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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1905)
into the hearts of his hearers Bdtlsh Raj‘linS tUB He I “’ I XMOAG ti/iff BEASTS. Crocodiles, Lions and Hippopotami Lnuangec Lives of Railway bri n8\Whi|t8 10 1110 llps’ and that 1113 bridle hand was trembling Builders in Africa. the croWl1 ye”Pd 80mc" The building of the bridge at Vic I c X m t ra,lcou.s' tals«Ho voice, and toria I'aii4 and the Cape to Cairo' 11 1 words at once. ., man loosed up sharply, woman In India who mattered—of Mrs. L..ny?ur ieilows down country have Railway has suddenly and necessarily fl* *2-a to every human being Harold. With that thought came also mutinied and killed their officers ’ 1 brought a great many people together to Harold. ‘Did you hear what i at this spot, where there was previous- * jjere , h0 -jn one shape necessity for action, and when a cried that man said?* he t'lo in “is allairs’ the man is called upon to act he is relieved Lutm^ US’ G°’ help D8-’ h0 «'■ ly but an occasional traveler or hunter.! ' i though it “iay “°t *?ad on to from the curse of thinking. Besides the birds and the butterflies “Harold s camp lay some thirty miles | claimed In that same hoarse, tense' and „nr vet down to ruin, proves the fish, the chief living auimals ^«wbat ii i“ him- brlngs °,ut to the north of my station. As soon the tart‘*et U3 ECt °U—t° the fort—10 were lions, elephants, hippopotami, J ►/J® iorth counting that may bo as the news spread the lives of Harold A great strapping Muhammadan, a crocodiles, jackals and hyenas. him and exposes his weak and his wife and sister would not be butcher The crocodiles were found to be so in a red turban, leaped from “hen enough. That tide worth a minute's purchase. —as many as thirty being ' *^1 'me in the Terrible Year—in "I slipped out of the bungalow, went the crowd and seized the rein of Mrs. numerous together sometimes—that they * th found us English folk, lit- to the stables, found and Baddled my Harolds horse with one hand. The seen 7 nerals of us, isolated, almost dc- mare, locked the ntables securely be other held a meat chopper. The horse have had to be killed in great numbers I rose in my Btirrups, raised for the safety of the people at work, i facing the brown millions hind mo and rode out into the dark reared. loaded riding crop and brought the One giant saurian killed a man and a *“<c^’nn'ce were banded together ness. I took a path which soon led my butt down full between the fellow’s woman, and was itself killed only af-1 ^Fu b? hato and wrath. I was mo clear of the town, and directly 1 ter seizing another man. A native | He dropped like a log. Stant deputy commissioner in a was in the open country I put the mare eyes. “ ‘Get on to the fort, Harold, In God’s woman was taking water from the' ¿ken district in India, and had Into a hard canter and headed for the name, and take the ladies with you,’ I river when the crocodile knocked her ‘ ¿ long alone among the natives Harolds' camp. The time for dream cried breathlessly, for now I was lay. in with its tail, seized her in its hor fl not speak half a dozen ing and for fear was ended, and 1 ing about me with that heavy butt, and rid mouth and dragged her away. Her * ‘ , of my own language without knew it. The time for action had the people, screaming with tear, were husband was close by, but was power S in a word or two of Persian como and with it a sort of intoxication tumbling over one another in their less to save her. He determined to of recklessness that filled mo with a eagerness to get beyond the reach of bo avenged, however, and for several Undnstanl I prided fl^rs on the myself pulse of upon na- fierce Joy and pride. my arm. nights waited in a canoe with a load “It was only a little after midnight i life in that district. Things were “I caught a glimpse of Mrs. Har ed gun. He, too, disappeared, and it is A ward of which I could not that I reached my destination. I con old’s face, flushed with excitement, her thought the crocodile knocked him out J rhe hang. There was mystery in trived, not without difficulty, to arouse eyes flashing with enthusiasm and a of the canoe as it had knocked his fair; you felt could fiad to Harold. I led him away from the Bort of fierce delight. wife off the bank, and taken him to its tents, and told him the news that had hole. “ 'Oh, how splendid of you! ’ she '^■■During those months I knew what come In. A week later it got another man, but cried. ‘How splendid!’ and then she “ ‘You mustn’t lose a second,’ I said. and Harold and his sister were off, at instead of taking him into its hole, it , £ to be possessed by a demon of 1. I told myself that it was all ‘The one chance of safety li s in Mrs. a gallop up the hill toward the fort, carried him to an island. Here its v ictim got hold of the reeds and strong Ecr that Asia was playing the devil Harold and your sister getting to the Harold leading. that I was losing my nerve. fort as soon as may be.’ “The crowd had fallen back before grass, and held on so tightly that the “ ‘And do you seriously believe all me, and I rode straight at the Muham crocodile could not get away with him. r«| was in the deepest folds of the jirk Valley when Harold came up into this rubbish?’ Harold inquired, stand madan preacher. I hit him, as I had Of course he screamed with all his hit the butcher, full between the eyes, might, and a gang of men with crow and I felt the bone shatter beneath the bars went to rescue him. This they succeeded in doing, and also in slaying blow. “ ‘You dogs!' I cried. ‘You dogs who the dangerous monster. Tuese croco dare to bark because fools tell you diles are so ravenous that it is not pos that the Raj of the British is ended, sible even to keep dogs with safety, get to your kennels like the whipped and parents living near the river are curs you are. And when sense re- in constant dread of losing their chil turneth to you, come to me at the fort dren. A Lion Terror. craving pardon, lest I send word to the government of the wickedness in your One of the lions killed had also filled hearts, and the hide be stripped from up the measure of its Iniquity ere it you in punishment. Go!’ met its doom. The scene of its depre “And then, why then, and it brings dations was a native village some dis tears to my eyes when I recall it, for tance north of tho Falls. The native they are men, these Muhammadans of huts are very slender, being built India, though like children they be mainly of reeds. In such a hut a wo easily led astray or aright as a man man was sitting when the lion pushed may chance to lead them—the crowd aside the door, walked in and seized set up a throaty shout, not of rage or her, carrying her away to his lair In defiance, but of approval and admira the dense bush. Then ho bad an ox. tion. This was In the enclosure with other “ ‘It is well done!’ cried many voices. cattle and donkeys. ‘It is well done, and behold our Sahib The lion, failing to get Into the en is a man. Let the Raj stand or fall closure, so frightened the animals with elsewhere, here the Raj and our Sahib his attempts that they rushed in a hud are one; and see, the Sahib stands dled, terrified mass from end to end. fool who spoke vain things and their weight upon the palisading while the___ lies yonder in the dust. It is in truth broke it down. They rushed oui well done.’ through tho opening, which was Just “I turned my horse slowly and what the lion wanted, for ho had now walked him up the hill to the fort. For nothing to do but to take his choice. me at that moment the world held only After the ox, he selected a donkey on one thing—Mrs. Harold's face—and his next vi.it, and then a sheep, ami that too said, ‘It is well done,’ and I finally another ox. At last the natives think also ‘thank you.’ became panic stricken until some white “After that there came some anxious men reassured them, telling them they times, but in the end mine was one of would sit up all night for tho lion and the districts that had no mutiny his shoot him. Tho lion came and got tory. Harold's nerve had been shaken away with another ox, for tho white by that scene in the town, and the mon, tired with the watch, had fallen worst of it was that he couldn’t get it asleep. However, they were able to back and that his wife saw it. track him. “At last it was safe for them to leave, It was Important that having prom and I thanked Go I for it, though lite ised to kill the lion they should do so. didn’t seem to offer much to me when for that is the secret of tho whit she had gone out of it. Anyhow, I man’s power over the native—never t< knew it was the only thing for me, if break bls word. So they set oft to th ( was to avoid making a fool of my- thick bush bait a mile away, whither • elf, and she—well, she was everything the lion's tracks led them. There the; came upon him and killed him wit., .hat a woman ought to be. “The evening before they were to go ono bullet, that entered the right nos away I came upon her sitting in the tril. This was what big game hunt veranda cf my bungalow—we had ers consider a good kill, as the bullet A MUHAMMADAN BUTCHER SEIZED THE REIN. moved out of tho fort ages before, in did not disfigure the lion hor lnjur< ing there in his pajamas, his face Un. By district'to shoot, bringing his wife suite of Harold's frenzied protests— his skin. Near by was the carcass of Bid sister with him. I did not know naturally white in the moonlight. and she began to speak of all, she was an ox, and a little further In the bush, “ ‘I do,’ I said. I htn from Adam, and I had not seen a in a sort of tunnel of Impenetrable to say, they owed to me. “ ‘On no better grounds than mere ‘ pleased European lady for over three years, so “‘Don’t,’ I said. ‘It is I who owe thorn, were tho gnawed bones—the re j ’as a bit bothered by the intrusion. native gup?’ a debt—to you. It is you who have mains of some of his former victims. “ ‘On that and on a hundred and one helped me, helped mo to play tu© man. I felt shy and awkward in the com- Tame Baby Hippopotamus. W of ladies. I was only too glad things that have gone before and that “‘I don’t think you wanted much now have a new meaning,' I replied. ( help to do that,’ she said very seriously. to ship the party oft into a corner of A young hippopotamus, riding on Its “ ’ Well I don ’ t believe a word of it, me district whero game was plentiful "In a moment we were on our feet, mothers’ back when she was shot, was «soon as I could contrive to make the he said sneeringly. ‘We’ll talk it over facing one another, and her hands were saved and cared for by one of the Mcessary arrangements. I did not care in the morning,’ ho said with a yawn, In mine. I knew then, I know now men. These animals are very danger j ®uc“ for Harold, nor yet for his sis stretching himself Insolently. that I might have kissed her. But—it ous to canoe men, for In returning to “ ‘You will do nothing of the sort, 1 would have hurt her. ter, but Mrs. Harold charmed and fas the surface to blow they often come cinated me. Harold was a cranl y sort said, and I could hear my voice vibrat “Instead I stooped and kissed her up right under thn canoe and upset It. | ’i beggar and his sister turned up her ing with anger. ‘You may think 1 am Sometimes they give chase to canoes “ 'Goodbye and God keep you, I said, and then the native paddlers do all u‘Inost things. Including me. Mrs. a coward, If you like. I ra responsible for what happens in this district, and arold was—well, Just everything that bank, a and turning, left her. they can to reach the t— — —. unless - a yoman can be! Beautiful, with a by God, man, you have got to do what “That, I know now, was my greatest , ‘ of glory of beauty that yet had in " ‘Well, I do think that yon are a h 8 certain dainty dignity that held m>,i70r ds alj0V8 you, and good—you rather nervous person, but we’ll see , ,, «id see the goodness looking out of what my wife says.’ me speak to her. please, I said. deed eyeS~and kind‘ *n thought and ‘As “ ‘Let you will.’ he answered with a fc.T,9 -’wolds had been gone a mat- i r»Jh jOme three weeks when the news , me the outbreak down coun- smnt: ’a3 sitting on my veranda, u ,. f'PO and dreaming, when I m . i ,-» Uhai?rnad Akhbar, one of the », -ln? aatives of the place, came to if„!udPenly 01,t of the luminous dark- vl 2 01 ,the "¡sht. He was shaking m,»V3Eci.tement as he told me of the of °* 0,lr troops down south and I femi rapidliy with which the dlsaf- lectwn v.-as spreading. TH. v9 disaffection spreadethi fast i ba7aaZery. nlEht it is known in our to-morrow the villages also eth .. ow' 1,len. perhaps—who know- D4,a’ave Allali, the Merciful, the Com- lonate?—the Raj of the Sahib-log blood iiVBi in blood, as in It % so had *ts beginning, nor will oai. l !urn of our 'women folk to be ^stands"’161* Ior the fleaaure oi new gr«/ word fear left me and a from al°ne remained. I rose him a,r and ,n an Instant I nad „the throat •hook care- d°8!’ I cried, as I Urt»/? ®/0 and fro while he gasped the q.h?v? and struggled. ‘The Raj of blood °K 18 n°t yet ended, and if thn •! . to he 'et> ®ee that it be not tbsEngHshl1’ dIstrict 1 am the of f 11 lm frorn tne. half stran fatn aa n * moment he was all ab and entreaty. *1th J crle<l. spurning him goth». y He gathered himself to- hick tn. .1 whlning excuses, dropped •41. 0 5he darkness. Instant ^ had gone I stood for an •odden k ed ia a world that had of a 1 r»aii,r»e“ Mattered about my head ’hlter^. .,h® disproportion of the of th. ®an 8 numbers In India to those 4® People of the soil. 41th , which Hal! Muhammad tat» «,.♦ d 8Poken, hinting of the Mia n ?w“lted Fngllsh women in •fthth-t?6. across my mind, and « them the thought of the one “'We walked back to the tent in si lence, and presently Mrs. Harold came out to us. her tall, slim figure wrapped in a white dressing gown. “ ‘Your husband thinks that I am an alarmist’ I said, ‘but I have informa- Uon of a general mutiny of our troops down country, and I know that the nows is true. I have left my post in a moment of «‘remV?er£Dmv fort' der to bring you a.l in to my_ fo t which is the nearest approachi to sa.< .j. that I have it in my power to offer you. Everything depends upon my ge - [tag back before daybreak and beta e (be natives know that I have left th" place; but I wont go w.t _nit yo . Will you come—now, at once. •“Yes’ she said simply, bendtar thoso grave, true eyes steadily upo. me *We will come, of course. An Make the trial yourself—leave off Coffee 10 days and use POSTUM FOOD COFFEE in its place. That’s the only way to find Out. Postum is a sure rebuilder and when you cut out tho coffee and use Postum instead, you get a taste of/ health, for the aches and ails begin to leave.' You may 'IHINV' you know, but you don’t until after the trial. —- Remember '^ «‘There’s a Reason. ° CM the llttl. book. "Th. Row) to W.Unllla.1’ tn wch 1 THE RACYCLE SPROCKETS Like No. 2 Grindstone are Hung Between the Bearings At ( pic/dej} fe ) Xv2 Which Stone will Turn Easter? The Racycle Rides Further with one-quarter less work MIAMI CYCLE & MFC. CO MIDDLETOWN. OHIO. International Harvester Co. GASOLINE ENGINES When enuinped with an I. 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He drew on Ills heavy hunting boots and with a Kcver Wore Pcjamas. candle went down stairs and con fronted him in the ant of putting the silver from the breakfast table Into keD8eie°dfgerofPtheIfaet tM- her safety his bag. "What are you doing?" de deaf To start conversation, she sal 1 manded the author. "I am hungry and depe»; was Just getting something to eat," hes .I/°an7<iednmy £ replied the thief. “T take a tatak I prêter’the old fashioned night itatingly 1-leg of 1-lamb,” stuttered the author, as he kicked him down the collar stairs. shirt.” Another Version. 80"Just after dY^ak/^hammadan Hud a Strong Breath. Mary had a little mule. outskirts of the town n An Irishman leaned over the eoun- It followed her one day to school. mendicant In a long green go ter in a Jewelry store and said to^tl e The teacher got behind that mule exhorting the people, His I <n. cllrk "OlBe one of rou J b. And Mt It with a rule, with excitement and contortedT(irward. 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