riff I ) I I 411 II 7 Mil 1 1 WW ,T,nai $2.00 PEH ACHUMSIX KOriTHS, 81.00. Free! ilndopcndent! FcarleNH! rcz- i::3Ti::. co cz.ttsc;::i i.j A3Vi:::: ROCKINGHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1888. WHOLE NUMBER 827 VOL. . XVI. NO. 21. jr - f; . irit off lite Jponfli. :o: PUBLISHED WEEKLY BT Win. K. Terry. Rates of Subscription (CASH IN ADVANCE Ooe copy per annum - -One cepsix months - - - - ' f2.00 1.00 50 One copy three months - - - Advertisements will le inserted at reasonable rates, oragreeable to contract . Obituary notices over five fines, or matter subserving individual or personal interest, will be charged for at rcgula' advertising rates. JOB PRINTING of all kinds neatly eiecutcd. Legal blanks a specialty. The American hog, which is found to be entirely wholesome and satisfactory to American stomachs, patriotically re marks the Chicago Timert does not stand well in the estimation of the effete civilization of the old world. Denmark has joined in the crusade against him, the Government having issued a decree prohibiting the importation 6t our pork products in any 'form. Francis Murphy's son, Thomas, it is said, surpasses his father as a temper ante orator. He speaks in a clear, ring ing voice, and is perfectly at home on the platform. One thing that makes him popular is his kindness to reformed drunkards. He frequently gives an old toper five or ten dollars after signing the pledge to help him in making a new itart in life. ! There has been at' Norcfhausen, Ger many, a most theatrical and awful . sui cide. A young girl completely saturated all her clothing with benzine, and, standing on the platform, set fire to her self just as the train rolled up to the station. The passengers saw a piilar of fire, and, trying to put out the flames, were overcome with horror to hear a hu man voie ask irritably why they couldn't let her burn quietly. General Crook, ..the famous Indian fighter, elands six feet in his stockings, and is as straight as an arrow. He has heen thirty-six years in the service, and knows hi? business thoioughly. When on the war path General Crook wears an old canvas suit said to be worth $1.25. He rides at the head of his column on a mule, with a rifle across his arm. He is a devoted hunter and fisherman, and it is said that he would go a thousand miles to shoot a deer. Every letter-carrier who has common ense, remarks the Detroit Free Pres, knows that he cannot rob the mails and stand one chance in fifty of escaping de tection, and yet fifty-four of them have tned it in the lost two years. The high est amount taken was 200, and the low est $2, and for these suras men who have wives and children and character sacrificed all. The honest way is the only way. Owing to the increase of sickness, thought, to be due to impure food and poisonous liquors, the Municipal Council of Lima (Tern) ordered an analysis to be made of 245 different articles purchased from almost as many stores. The result showed that 86 were counterfeits and 12 tre dangerous to health, 21 were adul terated or were not what they were sold for, 18 were decomposing or so changed ss to be unfit for consumption, 46 were impure but not positively dangerous, 32 ere imitations fairly passable, while enly 82 were really good. . It may be interesting to our readers to learn that every man when he takes up his cards at a game of whist holds one ot of G35,0i:t; 559,000 possible hands. As for the, total number of variations Pible among all the players, it is so enormous as almost to exceed belief. Mr. Babb calculated that if 1,000,000 men were to be engaged dealing cards at . ?ate of one deal each minute day atd 6!ght for 100,000,000 years, they would pt then have exhausted all the possible Rations of the cards, hut only 100, y)0th part of them. Barnes Greeley, a brother of " the founder of the Tribune, is a farmer in Pennsylvania. He is an eccentric man, nd while he advocates the doctrines of the Prohibitionists, he thinks that too teach atcr j8 a dangerous thing. He attributes his excellent physical condi ha at the age of seventy-five to the JU amount of water he uses, both as a TerS and for cleansing purpose. Uuckens and pigs are his favorite live wk, and they roam at will over his Mr. Greeley says that his rother Horace gave him a position on D Tribune in its early days, but he did Uke it, and after a short trial re Rraed to his pi aad chickecs. - I A SONO FOR TI E SEASON. or orchards Iangh wit t their bloom run over, .. ; j A flashing wing like a s til cute the air; There's a faint red rippe of sweet-topped clover,. : J ' - And a liquid note From a song- ard's throat, "And a dew-drop shine 1 1 the morning "fair. There's a plume and flu iter, of wings tnat : wave, ! ', - . ' . A fine soft murmur steal through the grass; . , ; j;, . . ' A myriad insects hum an i quaver, Andtoandfio r As the wood-: lymphs go, " . The young brakes curl where their foot-' . steps pass, -t i-. r The moms are rich with i he hues of roses, The wine of the wmds 1 ows full , and free; When the sun drops doi rn and the daylight closes j We hear the eat : Of the fairies ' feet, " As they hang the wands of the wfllow-trce. Now Pbylb's starts In the morning early. With her shining buckc t and milking-stool ; While her strong hands u ge the white stream pearly - ' b:' i ' ; She eyes the rate For a comer ate, Who saunters down in -he shadows cool; Who, sauntering, whistle i an idle measure, Then clears with a bou ad the brown rails. , top. - j ; j Her eyes shine bright wi h a greeting pleas ur. ; . f - y - But the dun i row's gaze i ' la of mild an iaze, When the pearly streai a and the whistling stop, ; I . Ah, spring's but once in t fie year's procession ; She comes with glee a id a laughing grace That wins our heart) in t , full possession: We too are gay IV hen she smiles this war. And care slips off whet we see her face. Estelle Thomson, In Harper's Weekly A BOTTLE OF OIL BY H. D. WAXDKOIT. Wishing to take the night train at the email station of B and having nothing to employ rdy attention about trie village, I went eirly to the station. and was ushered into! the waiting-room a stout, crood- by the watchman, natured-lookintr man in - tho prime of life, who wore, pinned, across his breast, an empty sieeve. n As I had an hour or before my train would more of leisure passed arrive, I the time chatting With the watchman. and he told me the ory of the adven ture in wbich he lost his arm. I repeat his narrative as nearly as possible in his K own words. ! Before I was" intrusted with the night duties of this station 1 formed one of a men, who had in crew of three section charge seven miles pf track upon our road, some three hundred miles west of here, in th roughest and most lawless part of the Territorv. Our duties were to keep in thorough order the track upon bur section, and we were held responsible to the comnanv for anything that would endarger or de lay the trains while apon it. Our section' began j at Summit Station and ran east seven miles. Thence to. Brewster's, the next station east of Sum mit, and fifteen miles distant from, it was another section e ight miles long. The night duty of a section -hand is not pleasant. I In rai a or shine, snow or sleet, the section must; be patrolled by one man who emph yes in good weather a light hand-car for he purpose ahead of our Overland Pullman train. This train passed over our section at midnight, and our departure w is timed so as to in spect the track imroi sdiately ahead of it. So, taking turns j at that duty, we started from Summi at ten o'clock sharp and usually arrivec at the half-way house" about ten minutes ahead of the train. Here we met one of the men from the section east of us, who bad started about the same time, and for the Same purpose. You see the precaution taken by all well managed roads for the safety of its patrons How many of thej passengers on the Overland to-nicht know, or Knowing, give a thought to the men who, since darkness settled upon them, have been plunging through the suow for hand- cars are useless in su ch weather as this swinging their lanterns fronj side to side. examining careiuny. every cut for fear of falling rocks, everyj bridge for broken them to ride in rail?, thus enablind safety. ! As I said before, the men from each section having patrolled fifteen miles of track, meet at a litt side the track, just a small stove and a plies, and allow the e shanty situated be large enough to hold few necessary sup men to enter. Here they stay until the rain comes in sight ; then outside, and display .their two white lights, that the engineer may know all is weV I Failure to dt this would result io a report to headquarters, and possibly in dischwre from the service. Oueniffht it cam mv turn toaun the section. Befcre stt rting, it occurred to me that our supply of lantern oil at the half-way house was low, so I procured and filled a quart battle of lard oil, the kind which is used for the purpose,, put it into the inside rocket of my heavy coat, buttoned it srl ugly about me, and started. It was a stormy summer's night, as black as ink. My tar ran smooiniy over the rails, and soon I had traveled about half the distance, and arrived at abridge crossing S-ake KivteK Here I dismounted from the car, and pushing it ahead of me as I passed, l gave the structure a care- ful examination, ound everything all right, and was about mounting my car gain, when J rec ived a violent blow upon the head which stretched me sense less upon the rails. : Recovering consciousness after a few moments, I found myself bound, gagged and lying but a ft w'feet from a gang of masked men, who n I saw, as well as the darkness would ennit, at work with bars removing ond of the rails just at the entrance of the br dge. Train wreckers! I had beard a great deal about the clespcrate character of these ruffians, but; was now making my, first annintanca (with them. At they worked, tbej 4iwuise4 th I and how the v should disnose vi me. "I tell yer, Sam!" one big fellow ex-j claimed. Best way is to tie him across 1 ' 1 ine rails, and let 'em finish him." "Yes, that's sol" echoed the party. "Dead men tell no tales, and he may have seen our faces." "I won't listen to such a plan, said one who seemed to exercise some influ ence over them. We shall have enough to answer for before this job is finished without killing him. How this nail sticks !" he added, with an oath. The man who drove these spikes must have meant 'em to stay. Come, mates! He is safe enough, and if we mean business, we must be lively. The train will be here in twenty minutes, and we have no time to lose," and at the rail they all sprang with a will. i Twenty minutes ! What could I hope to do to save the train in my condition, with so short a time? The thought of the terrible wreck which must result if the derailed train struck the bridge made me desperate. Straining at the cords which bound my wrists, I fancied they gave way a little. I remembered the trick of the necroman cers who free themselves ' from their bonds by alternately contracting and ex panding their muscles, and I lay in si lence, working in a perfect frenzy of ex citement until I was able to free my hands. In an instant my knife was out of my-"pocket, and my feet free. Without waiting to free myself from the gag, I sprang to my feet, and, at the top of my speed, started down the track in the direction of the ; approaching train. With a yell which told me I was discovered, the whole gang started in pursuit; but I had some little start of them, and bounded along the ties, bent upon stopping the train at any cost. In the inky blackness of the night pur suit was difficult. Soon pop! pop I pop"! frcm the revolvers of the gang. They cre firing down the track, in the hope of stopping me with a bullet. As the gag, which I had not removed, hindered my breathing, I was forced to stop for a moment to cut it away. While so engaged, there came a second volley, this time more successful. ri I was struck ' in the left arm midway between wrist and elbow. I should have fainted from the shock, together with the rough usage I had previously undergone, but for my determination to keep up. " ''Brace up!" I called, as if addressing a companion. "No time for such foolish ness now, Tom. Remember the train!" This I said aloud to myself, for the solitary work of my nightly rounds had given me the habit of talking to myself, for want of another companion. Setting my teeth hard, I overcame the faintnes?, staggered to my feet and ran on. I soon noticed that the pursuit had ceased. Either the train robbers thought I was done for, or they had returned to their unfinished work, trusting I should be unable to stop the train. And now it flashed upon my mind for the first time. How could I accomplish it? Light 1 had none my lantern was with the wreckers, s-r r While I was thus deliberating, still running on as fast as my condition would permit, instinctively I felt in my pocket for matches Ah, the oil!) Why had I not thought of that before? Of course I "Of course the oil will stop them, Tom. Spread it on the rails. Their old seventy-ton locomotive can get no grip on that iron. Smear it thick, cover it well, rub it on with your palm, so both rails, don't i neglect an inch of either. For life, Tom! for life. Think of the men, women and little children upon the train!" ;. ... -. I worked with the desperation of a drowning man. Upon my knejes, the bottle under my disabled arm, pburing the oil,by an inclination of my body,into my right hand, and spreading ii upon the rails. In ten minutes the! quart of oil was ex hausted, and as a result I had both rails for quite a distance j very well covered with it. '. ' . : i ' I had worked backward from the ap proaching train, and now rose to my feet at the end of ray labor aud at the ter minus of the greased rails. The train was coming. Already the rails were singing with rrrr txr rnmn Tin- awful tVio BirrVit of a big locomotive, coming straight toward one upon a dark midnight! Thee great, round eye of the head-light stream-' ing out into the darkness, the roar of the exhaust, the hiss of the steam through the cylinders, together with the rush and roar of the train, make up a terrifying though magnificent sight. I stood upon the track, waving my hands, far enough away to spring from it before tho train could reach me, but so that the head-light won'd shine upon me, and I could be pcan by the engineer. "Now for it" I thought. She strikes the oil the big, seven-foot driving wheels spin round as though the engine had been lifted in the air. Friction, the propelling influence is gone now. ,She slackens speed. I could see the engineer plainly. In my excitement I screamed as loud as possible, in vain protest to the engi neer, who was pulling the lever which sands the rails. 5 Shouting is of no avail, they could not hear me. : Had there been sufficient up-grade there the oil would have stopped; them quite. As it was, the inertia of the cars composing the tram wai able to push the engine over, sliding the wheels, v But one resource was left, and I thought of it just in time. I stepped as; close to the rails as I dared, and with all my strength hurled the empty bottle at the head-light. It struck the glass and shattered it to splinters, and the light ia stantly went out. '. Then came the welcome signal from tho whUtie for brake?, and I sank down unconscious. ; When I recovered, a moment sufficed to tell the story, and, proceeding slowly, we soon came to the scene of the trouble. The rail had been removed and was lying beside the track; bur, of course, the would-be wreckers had seen by our careful approach that-their plan was spoiled and had decamped- With the tools always carried upr n a train for atwh purpose, we soon replaced the rail and proceeded. . ' I was can icd to the company's hospital at , where skilful surgeons did the best they could for me, but it was found necessary to remove my arm, at yon see. and the company thought it best, to avoid my meeting with possible harm from tho gang I had foilecj, to traDlfer Bi to this polo? situation. Now it is time for me to light up tho station, for your train will soon be here. A pieasant journey to you. sir, and no mishaps. Good-night. YnuUC$ Cony- panUm. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A $10,000,000 telephone company has been organize! in Chicago to work a new patent. . - : The consumption of coal at Pittsburg, Pennu, has diminished 4,500,000 tons a year since the introduction of natural gas. . ' . i V The Maxufalurer anl Builder declares that there are at presents no j less' lhan 10,000 electric motors in use throughout the United States. - A. wire rope half a mile long, and weighing seven and one -.half ! tons, has been manufactured in England, for use in a Welsh col liery. "Venus, the morning star, is brighter than it ever appeared to any man now living, and nearer the earth than it will be again for 340 years. A gpn car ju?t made at Woolwich Ar senal, England, to carry a big Englsh gun has twelve wheels, and a capacity of 300,000 pounds. The gun weighs 248, 640 pounds. ; A broken pipe has "interrupted the British Royal Society's boring in the Kile delta At a depth of 321 feet, or 220 feet "below sea level, the solid rock is still untouched. The immense beds of gypsum near Medicine Lodge, Kan., are soon to be utilized by the erection of works for the purpose of converting the gypsum into plaster of paris. ......, Withmore coal than either Pennsyl vania or Great Britain,- West Virginia produced in 1886 only j about one fif teenth as much as Pennsylvania and one fortieth as much as Great Britain. :' ui: A Providence (R. I.) inventor is now testing an organ with glass tube, which, it is claimed, will be much superior to metal, both in purity and volume of tone, and cheaper into the bargain. ;; ; A German has taken out a patent for using bone slate pencils 4or writing. They do not wear quick, and do not re quire to be sharpened. " It is also to be supposed that young ladid will not ac quire any morbid appetite for them,, as is commonly supposed some of them do for slate pencils. Recent improvements in telescopes have enabled astronomers to makelintcresting discoveries, and it is positively asserted by Big. Schiaparelli, of Milan, who, it is said, has the finest instrument in the world that Mars is inhabited " by a peo ple somewhat like ourselves. He has made the wonderful discovery of a series Of canals in that planet. The remarkable finish of American papers plat es them ahead of any made elsewhere ; in the, world. The - excellent properties of the paper are imported by the addition of a mineral called'agalith. It is a silicate of magnesia, and is fibrous, resembling in this respect asbestos. Large amounts of it are found in the United States. , This substance does not seem to be found as yet in other countries. Dr. Richardson stated in a recent lect ure that it had been calculated, that no less than 175,000,000 red blood cells are destroyed every minute in the human, body. The more our material nature is studied the more wondrous does it be come. But could we understand it aright the marvels of the human spirit would be found to be more mysterious still. The Cabmen or Cuba. The Cuban cochero or cabman w such a marvellous contract to the American hackman that his deserts are beyond the power of my pen. But he is also such an unmitigated nonentity that he deserves ignominy. You pay but 40 cents in Spanish paper, equivalent to only 16 cents in gold, for a "journey" or ride in his little victoria from one point within the city to any other. He seldom over charges a customer. Whether so or not, the cochero, when unemployed, sleeps on his box, his little nag meanwhile sleeping in the shafts, and when awake he is good natured, greasy and silent. - He does ai he is bid and for the rest relies upon your honor, Providence and the police, lie seldom rises to the tremendous height of proprietorship, but rents his shabby out fit of a company which has a high-sounding name and is perennially short of fod der. The cochero has no home, eats at the cheap cafe, sleeps in the stable loft or upon his own carriage box and makes love anywhere. 'Philadelphia Time. Tailing the Knll. The colpeadero, or tailing the bull, is a diversion much affected by the young men of Mexico, barring those of effeminate tastes and habits. In this sport there is the chase by a number of riders of a bull let loose from a corral at one end of an inclosed avenue, 200 or S00 yards long. The bull is given a fair start, and the horsemen dash after him, dropping back one by one until only the most forward is left, and he, guiding his horse along side the flying game, grasps the . tail - of his bovine excellency, and, dextrously throwing one leg over it endeavors to jerk the animal off his feet, and usually does so. The feat is one of skill rather than strength and even women have been known to perform it. There is an element of danger bnt it is not revolt ing. There is even a comic strain in the foolish look of the bull as he scrambles to Ms feet again. Sin Francisco Chron- uli. - - ' An Odd Fact About Gnn-Cotton. When gun-cotton tr other high ex plosives are freely exposed upon an iron anvil and detonated,the enplosive leaves a deep and permanent imprcion upon the suface of the metal with ' whTch it was in contact. The imprc sion produced by the,' exploding miss is an x?moai exact copy of that face of the explosive which was in contact with ibe m?taL 1 hi is best observed with gun-cotton, for, from the nature of the material, it cm be shaped according to faner. and suth fig ures and designs as one wishes can be stamped upon its surface. ?Thu if a dink of gun-cotton, on the fsca 'of which' the letters "U. S. N. and the date "1S4" are indented, be detonascd, it wi';i l?e found that the letters and figmes will be reproduced in the iron ad. nsst i!ngu lar of all these phe iorr.ena. th-y w "if te indented in the iron u s tLe t-r In he gua-cotton.r-4?c ir'e 3!?!uft' NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Moire has a new lease of favor. Female barbers abound a San Fraa- cisco. . . r , J Silk gloves are promised with kid tips to the fingers. Bows of ribbon and pretty buttons are the favored trimmings. Ladies control theatres in Albany, Worcester and Richmond. Spanish guipure is a heavy lace and is suitable for elderly ladies. .. Old black silk skirts can be utilized for the underskirts of lace dress. - Sirs. Secretary Whitney owns two of the daintiest Sedan chairs in existence. The violet is the flower of the button hole or breast pocket bouquet at the mo ment. ' The new Duchess of Rutland is a fre quent contributor to several English magazines. Use tepid water for woshing the face and hands if you don't want to have pre mature wrinkles. . Of the twenty one committee clerks of the Iowa House sworn in recently, nine teen were women. A lady recently died in the City of Sfexieo who was a direct descendant from Montezuma. Yel vet corsages with square open neck and elbow sleeves will be extensively worn the coming season. The bordered wool dresses require no -trimming, and therefore for reasons eco nomical they are very popular. The main featuresof little girls dresses arc the killed skirt and loose jacket bodice with jabot or blouse front. White and pink are so much the bridesmaids colors that a bevy of them strongly suggests the belated apple blos soms. : .: ' ; ' The ever-popular sailor hat this sum mer will have a quaint crown of drawn silk, with a cluster of ribbons perched at the top. - There may not be anything strikingly martial in the girl of the period, but she is going to wear epaulets ail the same this summer. In silk the old-fashioned lustrous taffeta and soft twilled surah with chine figures are more new than either pretty or serviceable. . Sir Donald Smith's gift of $1,000,000 to endow a female college at Montreal, Canada, is among the latest largo bits of philanthropy Those jaunty directoire bonnets made entirely of lace frills arc the prettiest things imaginable, and are most becom ing to a youthful face. The widow of General Custer, the In dian fighter, is at work on another book of Western experiences. It will not be published for two years. It is predicted that fancy blue and piuk collars and cuffs and plain colored musliu pocket handkerchiefs will be worn with the summer dresses. ' Scarlet upon bonnets, in combination with black lace and jet, seems to bo as much favored as ever, notwithstanding the rivalry of the green shades. C. T. Ritchie, member of the English Cabinet, is the father of seven musical daughters, equally devoted to art, har mony and tho Primrose League. Striped moire and grenadine, in black oi white, is a new material which is likely to meet with considerable favor for both day and evening wear. Miss Sarah C. Hewitt, daughter of Mayor Hewitt, of New York, is the leading spirit; lof the Ladies' Amateur Orchestra, which numbers thirty mem bers. A Gainesville (Texas) belle can prop erly be described' as "killing," as two men have killed themselves in the last six months for love of her beautiful eyes. " - '- Open work in straw as well as In jetted wire makes the foundation of many a stylish bonnet for summer wear, and is certainly both pretty and com fortable. t Mrs. ; Oscar only color of suits of half a dant hue. with Wilde makes green the her garments. She has dozen shades of the ver bonnets hats, gloves and parasols to match. Frocks of light wool for little girls are often made with a velvet yoke, which is cut low to wear over a gimp, the arm holes being simply hcorded. without sleeves, and a velvet beIt inserted. Women booksellers are not rare in France. One of the largest booksellers in the City of Alsace is a well-educated and charming French lady, familiar alike with English and German literature. Lnek. The may be no such thing as luck, but there is a potential influence sur rounding some people which inevitably brings tbem to weilth or celebrity, or both. As an instance, I can cite a per sonal experience in-my early life while fra-ticing law. In the same city there ived a voung - man by the name of -McGill. who was also a lawyer, but de voted his entire. t'roe to the claim depart ment of the business. Ooe day, in my orllce, I was fastening a lot of legal documents together with the crude fasteners then in vogue, when McGill spoke up and said: "I have an idea that I can produce a better fastener than that." The next day he handed me a rough specimen of the present popular fastener which is shape! like a letter T. McGill offered me a quarter 'interest to pe t it patented, but I laughed at hira. He persevered, secured hi patent and to day lias an income of between $400, 000 and $-"0!,00 per year. He reside in Paris, France, and tle last time I was .abroad tendered me a banquet there. It was his luc', or whatever it may be termed, to.-strike fortune through a simple device and my It ck to refuse to share it with him. GIA-Democrat. An Inexpensive Idea. A Mr. Dunnd, of Fat is, was left widower. lie erected to the memory of hi cat departed a mauleum with this insrfiption; "Mr. I.'urand to 51 me. Da rastt" In coure of time his sorrow is assuaged, and Mr. Daraod marries a sec ond tirce. He is very fcarPJ ut again he is Itft a widower. cw, instead of erecting another monument, he simply alters the epitaph as follows: "Mr. Dumcd to Mmcs. Durand." gp!eadid sod so iaepcnyif. A CILISE AFTER A MOOSE. TUBTT.T.rgQ DESCBIPTIOW OP HUNT IK A MAINE FOKE3T. A Kim rod Iletate II U First Kipe-rience-IIow the Noble Ileast I lecoyeel to Ilia Slavjrhtrr. 'It was during one October that I had the satisfaction of seeing my first boom and of aiding in bagging it," said a well known New York sportsman. "It was far up in the St. John River region, in the northwestern part of Maine and only a few miles from the line of XewBiuns wick. My guide, a swarthy young fel low named Raleigh Wing, told me one day that he had seen abundant signs of moose in the woods, fand was sure a bull moose was near. At this time of the year the cows come out of the ridges and call for a mate, and as their cry can be heard for two miles at least, Wing was of the opinion that none were near us. I was anxious to go out and give chase to the bull whose presence - be suspected, but he said that such a course would be useless, and that he would go out that night and "call" it It would surely answer the call if it was in the neigh borhood, and we would get a shot at St at short range.; He produced from among his kit of hunting and trapping accou trements something that resembled a dinner-horn, except that it was made of birch bark. It was about an inch in diameter at one end and perhaps live at the other, and nearly two feet long. " 'It has been a good while since I had occasion to use this,' said Wing, and I don't know but I've forgotten how. "He blew upon the peculiar trumpet and produced a wilcf, modulated, pene trating cry that made the woods ring. " I haven't forgotten, said Wing, laying the horn down with a contented smile, 'and if there is a moose within ound of this call to-night we'll get him.' "At sundown we started with our rifles for a barren ridge that lay off two miles to the east. It was dark when we reached the spot, a h;gh locality, sur rounded by dense forest. The guide S laced rae in ambush behind a clump of ushes which commended the barren space in every direction. He then selected a tree standing by itself a few feet away, and telling me if he succeeded in calling a moose to the snot to take good aim at it back of the shoulder if I could, and to fire the instant it stepped into the opening, he climbed the tree until he was hidden in the lower branches, drawing his rifle after him, butt end first, by a twine which he had attached to it. Presently, out on the still, crisp, Octo ber night air rang the weird call to the cow moose as imitated by Wing on the birch-bark trumpet. I had thought it penetrating before, but the experi mental cry the guide had made at the camp was soft and low compared with this 'call that meant business. It seemed to go down into the valley in long wares of sound, and lingered . an amazing length of time ou the air before the' last reverberation died away. The novelty of the situation aroused me to the highest pitch of excitement. One moment I was burning with fever and the next I grew so cold that my teeth chattered. In a few minutes Wing gave another blast on his trumpet. When the sound died away the silence seemed to grow more profound and my suspense was becoming almost unbearable. Then a sound as of castanets heard in dancing broke the stillness off to the right of this opening, and series of short, gut tural sounds like the low bellowing of a bull came from the same direction. 'Make ready I He's coming! Wing signaled to me. "I began to shake like an aspen, but I shoved the gun around the bushes and had the entire opening before me. 31y hand shook so that I gave up all hope of hitting the moose, even if he came within twenty feet of me. But I had short time for reflection, for from the edge of the forest, plainly visible in the starlight, came the majestic moose, drawn thither by the false love calL He came pranc ing into the opening, his great antlered head lifted proudly and thrown grace fully back as if to excite the admiration of the mate he came to meet. As he enme with stately tread into the opening h i uttered several short, low, mellow cries and stopped. He was not twenty paces away and his great side was turned squarely toward roe. My hands could not be controlled, and. despairing, I closed my eyes and fired. Opening my eyes I saw the huge animal lying on the ground. The next instant he was on his feet and turned to dash into the forest when the truer aim of Wing laid him low again. Once more be essayed to rise and I fired again at random, but through good luck hit a vital part. My fiist shot had hit the moose in the neck and knocked , it down. Wing's shot struck it back of the ahoulder. My second shot passed through the moose's kidneys. Ijiever saw a hand somer animal than that moose. Its skin ' was as glossy as satin, and its antlers, which were four feet long and over a foot wide, were polished like ivory. The moose polishes his antlers tv rubbing them on mossy trees. To get the moose's, carcase down from the ridge we were obliged to call to our help some guides from a neighboring camp. It weighed 800 pound, according to all their esti mates. The antlers alone weighed fifty pounds, as I afterward learned in having them mounted. "The Castanet-like rattling that had first attracted my attention that night when the moose approached was made by the horny points on the animal's lng and slender hoofs clattering together as he bounded along. This clattering of the points frequently reveals the pres ence of moose to the hunter, as it can be heard for a long distance in the quiet of the wood when the moose is at full speed. "I saw a man In the Passadurokeag country who boasts that during one win ter he killed seventy-five moose. They were hunted with soowahoes and kilted in the crust. The purpose of slaughter ing the animals thus by wholesale, when they had no chance for their lives, was to secure their hides. This was cocsid cred a great exploit at the time, but now the hunters see what su h criminal de struction of the game led to, and they . V. - .1 - . A ; 1 i rrV, ' View IliZ iltUgUKI 1U uiunv fu Hail anl Erpra. A Buffalo coal dealer is suing ft tailk' pan for watering til raUk. the im:oK. Fleming down tha prn va'j-i, ry tlie ail v-r nl jlt kitt Oft the tarryiu - tr''tfU datlitts, Nath ttM'slo ly nMrs mist. i In thedtti tvh tf d.Ui, Like a ky with Ur lxtrvn, YbTr tho im-llo liiUin,; hjis N Of the sultry mmmr noa. Through th briery trk t bram?.!". Through tho Wmiin - ftrn and flower. Ever f-injjs it a it m?nt'M, fcina of sunny summer hour. Summer lour ar swiftly njxIia, Pays that will no inr hiw. Mortals, f ye y n-4 unhwlin Here thia sons of mine. In ths thirkt there rli worm Wtwre tho wi!atvt hans d'uIm 1, Through th thicket 1-uhcs c lovrn. Moves it in it nm-ssy Iwd. Whre atov thi H.momin;; branches landing, mak a c ol rt treit, There in ever -d lyin laun f Sings it t'UK r n.ns an I wt. Farthly mummr swift are Hunstlwit will n lrr-trli : MortaLe, y nt unhev Imj Here this son;; of iniv. HUMOR OF TIIK DAY. Stalo butter An aged goat. Hard to beat A hnrd-lmiled c. Something that should be- looked into a telescope. A clear skin Heating a friend out of borrowed money. . Siam is a greit place for comfort. Thero aro largo quantities of SUm cato there. Ada "I had ten offers of marri in last weck."Klla "How monotonous aud persistent of Jack." Titl-JlU. Many otherwise domestic cooks aro in the. habit of introducing foreign material into plain soup. y i" Vork A fr. It seems to bo the custom nowa la foryoungmen when they get a liy nil from work to get away olT.j Ktntucky Stale Jviirnal, In th nring tho !! innn' fany turrn t v thinRs aiKMit inn lioil tli. And in iivr rvgulatjm h invent surplu-t wealth. "3fr. B., I wish you would not nmoke BO much." "Why, th chimney aniokf , my dear." "Well, if it dots, it doesn't spit over everything." -The Whitehilt Timm says Jhat the mouth is the window of tho intellect.' The toothache must be a sort of window pane. H.to Yik Hun. Rejoin, (y frw-iid, you're not a Romm, And count your privilege nn ?rrnt; For well w know in thee da v no man Would have patience to wnto mik cclxxx VIII. Dogs are not allowed to pick their company. That is why you often m-o a $75 dog out walking with a fifteen cent man. Tonkert S'aUmnnn. Her li a lawyer cold in !ath With all nil up that'ilue hint lie lies at as-l in aff til ri,t, For lying's natural to him. Wahiajtott CriH- Minnie 'Tapa, what is Yobipukl" Papa "Why it's the universal lan guage." Minnie "But who speak it i" I'apa ' 'Nobody. "UlaytH m l-m 1U; n (win. When the teacher ake 1 : "What undo the Tower of Pisa Ic.m ! " the slangy boy at the foot .f tho (hw prutplly re sponded: "IWausis it wa built that way." Xorrittvtn Jl-mf-f. Hero lin a yoijiixan 1 Mmpl-j VxA Who Naturt law d'lil -Ho vo!uotrl tt li tli niil. And ttia.l' jut how ho H'-t! S(pinj. "A genteel carver," nys a book on etiquette-, "always ails when he rant?." Carvers who get on the tnldc and have a wrestling match with the chicken arj known by sonic other name. llxhrnUr Ejrpren. "Yes," remarked the second son of an Englhh noblcmtu who had bem sent t an American ranch for refu-in' to'tako orders in the established church; "con science makes cow-herds of us all." JJttUimvre . ; Old Wimple ' (solemnly) "Young man, to attain aucceve in this world we must be up aod doin. Do you ever nej the sua riaei" Yrmng Man "Vc-, ir, occasionally." "When?" "On my way home. tiijtin'j. Ooalin "Yc, Miss Smith, I expect i' ail. for "KiirojMs." M'tun Fmith (inno ccntly) "Indeed. What on;" ;o!i:i (embarrasscd) "Well, er-ti tell u the truth, Mi' Smith, it's oa borrow i 1 money." Sifting: Doctor (who find a trnmp groan in r; by the roadside)" What i the matter with you?" Tramp (dolefully)" My yatem it all run down." Do tor " JJy what?" Tramp "By a dog. Jvr iiKjVin Fret I'm. He "I ce that old Mr. Bently wa buried yesterday." Wife (lotk'd "Why, it old Mr. Ifcutly dead? " " lie (who ha jt;t been 'at uron "Thcs paper eloesn't svy whether he i devl or not; simply that he was buried yester day." iUV. "How hideous Mi us B. looked in that new bonnet." "I thought it was very becoming; at least ih; trimming a very appropriate." "1 didn't notice th tmmlng.', "The linnet was trimm' I with ivy b-aves. Iy clings to oil ruins." Yrf irk Vt r. In the cruh of travel cn a N?rth r'i Is cable car U-X Saturday an accident oc curred that Came near proving t' rioui. A Polih grij.man, whi'e boning o-it l the car in front, inadvertently droj j I his name and it becam entangle 1 ia tJ s grip. It was Cna'ly dragged out froi :i under the car with the aid t tevcrii horcs, and the partially dixb!e 1 cora slowly ins umol iu travels. Vhlaj t 7 ri- "PriAOner," observed the Arkar. Judge, with imprtkive dignity, "!. I have to ob'f tion to your ;-S Ire me familiarly 'when, you ir.eet-ie t: viy saloon, I wih 3014 to tinderktad "l-lt this court, when in regular "Sion, KI; r s tea no inso!ct familiarities from any body, and I five you notice that t:.s Beit time yo:t ndlre tha fo nt k "Poker Jim" 1 shall kick you cleir t:p through your shirt colUr. Go cn'.vhh the ' tesUmuny, gatlttao.M C-JJ 2'rZvne, . :