perfe. t rir l, bss rarely, if
r. tn sn
A Qaeea' RelentlBe r.iperlments.
The king of Portugal mid hmcntli
court are rejoicing over the - si and hi
ll list rv with which Queen Aim lie I U-
voting hern! in the study of ti
Koelitgeu liirbt. IIT liia-My pu I
all her time now in photographing K'i
(alios and the ludic and I'miiii'M n of
the court In order to din-ovtr wUiw
il,i lr skcb-liiii are like. I'xr kmii-I
yeara the qu.-en bus brcn a rapt slu-lev.t
f medicine, and ill her riiUiusuiM
pursuit of UH-dii-al kcleiier and by hT
exurrltiieiila bn reduced some of her
I.kIii s in wailing almost 1 1 tli-uili
door. Now ll.at t he qui en hn iietv
bobby, the Portuguese court rejoii-
t-sprrlally tb ting, a the quern wan ui
way Insisting upon hi trni,r ne
method dloered by berMll for e
lui liig hi growing corpulency. It t
even ald that lncoU'equcieeUiekll'g's
gratitude to lUwntgen the profeseo" in
to be Invited to the court I I.UI-nii. u I
will rerwtie a high decoration from bis
majesty. Washington Time.
An Accommodating Justice.
A Philadelphia magistrate, who re
cently distinguished himself by hold
ing court in the street to hear a cbho
concerning two men who were brought
to his house while he was at dinner.
broke his record one Sunday recently
by leaving his devotions 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 Kith precinct one Suturday night
for a slight breuch of the peace. Next
morning they were willing to pay their
fins and wanted to be released at once.
They were token In the patrol wagon
to the magistrate s house, where it
was learned that he was at church. The
wugon was driven to the church, and
the judge was quietly called out. He
heard the case, indicted the usual fines,
which the prisoners paid, then' dis
charged the men and went back to his
pew.
Trsmesfi In Glasgow.
... 1- i:i ij-v- " mo
ample of Ler1., and ndcnl mi overhead
syiitoin of electric tract ion ror tne tram
ways of the city, which arc the property
of the corporation.
Sliuwvr Hatha fur Horses.
They do a queer but very sensible
thing to tho cur hornet In New York In
hot weather. The Ihum1 lire kept out
side, not in the hi-uk-d MiiIiIcn, and are
put in u row, face to Hie -.idcuitlk. One
if tho si ti lib-in i -n bus a bofe which he
turns on the hum- every little while.
Tim stream of water In sent first on
their bin-lin, then on the head, and as
1 1 comes iluw ii the row the horM-s Hint
huv not been wet look up to m-i when
their turn Is coming. They apin-ur to
like it, and no wonder. Probably muiiy
b Ixiy or girl, walking aluug In the
beat, would like It, loo.
CATARRH
I m ,. a I
LOCAL DISEASE I f&ii&frl
sue is is men or ceras se
sad rive (IibmIi ckengss.
It ran be rured hv s plfMosnt
remeilv eliirS tss.iiil at.
ferlii Itiie lh nueinls. He
irs nsl' sir sieurbeUlt give
relief stun re.
Ely's Cream Balm
Is knowMred la he the nM Ihonwrli cere f"f
Kealriuirb.r,d In Ilre4 snl llsv reeer ef all
feemlies. l pni end ilmiM Uie n.esl se ft,
sllars psla snrl infsmmsii'ie. hesM Ihesnres, ra
leru the ewteiiesne from eui-U. neFe Ue sedv
f taelesn4,mell. I'tV""- sl lrmilsiw hf rnsik
BM.I llliol lit.ii.1, BsmHM,n leva.
Your Face
AiMevl.ee rsravegea .
It U no wijo-ler tbat furetfner rfT
Bt the wbiasa of rich Amertean when
DM bear of isrlil lne of ltrv
gr W brr re:il Lly lur
Ir4. fornnrly tb discbof Marlle
owgh, wbo was burn bf re la the I mud
Rtate tfl mta vrrHl a ri'k Kew
Yr, eki afUrweH d.el. bae J-t
rwturte. frvxa a trip with br kis'etud.
Lif4 HrW ir4. Ibey trei4 ?
.fl atone i,t . .r r . H f.eir Hem
sai'l 4!.ar (-if f,.).u sr.sii s . l
m. . . ' I . I . 1. 1 . ll fc t.l Iu,.m
a - - . , , . .. ... , i. . , .
H H "" '
It .ftt srvttt trar.tfe tbtt B t-lfl
Wols.t i n B r'! B4 sleep all Blfbl
iH !,.. I fsllif.' i.f?. but I he esp'at.a
1 1. 41 I .n. le The . rebrtt .f the leg
.f l-lr-1 Ii al Is so afrti,'e.l that
ri i' . I - i li.t at I'. I M tl
. ti n 1 1 is t lo i i.lt arid thte
b- ' l f d. b grip th
" i' '5" "1 I -. tb ewv
Owe Wsf ml Tellleg.
Wife I know that Mr. Hrnnston
waa thinking all korts i.f borrbl thing
of tne while sbe was talking to me.
IliistMind-VVby, my dear, I don't un
derstand why you kbould ay tbab Hb
certainly waa Very l'lcaut
ttlfe-Ob, Vea, of rourse, but ab
kept be. king at my dre. all the Ura
Bbe was talking -Ilrlroit Ire rrva.
rileel rilest Iwklsg I' I lee.
h)mttova-toitore; intense ilebint
sad slinging; Bxt at Bighi; woraw vj
scratching. If llow4 to eonliBo
luniora lor, abeta tft blel and
n Iterate, beromiag very mra. hw.Ta a
OIVTMIVT IH U Itching and bleed
Msg. beat aknerelHiB. BBo IB nxw
eeraueee tb tovs At araggtet
mail, for bO aeet. Ir Nwyt
l1,llavtett.Vai.
a-7
n Mr. Ing thawing la the II.
rot oil arte a lb life of antiUli woroaa
umst bw dull enmgli. Hut of rvmrse)
there la everylblrf Ul the point of view.
The fpantsh ! evidently be
neiiber mir ambit ion nor imr une.nn
foftalily devrloravl trne of Ixlium.
Mi ba ho aelriWe for B wl-ter hovl
"n, ali ba bo rtesir f.st a university
e.iraiion, or B peril mentary .i4 a
pe,frki,m t retfler her lade s Bile hi.
Hbe la perfe,-tlystist.1 with life It U;
lie I, as korvpBll,iiU. ra-me v affair
lislnf tUti-ie-l toby bT )ie ri.iativ,
nt keeping being be4ie. aft T
by ll,e , rvar.Ui she ba ! lily i.f (law
Ctug. fi.rlattoa and Intrigue, wI.mIi la
errte. tu a aeienw mt u lrel.Uf
aim in.-1. 1 in i.f-. v Uat r e an sl.e
p.,i 1 V want? Wooel I ber arise) ' f
Ui ) nir "I'm tf to w l.itin r l r esi.v
wrwJl4 be etr.f )i s ) v-nesat.
Will b srrsslKeal Uh a meat egleg
mil, rur few Invest I
s ll8SeiiiEKacliiii3
ieuieet w.t it aiw
PINCH TENSIOrl,
TENSION INDICATOR
AUTOMATIC UKTCH MUASER,
IV vt r)ir..W I ' I bKw
4M t ' "
lb wiim: i
Cirtkty a4 Hd.'iy Cs'lt,
Cf TIM riH1 J ftrfoct Atiit-.t,
tret ALL Iwi1' AHk.
A1 I s s I t s .; ' 11
kwrt -ntf ,
A' tut I t ti t 1 1 i w
B4 V I I . .! t t ''"'
v.;;iie eev;;::3 i:r,:;::.E CO.,
I f,iVLA)Ui
' re eie bt Cue