PAGE TWO
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Train Plunges
Over Trestle
STEILACOOM, Wash. W In
what the engineer called "30 sec
onds of hell." elchl units of a 73-
enr Union Pacific Railroad freight
train plunged through a burning
trestle Into Puget Sound here yes
terday. The only casualty was L. Ft
Pearson, a brakeman who suf
fered minor burns about the eyes
as he braved flames to save three
carloads of bellowing cattle.
Union Pacific officials placed
damage to the trestle and to the
cars at more than $300,000.
Engineer William Boyce said he
was highballing along the water
side track toward Seattle, some 45
miles to the north, when he round
ed a curve and saw flames billow
ing from the trestle.
He applied the air brakes, but
the heavily laden train couldn't
be stopped before the three dlesel
units and 10 cars ploughed through
the flames. The next eight cars
dropped through to the water as
Ihe trestle gave away. Pour c&rs
burned.
The destroyed cars carried wax.
tires, refrigerators and shoes. The
cause of the fire was not determined.
ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL
by KEN McLEOD .; .
We left John Muir and party
camped at the top of Gulllem's
Bluff overlooking Tulelake and the
Modoc Lava Beds In yesterday's
column, the date was November
14, 1074. John has left for us one
of the most delightfully descriptive
nassages of the beauty of the scene
from a vantage point so few people
have ever taken tht tune or eifort
to visit. ,
The next day we returned to
Van's ranch," writes John, "but
Sisson. who thus far had been oc
cupied mostly about camp, set out
alone for what he called a square
day's hunting all by himself, de
claring he would 'kill a ram before
night.' Prom Rhett Lake, where we
had camped, he struck directly
across the lava plains for the mam
sheep mountain, while Jerome
drove around with the wagon. Van
Bremer, Brown, Hepburn and my
self rode over the sage plains,
leaving the mountain on the left,
hoping to find , our game on the
way; nor were we disappointed.
While we were riding, single-
file in . silence through the rough
lava and sage plain, Van's keen
eyes discovered a flock of fity or
more rams, ewes, and a few lambs.
I was gazing at Mount Bremer,
and the first Intimation I had was
Van's dismounting and handing me
his halter. The noble game was
about three hundred yards distant
and stood gazing at us. To the right
wax a Jagged battlement of lava,
to the left their grand mountain
stronghold, and thev evidently were
undecided as to which they should
reach. The latter was safer, but it
was further off. They turned this
way and that, evidently frightened,
feeling caught on account of the
levelness of the plain In which they
stood. Meanwhile, Van and Hep
burn ran towards them crouching
In the sage, and taking advantage
of a slight swell In the ground.
Hunter Brown, who was always
doing unheard-of-things, had taken
his rifle apart, locked it Into its
pine box, and sent it back to Van's
in the wagon.
As soon as the hunters' heads
began to appear above the swell,
the watchful game saw the absolute
need of moving somewhere, and an
old ram led off towards the moun
tain, all the others following slowly
single file, about fifty In the
block, and as they bounded on at
right angles It formed a very ex
citing scene. The hunters were now
about, two hundred and fifty yards
from them, and just as they got
under full headway they drew up
and took deliberate aim. Van. as.be
sighted his heavy Colt rifle, looked
exactly like the figures one sees on
powder-flasks, while the tall, manly
form of Hepburn, slanting back and
taking aim, resembled the mast of
clipper ship. They fired, and Hep
burn's ram fell, a noble old fellow.
broad and ponderous as a buffalo.
Then bang went his other barrel.
and his second sheep, a ewe, fell
so suddenly that in the excitement
she was not observed. Judge the
feelings of poor gunless Brown, wit-
nessng the fray, outwardly cool as
ley Shasta, yet doubtless, like that
om volcano, not wiuun.
"The brave sheep were now
boundng wildly over the - gray
plain In a direct line "for their
castle mountain, and a bright
thought flashed into the brain of
SEW-VERY-EASY t
V
TECS
t
4
I
1 kTTTT TTi
(OMIT Trwic!""1 gtfO ij
waonirI1..-- Um" eh
SMSEuiiia
V
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& 1 1 w
Brown: he would head off the fly
ing game and drive it back to be
shot. So he gathered up his reins,
and, as if he were riding steeple
chase, dashed his spurless heels
into his horse's flank. But the lazy
mustang had no enthusiasm and
made but a feeble response tfl
Brown's ardor, so after galloping
madly through the sage at the rate
of about ten miles an hour. Brown
drrw rein in despair. Meanwhile,
Hepburn's ram arose, and after
staggering a few rods, while the
hunters were reloading, ran firm
and erect again with his huge horns
thrown back over hs. shoulders.
A second shot missed him and he
fled like the wind to the shelter of
the lava cliffs, the bullet probably
having grazed bis skull without in
flicting 'any permanent injury. It
was a fine specimen of a full-grown
lam, broad and massive and prob
ably weighing three hundred and
fifty, pounds. Just before he went
down back of tho cliff, he halted.
There his form and noble horns
were clearly outlined against the
sky..
"We little know how much wild-
ness there is In us. Only a few
generations separate us from our
grandfathers that were savage as
Mental Disturbances Of
The Alcoholic Described
(Editor's Note ' This is the
twelfth in a series of articles deal
ing with the disease of alcoholism
and what Alcoholic Anonymous
is doing to combat it.)
. j
By LYLE DOWNING
An Associated Press dispatch to
ih. Herald and News from New
York Saturday quoted Dr. Seldon
D. Bacon, director the Yale Center
for Alcohol Studies, as saying:
"r dnn't believe that alcoholism
is ever going to be cured by a pill
or a law." .
Dr. Bacon made this statement
in connection with the Alcohol Foun-
wolves. This is the secret of our
love for the hunt. Savageness is
natural, civilization is strained and
unnatii.-al. It requires centuries to
tame men as we find them, but if
turned loose they would return to
killing and bloody barbarism in as
many years. In the excitement and
savage exhilaration of the pursuit
of the wounded. I, who have .never
killed any mountain life, felt like
a wolf chasing the flying flock.
But all this ferocity soon passed
away, and we were Christians
again."
dation's findings in a search for a
hangover remedy. ...
The alcoholic researcher also
verified recent estimates of the
number of persons in the United
States suffering from the disease
of alcoholism as 4.000,000 of the
nation's 65,000,000 drinkers. Alco
holics Anonymous has reclaimed
more than 130,000 victims of the
disease.
It Is' very interesting to learn
that the Yale Center is concerning
Itself with the hangover. However,
thousands of victims of alcoholism
would be more interested if the
researchers were trying to find a
cure for the nameless fears and'
aberrations that affect persons in
the aecute stage of the disease.- ,
MENTAL DISTURBANCES
An alcoholic who is about to
hit bottom could go through a doz
en hangovers such as the social
drinker experiences standing on
his head. Victims of alcoholism
suffer mental disturbances that
make the conventional hangover
seem nothing worse than a slight
headache.
A great many members of Al
cholics Anonymous, since their re
covery, have described some of
these mental aberrations. Before
MONDAY MARCH 29. i J
they beat the alcohollo rap, 24
psychiatrists with an equal num-l
ber of couches couldn'l have
dragged the information out of
them. But when freed from the
alcoholic shackles they were will
ing to reveal details concerning
mental disturbances which they
had previously kept a dark secret.
They reasoned that fears of others
might be allayed if they knew
their alcoholic nightmares were
not unique.
Twice before in this series we
have referred to the case history
of Joe E, an alcoholic newspaper
man, who Joined AA and made a
success of it after a seige of de
lirium tremens. Let's review what
he has to say about mental dis
turbances caused by alcohol. .
NIRHTR OF TERROR
Before he was finally stricken by
a full-fledged attack oi me dts,
Joe E spent many nights of ter
ror alone in. his hotel room. He
had two obsessions which he la
beled the "FBI Horrors" and the
"Big Magnet." . '
After he reached a certain stage
of intoxication, Joe E would be
mentally projected into some sen
sational crime case as the central
figure. The illusion would become
as realistic as if he was watching
it on a movie screen, Joe E would
go through all the terror oi De-
ing pursued by relentless FBI
agents, captured and, hanged or
sent to the electric chair. Restless
sleep would follow.
The "Big Magnet" was Just as
terrifying to Joe E as the "FBI
TJn.rnrc r Tin wntilH nftn wnlrn im
in thV night and see a 'muL;
bb.i lii in .1
ones he used to pick up pin. J
when he was -a child. The
would be in the window of huTl
and its forks would be point??
ward mm. Joe E would hav.
,hiuw unm grip OB K
bedstead to - keen Iron, J"
drawn out the window. Just S
it seemed he couldn't hold ??
Innnr- h. man,.!
O--, - o'-"" wuuia IH.
pear. . - . -
Many a night Joe E sav k.
In a hotel lobby to escape th
Magnet" and because or It woT1
never sleep ih a room highoraJ
one story from the street,
riuiiareas or other member. A
A A mi toll incf Be .7"
J ma3HC lb,
les of mental aberrations
tunately, the social' or cont,),
drinker has nothing more strw,
in wnipu ollAIlt thaw t.. 1
v j "" nanffrnn.
(Next-More AA experience
CLOSED MONDAYS
Ben B. Lte, Mgr. '
9324
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FIRE
MISSOULA, Mont. M Nine air
planes and the hangar they occu
pied at Missoula County Airport
were destroyed early vesterdav in
a 30-nilnute flash fire and explo-j
sion ot undetermined origin. No
one was injured.
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