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THE OMAHNA DAILY BEE: :EtTNDAY, JULY 14, 1895. 11 whistle, when out of the woods a dozen men 9 M, & | trouble dotng it. T ten you, for he fougnt came running toward us and repeated a cry TR,\]N]\G ]HE‘ hLEPH,\NT like a devil. But he didn't make a_sound, | raised by Mardrochat, ‘Make the lassies show e the whig's hiding’ place.’ They had been that not a trumpet or a roar; he just buckled down and fought until the whole place shook Well, we finally got him stretched out o | that he couldn’t move at all except to thrash ‘mu big trunk form one side to another, and | t was a cave on the braw surface ' etling crag, but their knowledge of | A Most Unraly and Dangerous Pupil for tion was not more certain than this ; L exact spot they bade us tell, and frighted Teachers to Handle, ain_ with threats of all kinds of dire s O .y We t h‘l them_they could find gut for | " elves it thers were Juch a piace, but : : as for us, we would say neither yes not no.: | CRUUE IDEAS ABZORBZD BY MACHINERY ““When they had brought us by force to the face of rock and copse where, as you know . | the cave in," Maiste. went on, iney asked | T4o Asiatic Naast Qiitd 'Tégc | us again and again to take them to the Co we took good care to get out of the way of | that. Honestly, it was a pity to see him lying there heipless but game. 1 was sorry £5F Bia when 1 thought of what he would have to take before we got through with him. There was nothing else to do, though as far as we knew It was a case of his life ble Under | against curs, and the only way to get along with him was to make him give up. So the | Are again in the east making puision — Rewarfling, the Good, [t B WAS 1O o e With stakes. sledge . iy irhtes 0 | nen armed themselves with stakes, sledges, 48 . n 3 rightest whig's hiding place. When we refuted they | Panlshisg the 1Rd v Markes | poxurs,. pitchtorke, ot ifons, axes; every selections of the newest and brig uttered the most horrid threaten swear- " | c - Value of Show H¥bant thing you could think of, and formed around g f et p ing what should befall us. But they were | old Chief in a circle—though the circle had a things shown in the Furniture and € ot able at all to shake us, though we were FAN | ap-in it; you can maxe to youe mimo, whate 8 i but two maids and at their cruel w and | his trunk was thrashing. Then we began on T, ) 7 U B 5 they were not able to find the mouth of the | (Copyright, 1505, by S & McCiure, Limit<1) | him: Kept 1t up nour after hour all (hrough ¥ | ct trade. We have a few odds and ends cave in that mile of tangled gairy face. | Only Asiatic elephants are capable of re- | the night. I tell you it was an awful sight A So the cruellest and flercest of ail, the great, stark, black-a-vised man whom they ning without any let up, that elephant called Mardrochat, that same that stopped Tiiv. thedloine. Rl neves: WhImMpersd, | il 3 % ; ¥4 us by the ford when first we fled from Bal- | Mot one of the African variet never gave up, never squealed. He died at & close at cost. Straw Mattings down to 8¢ maghie The most difficult trick an elephant Is | o'clock in the morning, and he died game. 7 g per yard, Alaska Refrigerators at cost “Oh, cursed Mardrochat,”” T cried; “wait | called upon to do In the circus ring is to | When I saw the last struggle come to an Jewel Gasoline Stoves are the only abso From 10 o' mo celving much instruction, and in the Bar- num herd, numbering twenty-four, there ts Mol AL LG Bl Ak in our Furniture department which we will Ul 1 ¢ome to a settlement with you!” | stand on his head, Of the twenty-four n | €nd. the last quiver die away and the big “No," said Malste solemnly, “all is settled | ¢ Batnum show there are only 1nm body all torn and tortured ife still, 1 tell e Barn sho ere are o three that t and paid alread i agdroc] they b you I felt as if a erime had been committed bbb b U dat 'Y | bave learned this difficult feat, They are of sighting a sha threat tll “they were weary, and the | BA%0 ; .\lnl 1w s m\;'llv\lx glad it was ove I didn't { : night was coming on. Then Mardrochat [ “Babe,” “Lena" and “Columbia,” all young | believe the old boy wc give up anyhow ko P _ and we are solc turned about to his gallows’ thieves {and femal Doubtless with great pains | he was too good an elephant for that.” @ ute safe stove on earth, a ‘‘Must we go back empty handed? Let!and patience the older elephants and some | PUNISHMENT NOW, . i o ity by B. M. Crockett l""‘""‘ (hat very day, hearing him speak | me try my way with the lassles. They hall | o¢ the males might also be taught to s | Me.: Contelln® paused ' moment 18 hix e acvents and sell them at the same price 4 CHAP XV.—CONCLUDED. from the Session Stone, smote his thigh | be complaisant to tell where the old foX lies: | op their heads, but it would be a long | cital. Then he went on i R But suddenly, even while we execrated | with o ‘malediction 1 «klh‘“ w)x.;- Almighty | r\“r“'l‘l\' Alifter” that ‘which shall serve Us a8 .. ope | " “And the worst of it all was that all this thers want fo Home Destroyers. ! Black MacMichael for that cowardly racthod | forkave: | ARG then skrty. oat, ot plAf "”;‘1! “With that he came near and put his hand [ When the trainer, George Couklin, has an suffering was unnecessary, it we had only at n foe's back, we Knew | frea the prisoners betore Amton Lenox | upon me in the way to hurt me. Notwith- | elephant to break to this feat he begins by | Kiown It. You sec our ldea was that the that we would have done as he, would have | should be near Edinboro and the headsman, quarter o r spor L3 s & s strong ¥ 8 s lif s If you have anything to buy in the way oy standing, with all h was n y way to sy a A y g Yy ) he land, could we, for the spo listributed his men, who near all knew | I Strove to keep from crylng out lest my | sta 1 th g y make him own up that he was beaten, and the ways of the hill, scattering them over father should hear, which they counted on. | the hind legs below the knees, the ends of | the only way we knew of to do that was to e ¢ | But, as God is wiiness, 1 could mot. Then, | the chains being connected with a bl make him suffer until ne squealed. 1If he i u the slopes in the hidden spots and those on | But. as God i witness, T could n Then, | the chains being connected With a black |t ot s e o Sl 1‘r1“1 R Carpetings of shooting the man he named | “Mardrochat!” he said, rising from an.ong the rocks and running down to ‘he water, that still looked clear with its sheen of shimmering silver Yea, it the man lying on his face were Madrochut, 1 would have held it no &fn to horses along the bosky edges of the burn. In | the fear being upon me and the pain | ing. When all is ready a number of men or | then I have found out a way of bringing [ a pair of horees are set to work hauling on | flerce elephants to their senses without push {able to have surpele: SO, thrice accursed Mardrochat, die not | the tackle, and the elephant’s huge hind- | g things so far. 1 never found it to fail | "Prese Jted L with my pistols | 1L T meet thee,” T cricd again, beating my | quarters are literaily ho into the air' Why, there's 'Old Fritz! the biggest ele | as we lay, T with my p naked hand upon a rock fn the Impotence of | until the force of gravitation and the re- | phant in the herd, who tried to Kill me every T straining power of the front chains bring | such wise were we put that we had been | Woman, 1 cried out in my agony, as I able to have surprised a much larger force | NeVer before done in this world held ready to pick m men, we heard a | voice shouting a ribald refrain | | s he had not secn but | there was a troop of horse encamped about a a poor maukin—a lad that ran from them. | had felt the deil fire, the same that ye halted and t b 1 believe that we should have come at once | At the in i to an open rupture had I not remembered | from both the prudence I gained during the last days. |led h | Our unwelcome comrade knew the country, | bosky how to hide, to run low, the lore of hill and [ The. dale; where the heather was thickest; spots for hiding among the moss-hags. We had found these traits upon our short acquaint ance while we hasted along the way on that near impossible errand For how could we two, with but one ur- willing retainer, who had a name bad ik us nt white puffs of powder rose | from in the midst of Enterkin. Now, my des of the burn, while Sandy |Zather, running and smiting blindly, tripped horsemen from their hiding in the |over a halter and fell headlong in the heart of hollows. them. Thus they took Anton Lennox, who must have imagined us many more | had never been taken before. They took us maids, also, but the dragoons being officered by gentlemen, there was no more i1l usage. Now, though' he had Kkilled the informers and spies, the soldiers liked my father none the less for that, despising those whom they employed on such service. Rather they gave my father honor and not dishonor, as one day for three weeks, and was in such a mur Nat dEmemba ve 1aad 18 Bave done the same e'en to Ms back. 1|YOg.o : ¢ ours satd. | Matsle went quietly and evenly on with her | him into the required poition, —Of coure | derous mood that o one dared o go near just remember that we lead ‘ | thought of all T had heard of this sly, wicked [ Othors voleen took s that ditty . steaped | tale without heeding my anger. the animal when treated thus for the first | him yw he's all right, you see. Look at s 8 ¥ N ] Informer, who even the worst of the perse- | w0k iie Jolliee ork ob ht O teeReT | “But when 1 cried the third time in my [ time is thrown into intense rage and fear. | him! You wouldn't hurt me, would you procession in cutors despised Kata Mool had de- | wnaw ctteaiey o Tt ariu | extremity, like a lion out of the thicket came | She trumpets fle thrashing the ground | Fritz? Come up here, old b There, see 2 o cribed him " NS N WILH | ThRE CHey LA had kb FHs nE CHRE b my father forth, springing upon them with i . i e s et i ; Sio! ‘ ] i R (w)w,.\‘('Lw.’.'.l‘\.‘1;J"‘:l\‘1u]::“~l‘| b | jndt they had had at the inn that stands | his sword in the gloaming. Never was ther Style and P B0 DI thely. hen ttwas i WDIFIC. of revene | b gor s Croila foad o the Clashan of | syt striking sirice the world began, He : § | which 16d Him to ssek the cave in the face | = bresantly tney came. by two. their | fruck and struck, panting and resting not, Low Price | of the cliff above the loch, to be quits With | goar rattling Above the somng of thals 'voros, | FOAFINE in anger, till they fled from the face : Malsio and Kate McGhie t00, would have | Fhe man by ve the sound of thelr voices. | of him. And the first that he struck was E i shot him behind while I ‘stopped hid be: | had been my side whispered that we | Mardrochat—he that held me, and the blood ot h ind & | had been right in our conjecture earller in | gpurted over me. Thus it was,” she went on LB R (may MaeMichael | h¢ da¥, and that it was Lag's Dumfries | calmly, “my father clave him to the tecth ; R AL A [ 44‘5\!'\'3“‘!1"‘:" e e and he fell forward on that which had been ¥ $ 55 ; 2 d back to us from the water's e LS rese here came a horse with a 1ass, | his face. Then plucking his sword to him g o _ this man after all was not Madrochat, but | and straining my eyes to be in truth sure, | again, my father swung 1t hither and thither “YouR MoNeYS WORTHORYOUR NOQIEYBACK. | R e oty | LIELW Wat and I had thought, | like lightning, and pursued them over the g s 4 U L o o n Lier | Maie Lienox! moor as a flock of sheep fs hunted on the hill ] back, I belicve we even would have taken | [ rose up at the sight, maddened, I know | And he smote and slew them as _he g 0 our comrade at the throat, now that again | well, and let fly a bullet that took the roy- | ran. My father did that all alone. But ! ] the cowardice of the shot seomed apparent, | stering blade that led the party in the groin, i e O - like that of the soldiers I had seen Slooting | 8o that he yelled ’ A h Lo THE PASNS "(; OF “J 0 0 [ ot air into the carburetor attached to the THE PASSIN $8 D1 ) WY D OGO ) creates the generation of vapor from gasoline — contained in the carburetor, and the mixture ¥ of vapor 1 alr is drawn out of the Cariiages Propelled by Motors Seem Des- | carburetor into the cylinder. Between the carburetor and the cylinder a cold air pips enough for treachery, ever expect to free that was mighty at their own trade. And to tined to Succeed Him. s attached to the suction pipe, which 1€ ‘ Anton Lenox or his daughter, Maisie? By | us the babe-faced officer was both kind and opened or shut by an admission’ valve. T¢ What trick of wit or any cunning could we courteou needs a certain proportion of air and vapos, . arrive at it? “Is it not a noble thing,” he said musing! THE RECENT EXPERIMENTS IN FRANC |to secure an effective explosive mixture, and 1 confess as we ran over the hills to reach | a point ahead of them I saw no way at all, | no hope of doing aught. For it appeared i to me that Maisie was lost forever, and, for getting all my good Scot training, I cursed the mischanc®, as I would not and rhould ““to have a father that will render up his life for you as if it were a little thing?' But I thought within myself that he need by opening the admission valve more of less, the proportion of this mixture is regus lated. The upstroke of the piston forces the not have given it also for a peony-faced explosive mixture into a platinum tube ate officer boy. But I uttered not the word aloul, tached to the explosion chamber on top of lest 1 should be shamed for one that had not e e ures—Popular in Parisand Likely the cylinder. The platinum tube is heated Detnils of the Mechanism, Manner of Gen- erating the Fower und Other Feat- b not have cursed, I deem, even at a like mis the true root of the matter in him, which, | with her trunk and straining at the chains. | how le lifts his trunk. He's as docile as the to Invado This Country. by a small lamp, the enly fire used. It chance having fallen to my own mother's lot. indeed, I had many a time suggested might | Sometimes the chains are broken in the | baby elephant, and yet I wish you could have ignites the explosive ge®, thus er a 1 It w .w}n Ih.nl Iui n “!h n ~'I| dy |'u'i\i prove to be m‘{ Gl _Hh‘ m\';"» violence of the struggle, but more often the | s¢ !‘n“hnln\ xlh(‘lmllph( of _\nl.xr.« :lgul. e iu‘ml(hl»n l.v‘,\‘vlu:q;l‘:;l “f'rl"' “m’.l‘vll “r‘nr;; l“n;; not so much about the others, because he e Cantibugd stakes are pulled out of the ground. “What did I do to 71 chaiied him [ “rrare 1s a aplondid ohrriags team—gentle, | PiBton: down agi ie second upstroke knew that Jean IMamilton was safe, wh TT0 TSAYE, Fiftcen minutes at a time is a much of | down Just as we chained down ‘Chiet,;’ but |, =i '8 & BEEREE CERORES TOUIEDREIC | the cylinder exhausts the expanded -gazes was his wife. Maisie had come to me like 3 {his severe exercise as it is considered safe | idn't use hot chains on him or spears or | Intelligent, spirited travelers and without a| through an exhaust pipe opened by a valve Jean to him; although she was a winscme, VEittent TimNe es to put upon an elephant® She is released and | axes, only clubs. I got two gangs of twelve | blemish. They are noble animals. To | at every second stroke only. Thé exhaus ) quiet lass, she could have had the groatest o % i given two or three hours to recover herself. [ men each, and kept them clubbing him for a | know them well is to love them. pipe is opened at the rear of the carrlag 1 -y saye, gifted, from the realm of sound, | & a egabls man' io ail Galloway had ahe but willed it \ou leadest music with a gentle hand n the chains are made fa=t agiln, the hind | coupld of hours. I had one gang club him | The speaker was an eminent Omaha citizen | &nd the motion carries any disagregabld 1 thought of her coming each day to me, ‘Along the winding ways of harmony, s once more lifted tnto the alr and.the | until they were tired out, and then let the | sonied behind a handsome team of Kentucky | °00T8 @way from the cccupants of = thq when hidden under the roof of the well As one, who, knowing best, lovest the | elephant brought back @hnto the pgsition de- | other gang lay on, and €0 on. ‘Fritz’ never | . ....onhreds. It was the morning of the vehicle. house; of ‘the little Maisle in the adveature most, sired. Four or five Unio¥a day thig operation | squéaldd while they were ciubbing him, he [ ] b i 8 Of the | “ppo objection to this motor i the fact thaf BRI YU RIREA RO TRS L GayRariandieiha BB AL s gone through with, agd every time the | was too game for that; diis rage was up and [ Fourth of July. Bands were playing, crack-1 o start It one must turn a little crank g skyadhoth our lives, I would that we were Thou, having sounded well expression’s [ same struggles and. resistance are encoun- hhe would have let them torture him to death, | ers cxploding. There was a riot of natal [ half dozen times instead of merely opening ST & Ls plignt togetiier yhhme alons depth, tered, Once entered upon, the task Is never [Just &8 ‘Chiet® did, without showing the [din on every side, and the gentleman ex- | a lever or turning a tiny wheel, as one would A Reret Witk e runying lover’ tho Kl Speaks 0 no einful ear, no selfish soul; | abandoned uRHI the elephant has learped the \;1;«:-;,5\@:»;«‘1-. llll:l ;)‘ml wasn't my ‘hm,\.l pressed a natural anxiety lest the horses ‘1;. o start a s-lv‘.nn vu[ulnr'.! To' do away u‘uu ere we we n ver e ears no one message on thy siren string o) P by didn’t’ want to make him squal that day. So | T , > the necessity of turning this crank to give daft and fey, only with instinct keeping Of love, faith, beauty, fame, or dark de- “.':“:l',';, n".'x‘f,,",’?;, i el "By d‘;::r::: {he'l atter e men had clubbed him for two hours [ Should become unruly. — The animals | e WEEEEATS L (AR EEE, EEEME 0 48 something, my chance to solve our puz o Apair, g thtv | elephant. grows: accustomed to standing on | I looséned the chaine and let him get up, but | seemed to understand that it was a day for | yiotor has no explosive force on' hand red zle, Yet holds them all and more in mighty | slephunt, growe focustomet 0 0G0 their | kept the chains on the forelegs. The ‘next |nolse and walked through It with becoming | guiring a_safety vavie, as has a steam Afaye tan. on I wasiaigk of the: heart B Ry ithin the chord control, Workt more willingly, At last comes the day | 98y hiS body was so sore from the clubbing | dignity. Their behavior provoked the ex- | engine. When a motor of the Kind just cursing my folly in having gone to the con nly she lald her head on my shoulder hen the keeper can make her roll forward | that the glightest touch caused fntense pain. | ciamations above quoted. lescribed |s shut off it is practically deady 1 venticle of the United Societics, in having | 1nd began to sob bitterly. The young heart hearing feels a vague re- | When the keeper cal fors into the air merely | After he had been left alone for twenty-four | =500 0T L, G | There can be no effort on its part until & left her alone with Anton Lenox on his back — e grot and 1ift her hind quarter Into the merely | fiours his rage was calmed a little; and when Good horees,” he continued, “have mou | THETe coF Be 1o FGEL o I BOTL SHET —he whom they never would have took, alive | than we really were, for they scampered | A longing wake where satisfaction slept, |at a word of command and perhaps we chained him down the next day and the [reduced much in value. The common grades | ("o i o™ e gas and air to begin a new, | at least, if he could have held a sword, for [ away right and left, to and fro, each think- [ A mighty upward impulse as desire prod with the elephant hook ssed by ele- | Men began clubbing him again he squealed | have, because the demand has enormously de- | g0 jeg of explosions in the cylinders. i 1 not until 1 had heard the story afterward [ing of his own skin, and forgetting those | Mounts upon aspirations tireless wing. The remarkable memory possessed by ele- | (o iy “five minutes; he couldn't stand any |creased. — Yet I fear a like fate awaits the [ SRR OF CXPIORRRS B € GYlnterie o 3 did T know that even in the sheer extreme | fallen in their tracks. B O e e Srat not g thy Iyre [phants shows itself in:the persistence mlm more clubbing on that sore hide of his. The |better grades. It is impossible to pretict |, The efforis that have beoh made acroes | of his weakness he could find strength to| “Maisie!” said I, at her bridle rein now.| Save as experience, lighting all the past, | Which : to a certain order in the | rogult was we had old ‘Fritz's’ spirit broken | Where the development of electricity will end. | \.0 20 having to start the machine fight his enemies when rage prompted. She had been struggling with the little | Reaches athwart to gloom to where faith's | tricks ¢ do, once theme have been | witnout doing him any great harm, Now [I¢ a man hal “prophesied ten years | [ONAES O AV I8 sATC, (RO acTIAG You see how the matter had turned me |horse that had his nerves tingling at the star thoroughly learned. For instance, it Conklin | thera is not a more obedient elephant in the |0 ~that —electric motors = would “sup- | p¥ BWIBE Several turhs to the ceanit man mad, and yet Wat Gordon of Lochinvar was | fearsome noise Burns bright, eternal set. should give a wrong command to his ele- | oiov ty B L TEE R plant the horse and cable cars he| PO adaiea whon 1L il snnL iy ] in almost equal bad way. And as we hasted | “Oh, Will" said she. LT TR e phants while they are performing in the | "L keepor patted old “Fritz” tenderly on |Would have been classed as a lunatic. | 1aT6e motors of this kind, the enkines of ho-asked me if I remembered th> head of | Then was I fearsome of that bonny face R N SHUMANes, [ ring, the chances are they would disobey | njg big trunk, which the elephant curled up | Even five years ago, when the Omaha street | 1Y [007horse, power, the mart [s opiained his father falling in the snow that night [0 pale and distraught with what she had e s Bt him- and execute the order which should |in a hait affectionate and ‘half respectful | railway pecple were discussing means 0 Jure it'would be futile to attempt (o stars of his gallantry with the Lady Wellwood in | undergone. She reminded me in some way TGE have been given. , for example, he told | way as it he appreciated the good turn |check the competition of the Mercer motor | [CHES BeBe. gl Edinboro' town. I told him I never could [of the girl bairn who was still and grat ANFARERIO N NELECG DY them to march when -ordinarily he would | which had been done him by breaking his |line, an officer of the company expressed the | Y hand & lave engin ‘n:if”u'.?!...:“T.':f...'.’.'&“‘;: ~ have forgotten that grisly thing, nor the | not so much as the boys before James John- ! = sy B have told them to waliz, they would Ko | gpirit on an Improved plan. opinion that the rolling stock would be worth- | MIll not budge unless, the fnitial lmpetus is < creatura 1. had dreamed or saw—I never | stone’s crueity. She was not, after all that | Pon't Kick Up a Fuis Unless You Know | .404q and waltz, refusing to do the march ELEPHANTS EASILY FRIGHTENED. less except as junk. Yet within a very short | °F Rt R thrRb A AN it can be sure—came out to bury it while 1|had happed, the same lass that had so re- You Are Right. except in the usual ordér, N i 3 ", 4 period electricity superseded the hor ang: | seriestobisomatimes Lhres; SnaLiens CRRISA ca ' J " L X et £ : one | In view of their enormous strength and banisned the cable, Indeed, the devel- | the smallest of which is not too large tosbe was in hiding cently the luxuries of the great house of | ~Once upon a time, relates the Detroit Free | cCRUEL PUNISHMENTS OF ELEPHANTS. | gjze it js remarkable how easily elephants | oor banished the cable et that el | started by hand. This smallest engine themn “I told you that night you were a man, | Balmaghie to minister to the great sickness | Press, an eminent cltizen entered the ofice [ 8l TV RIRERERTE B DOICh (NI | sise, 1t o remarkable how cusily (fachhatits | opment of electric power I8 ®o vast that we | Started by hund. 'his smatiest engino then Will,” said he, “when you were strong in the | of her father, Anton. of ' gus company and threw down the | WhHet S8 SRR SREOTIER AT ust [ are frightened. It ons of the little Giroud|ng longer marvel at ita strides, Tho electric| SIAMA the inext lerger, and Hiat i S y fight.’ But I caréd not a whit. Distraught as | month’s bill he had received that day and | D Prought intc su DR 2 t poniesris’ o pas ' phan! ieY | jgcomotive is no longer an experiment. It [ Sets going ma bonny fight. b6 PO by b houted unually no half-way measures will serve. |stand in their quarters every one of them [ not uplikely the same power will event- | be seen if this clumsy and roundabout are IEEDS fathat e neant that T souldinobibeti iR M eRs AERTD KNACS BRE SAALE NmanaTRe) | ShC0A0 Indeed, many elephants, when fits of rage | will begin to move about uneasily and show | yally be harnessed to the carriage rangement cannot be improved upon im Qisheartened, but he would not have been in | before ail that crew of dying soldiers and Now, by the beard of my father, but I| S-S0 i fiem have been thought so hope- | signs of nervousness. It 18 worse still if a | "py, 2 . America better spirits had it been Kate McGhie in | exultant membors of our own. am wroth and want gore!" e roria e oaniaver:foithe desirasto A0k Igetat intas the quastara tand runN AmODE, | LLo maikniclicly: fearw exproasadiy this ad: 5 | i Frak ¢ Say (A St A Y : ekl only course o as t 3 e a conceded on sides th cle has | o i / | And then on the instant Black MacMichael | Which they bad-come. | = 0 & 0 | teally queried the young man at - the win- | oo, M h “famous “Tip” In Central | them’ will et the whole herd shrieking and | {tide al miing Inroads Into thie livery busi- | The more one looks into it the surer he i called back: hould find them fn | taken before—and Margaret!" Al "\Wrong? Wrong? Can you mot read?|Park was put to death with an agony of | trumpeting as it some terrible danger threal- | noys materially diminishing the demand for [ becomes that the next fad in America ia “Hist! new we should find them in ore—and Margare! ? ? Ca ot rea Nt £ v v | ened om, A buse, pe LoDl Y zoing to be the horseless carriage. One of ] Rigsi L kney. Q1A= a0 1| Her Beart was with them. as T knew well, | Can't. you get that sum. otal throukh your | POISONIng a few vears ago. In this way many | ened them. A mouse, perhaps, Wil throw | horges, Bug the bicycle is not as serious a | KOINg to | . g0, 1 3 time—it it be they » elephants have been simply murdered. George | them Into greater panic than any other ani- the usefulness of the horse as |the objections to as well as the pleasing And then we, crouching low, as he had ",‘,”' Fakried ',", L raae, .'f”' ?“;‘ Stating:iyounk jand ""'.("_"P"‘ ""“"I I by this bill e sl rea ihat ul i% only in very rare | mal. Whether this fear compelling power !‘I‘I‘l.”‘:“l:‘,‘l"};m,’,‘\ Sl mechantcal ,,mwr‘ Yo car. | feature of the bicycle is the work it takes. @one, looked down on the highway, which we [ WAt we Would do to deliver her from this | Of a surety & can, sir. 1 sec by this bill | [ S0 0L 0at 1t 1 really mecessary (o kill | of the mouse s due to the notion In the ele- | ygyas which has undergane elaborate tects | This may seem paradoxical and inconsistenty ASITperploxiiy, that you are charged with 50,000 feet of gas hant's mind that the little creature migh b 1 i* | There can be no doubt about it, the average Sand eturned fr DI v e 0 e mol an elephant. PRANVACIURG Sabuine e creature might | i "France, The tests have excited worli e ca a ) 1 Sandy, returned from the pursuit, now | at $1.50 per thousand, for the month of s b run up his trunk or whether it i8 to be human being likes, when he is not actually smounted by his beast's side, relg st—tol 75. Prithee, s ¢hg | *“We used to think,” said he, “that the only | Tun up his trun| ethe s to be ac- | wige interest and are regardel as the be- | hum 3 , Wl dismounted by ast’s side, his forelgn | August—total, §76. Prithee, sir, but why| o ) counted for in some other way, is a matter svolution {n road locomoti intent upon hard work in the way of exers ! hat in his hand, out of respect for our lit- | this fervidness of speech?" Wway to deal with a bad elephant was to tor- o0 P 00 pitee” (0" puzzle over; ‘but the fact | 5 hiing of & revolution in road locomotlon. a1 | clse, as easy a time of it as can be devised tle friend, Maisie of the Lenoxes. “I never burned that gas!” ture him until he squealed, which meant sur- | for %9 v alenh Keepers know, Electricity and petroleum were the rival | fi8¢, T iAo gk ARISRR S p 4 7] b Fne b aalt A ender. And T am sorry to say that many | Of the fear elephant keepers know. powers In the competition, and liberal prizes | for him, and there are few exerclses more, And then, talking, she found at last how But the meter, sir—the meter makes no | rend y ¥ It is remarkable how little slesp elephants IRt aett 401000 tratic iba popular than driving. The main difculty 1 to explain that her father had interfered | mistakes! However, I will summon here e 4 &5 . oD S opaan s | were offered, the largest, 40,000 francs, bein 4 i s - t her stakes! H | b hare need. Two or three hours a day are usually | for tne best four-seated vehicle. ~The dis. | With driving is that it costs too much. since he was captured in behalf of a little | the secretary, \\lm_un”a_'xnun of more fluency sufficient for their rest, and even this small | tanoe covered was from Paris to Bordeaux [ There is just the right amount of exercise b officer boy, Who had been set on by two others | of speech than myself. amount is often taken standing. Indeed, when | (ha back %737 miles. About twenty | about a good carriage ride for the average of that disordered array. Anton Lenox, weak [ ““Why this Kick, my dear sir?" kindly traveling on the railroad the elephants are | fwentore. ed’ "The best time was | human being. You sit there In a comforta= as he was, and after the stern fight he had | asked the secretary as he appeared. packed so close that there is only room for {hing lots than forty-nine hours, an |ble wagon or carriage, and the horse does of yesterday, had been overcome and then I'Because of the n;..f.{ that bill about half of them to sleep lying down age of nearly fifteen miles an hour. The | the rest. Now, horses are expensive anle bound to a horse's back and sent on by the But you must remember that last month Those that lie down first gain the precedence | {icad record was ma‘e by a two-seated pe- | mals, and require knowledge and care to other of the two roads, Malsie thought, which | Was a long one. nd the others ape of necessity obliged to | ioum carriige. Omnituses, Viotorias, bug- | make them give a reasonable amount of forked near the inn where they had loitered. But I was away on & visit and my house sleep standing. But even in the winter quar- s and bicycles were among the competi- | pleasure in return for the capital invested. When she had explained this and that she | Wi8 deserted. [ did nof even burn one foot ters, where they all have plenty of raom to | focs A The pleasures of driving have long been thought a greater party followed, with which | Of Your infernal old gas!” lie down, several of the herd usually sleep THE FAD IN PARIS. lauded, and the happiness of the gentle it would be utmost folly for us to attempt Tis passing strange,” quoth the secretary. standing, merely leaning their big bodies ‘riage at first in the streets | exercise of long outings in country lanes contention, and, after all her regained self- | ‘I Will summon 'ience our president, wh against the wall and sinking Into slumber, | /A horseless carriage at first in the BUr6E ] %0 o nen air, with only enough exertion possession, she broke Into sobs, as, after all, | Hath the m;;\k(l;(‘ml-‘r-:t'flr!lnkK;!r;lulu"n;l'!rllm-‘m They seem to like this way better. ’\‘\’N"::";, ‘(‘\“",“‘:I”‘I“',l!.,"‘,‘,'"1 a8 A reak ot |and mind eftort required to keep the thing she was but a lass a iy better senses left thee? THE MOST VALUABLE ELEPHANTS A8 A g0 ) he Chinaman, wh- | from becoming monotonous, have beem “py , Rt i ¢ly asked the president as he looked i AUDATILY WEHANTE railway train ever was to the naman, A ' Poor Margaret!" said she. “Poor Mar- tely Atrioan " elonhinute. {0 oontr TR R e praised in the highest terms, but now comes fth upon the kicker. “Hath news of war or African elephants, in contrast with the | looked at it in astonishment a a: ey A ; - garet 4 - Asiatic, are rather stupid and 1iH1a" uee| nuriae ey oo ‘allee samee.” Therc | an_exercise fully as beneficial as the ordie a2 i 3 excitement of polftics turned thy head Asiatic, are rather stupid and of little use [ pushee, no pullee; go a 4 ¥, . . But Sandy, who listened, said 3 T B L Sun in the' circus ring, since they are almost | was absolutely no way of seeing how the | nary driving, an |”)m[n‘u'." y;,;‘fvyliyrllhn ad RS s 8 when my house was snut upt’ unable to learn tricks, They-are moro im- | thing went. It must be remembered that | yOUTReS SU6r o (G G QICREY, BAS OIS o declared -that he would. be a e 1 i X o o Thorselots jage 1s not a steam pro e o of these Is the X rithee, sir, no one says you burned th posing, however, in a clrcus procession, be- [ the horseless carriage 18 humen leka:e: Onetat thesek 6 ould leave three to escort Maisie yself | ghut up. This bill is simply for the leakage legs and a high arched back. The famcus ce of mesns: of 10p0MQ LK ab b b has g h to b to Tonoskin in the wilds. that alwsys takes place in the house when LAl . | Phere s no noise such as steam Invariably | that when one has gone far enough to begin r alwuys takes place e house whe Jumbo” was an African elephant. To get 4 to iywhere he ed « o _ Wat of Lochinvar would een stay With | the family is absent. 'Tis but a trifle, and [ the greatest helght an Asiatic elephant, Iike | makes, no exhaust, no waste, no ke B |4 A% ROYNDAE ,.,,‘.‘.u.»': fheg ol MELERA Sandy ‘:l;u-l-::‘»l‘ulw amelt the fray. - And aster| it (o, art nclined” (o' raise a greal’ row @ horse, is measured at the shoulder, bt an | €Iners The e 8 ssengors on . the | thing 18 tiresome and monotonous, becauss B ARSI AR B AERR 0. WAR.10 T aD Qe African elephant is measured in the middle | Prenensibie . . g t is impossible to have change of scens in very truth sg unwilling to lift his hand in “Oh! no! no! no! T simply did not under- 0 e bacl il e her | CaTNEr Parisian horseless carriage D d ] _shang the fight against Charles Stuant, who had |stand. It looked like highway robbery. Your of the back, which Is considerably higher| omeq to move by some vithout too much fatigue. With a horse e . T atend. &6 lopues Jike bighupy robbers. Tour than the low-placed neck. An African ele- | SV ¢ “rhey sat there doing nothine | it is much the same. Of course, one cai d b . L : e phant has only four toes on each foot, while : he movements of & vehicl |€o much further afield with a horte than i All this did not indeed take all the time I [is the cash and I beg your pardon for my but directing the m e have needed to put it to paper. Yet we were, [ unseemly conduct!” an Asiatic elephant has five, and the head | tpat seemed to go by itself i L @s it was, deliberating all too long; for sud- | And he counted down $75, shook of an African elepfnt is much narrower | "y earlier trips of the new carriages were | journey, a8 hings ere now, whep. A iR denly we heard the tramp of many horses | hands all around and wished them peace and and more peaked than the head of the | qattractive to the idlers, and many a “‘cocher | o it &'/ doy igscq g, the.6p) (-n' B I e e e | A s Ao haq R e = Astatic. Elephant trainers have an easy, and, | recelved orders to follow and see how long | hardly means more than a change of Sity As the hoof clank sounded down the road | turned the corner when a woman came in o a3 they claim, infallible method of estimating | the curious thing went without having t AR L e e B . 1 eried to her through the dark Sandy urged us to hasten in the other direc- | and said they might take the,shoes off her the helght of an elephant without the trouble | stop for fresh supplies of fuel. Many . [JSITIASS ‘one WA E0, R A . - tion. feet before she'd pay the outrageous bill of . N of precise measurement. They simply meas- | Parisian horse got weary In these "'ll“lllli’; ;' “';I‘"‘:-_m'r':‘ ":'m“'{ "“;"‘““:I“‘r"’ u: had run In on again, and there below as the | I was sore put to it that It was my need in | $1.76 they had sent by the same mail. S T RIT? ure the circumference of cne of the forelegs [ The new vehicle swept down the Rue de d re I e for dinne - road turned by the ‘burn, I saw again that |order to help her we had rescued to leave ———— AN ELCPHANT FOREHEAD—FRITZ. | at the toes, and the result multiplied by [ Rivoll, out beyond the Musee du Louvre and fatlgued with no fears of a lamed pet or & great man, my brother, Alexander Earlstoun, | him, my brother. 1 had wo other way, but It Worked. - —— 5 qitemsticm | two gives exactly the stature of the elephant | then returned up the hill of the Champs G T followed by some 300 men of th2 Covenanters, | yet 'now I would that I had not; that | had [ Harper's Bazar: “Miss Harkaway,” said 8000 clcphants have on thls principle been | at its greatest height. Elysees, and the more the horses followed | v (¢ ang try it If you want a deliclous returning from the conference of the Seventh | stayed to see him in the guid fight, striving [ Dolliner; “I suppose you have seen the [ (Ortured to their deathe beosuse Htelr KeBPERE | = An ordinary elephant fs worth $3,000 or| it the more tired they got without n any | ino’win 4 beautiful boquet—Cook's Extra Thousand. As I started to run down to in- [as only Sandy Gordon of Earlstoun ever | statement In this week's Gazette that we | KneW no better. Fully halt the elephants |$4,000, but those that have received 'speclal | way solving the problem as to where, when | p) "oy nagne, tercept him to tell all that had happened, | 8ould! ~Ob, that I had stayed to keep him | & ngaged to be married.” that are taken with thése bul ts of frenzy | training are much more valuabla ‘‘John L,” | or how the curious affair got its power. It | Black MacMichael pressed my arm trom being taken! I s e ip will_endure any suferimg that can be put| the boxing elephant, for would bring | would be difficult to find anything more “Ay, mon, they cast me out, and I can| But my duty was plain. 1 had no other no-| “Well, I wish you to know that I had |UPOR them rather than show the white |$5000, and “Dick" or * 2" at least $6,000. | simple, easy and graceful in appearance than Joln none of them." tion In very truth save to accompany Maisle | nothing to do with that announcement, and | feather, They will let you drive hooks and | Mr. Bailey would not part with the little | a horseless carriage JUL l SPECI L. I thanked him for the good service he had | Lenox nad not to leave her again in such a | I have written this letter of denlal spears inio tham uatl) they ‘are covered Yith [S-year-old YBaby Ruth" for Ibes than $3.000. | | The firat, second, third and fourth prises done me in showing me the strong hand that | plight as I had before. So separating we bi I wouldn't sent it," said ahe, naively, | Diodi they will let yow:burn them ail over |'A still higher price would be demanded for | gt Paris in the Hordeaux race were won by could help me fn my need, even the hand of | rode each to his destination. “What Is the use B L T ot | coamble,t dhie ous elsphant harn in, this | cacriages. propellsd by one, kind ler maton uufl fl fl a Sandy Gordon, my brother. Gradually Maisie's self-control returned, | ‘‘But it fsn’t true!” em, em, do anything to them, but | country that is now liying. olumbia” was | The engine that furnished the power s A n an instant Wat of Lochinvar and T had | and she had told the story of all that had | “That is so, but it lsn't impossible. Do |they Wil mot glve up; you can't make them |born of ‘Babe’ and ‘Mandy. ffteen vears | powerful, light, and has no such incon- astounded Sandy by seizing his bridal rein; | happened while we had been at the conventicle | Y0u know that paper contains a great many [ S1ucdl. AnC [ you persist in this Kind of or- | ago tn Bhbilacelphla. There was another ele- | yeniences, as steam, but it has one disad- B L aral it ah Tt e TREL | ARGened ¥ i, N DA iyl sty ture you will surely end by killing the ele- | phant born in this country at Bridgeport, | vaniage which steam has not, and which k witeh mother of the idiot, Gash Gabriel, hav- | “You had scarce gone, WIill,” sald she,| And he took the hint. :;':‘j’l“m““‘":'l:‘rr":lfe“:’k“:‘l;’;k";""‘"‘::Yd"‘:"“‘.l“‘; :l':“‘_"‘“")'L'lru““‘:';“’;'1:"'“;"7.'""""{\»h';'::““ died | the best brains In Europe have long been | ing 1o all likelihood told Mardrochat where | “when Margaret and I saw a face peering P————— e ma shntautRiAT e Cent ™| body is In the Bridgeport museum. g | vainly trying to do away with. This slight 4 Anton Lenox 1ay, hid in the cave in the face | out through the bushes. I screamed in my or Day “ remember several yoars ago, when old GLEVELAND Morppry, |iSeenvenience is Waat inventars of thia s of the bill, and how that sly spy, remember- | horror, for it was that of the great black Times have changed since the days of 10ng | opjet went mad and tried to kill several of £ NORESMAIS ' of the water are now going to try to| 3 ng t he had sworn revenge on Maisle | robber’ which stopped us, as Kate told you, | 40, When one church member went to an- | (he men. He was & big, fine elephant. one of | T almy th, eliminate. and Kate MeGhie for thelr bravery and their | on the way from Barmoghie.” other with this offer: “I know you are very | the best in the herd and the quickest to| All eyes ars now turned to the south. You PRINCIPLB OF THE MOTOR. taunts, had sought the spot out. We only “Mardrochat!" said I Mardrochat!" busy, Mr. H., but I will take your little boy | mind in the ring. But he seemed to be so | can't afford to fight long, cold winters and This motor, which has met with much could Imagine the rest, even the worst. But “Yes, Mardrochat, the spy, was he, Wil | to the circus !gr you, if you cannot go." dangerous that sometbing bad to be done, | hot, dry summers, and take chances on crop | #uccess in its adaptation to launches in this on the other way, down that very road, were | whose wicked face peered at us. He knew Not much!” responded Mr. H., warmly, | and the order was given to break his spirit or | failures when you are sure of a_good living | country, produces its power by a serles of fhé dragoons who led her and Anton Lenox, ) that he had us affrighted, that we had no | “not much. I have been walting seven years | kill him. We got a gang of men and went | and of making money on Orchard home | explosions conducted in a cylinder or hot CHAS. SHIVERICK & CO, er father. help near, and he remained there hid, glow- | myself for this boy to be 0ld enough to take. | to work about § o'clock one night. First we | lands. Particulars on application; corre- [ box, and brought about by the mixture, at a » i nd then, my brother, the great man in & | ering at us, while we knew not what to do. | You g0 borrow a boy out of the family where | chained the big fe by his four legs, | spondence solicited. _Geo V. ts, gen- | certain temperature, of air and gas. The And the brother, th t 1 g X to do. | You o b bo, f the family g fellow down by four legs, | spond rge W. Ames, gen e f al a T y toreign bat and coat, whom I had grawn to | And then, as tirgd of taatalizing, he §avy & | they've got more than oue,” b L USIOG DIogk &R tackle, aud we bad some | eral agent, Omaba, Nel ., A1 Ldown stroke of the plston draws a current of \ ~ ~ - i '!:'DV"""VV\-"\L“ | ; o . 3 i s w9 - .