A TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: DECEMBER 0, FIGHT FOR THREE-CENT FARE CltTeltnd'i Loec Etrairla for Cut Fricea on Ctreft Ci rv SUCCESS BLULVLD TO EI NEAR story of Major Tom Johnson's Per slsteat Rattle Asrnlast the Flve cent Roads Mirk Bltter M Manifested. r A gocd fighter in a public cium com- tinned policemen on a downtown street and atopped the ears tf the Cleveland Electric company from going over a short sectlrn c-f a street which gave them a loop to send cars around the publto ajutra. Mayor Johnson said ' ha. took the -action to de termine If the company had any further right to uk streets on .which he Insists the franchises expired over a year agD. Appeal to the Coerts. This action Bent the Cleveland fclectrle company Into the United States supreme court, and the case was argued there a week ago. The Clereland -Electric com pany claims that the franchises on the streets In contest have not expired, be cause franchises on a certain downtown line to which transfers from all lines ln- r.Mnds the admiration of friends and the i tersecting It are given has several years to re pect of enemies. Especially so If the fight Is carried oft for public benefit The pluckiest Ions; drawn-out fight on ths boarda right now la that led by Mayor Tom Johnson of Cleveland for reduced) fares on street cars. Contrasted with Omaha's feeble effort in the same direction, Cleve land's struggle looms as a Pikes peak above a butte In the bad lands. This fight for low fare, which began In 1W7, has grown In strength until today cities everywhere are watching Its dally development. It la a fight that has elected and re-elected Mayor Tom L. ' Johnson, overturned the method of city government In Ohio, disturbed party conventions, de feated the republican party repeatedly In Cuyahoga county and sent a number of men sailing smoothly Into a sea of political prosperity. While it centers around Mayor Tom I- Johnson, who Is known from coast to coast as the great apostle of 8-cent fares, ft has drawn many other persons of more or lest local prominence into Its meshes and cauaed the late Senator Hanna many troublesome moments during his tri umphal and tempestuous political career. Tli gllaatloa Isnmarliri. The situation today, as summarised by a New Tork Times correspondent. Is this: After years of fighting Mayor Johnson a few weeks ago saw the first care on a 1-cent fare street railway start down a Cleveland street. The company operating these cars is onty waiting the outcome of the legal suits now pending to spread out until a pretty healthy rival of the Cleveland Elec tric company could be competing for the publio patronage. The building of this l-cent line, popularly known In this city as the "Three Per," was only accomplished after twenty-five Injunction suits had been surmounted. The twenty-sixth Is now awaiting the action of the highest court In the land. At every step the plans of Mayor Johnson were met by legal opposition on ths part of the Cleveland Electric company. How the courts were used by both parties would take a good-alsed volume to relate, but the Forest City Street Railway com pany, a child of Mayor Johnson's brain. run. Mayor Johnson Insists thst If this claim holds good the Cleveland Electric company can just as readily lay claim to permanent franchises, as new franchises are given almost every year for certain extensions and cross lines. But the latest legal action has practically brought the fight to the last ditch, and Cleveland peo ple who have been regaled with a steady diet of low-fare talk for many years ex pect soon to get a little real benefit other than excitement and good newspaper stories. The fight went on with unabated vigor, until a year ago the i-cent-fare line took on a definite shape by the organisation of the Forest City Street Railway company, to be operated under a lease by the Mu nicipal Traction company. This company holds a franchise revokable at any time; It must stick to a straight (-cent fare and give transfers all over the city. Yet with all Its limitations such great faith had the people In the success, of the new company that Its stock was oversubscribed In a short time, nearly all of It being held by small in ve tore In fact, large offers for big blocks were refused, and the applica tion of personal friends of Mayor Johnson from various parts of the country were turned down. Brisk Competition. With stock subscribed snd money In the treasury the company at once began track- laying. Then came more sensations. The Cleveland Electric company had a single track In Fulton road. The new company had a franchise there for a single track, and the old company had been ordered to move Its track over to make room fur Its competitor. The track was not moved, and one night Mayor Johnson ordered a force of men to tear It up. When the Cleveland Electric company heard of this move It went to court and got an Injunction, but the track was torn tip before the papers were served. Mayor Johnson was haled Into court for contempt, but a hearing cleared him, and the new company had Its track down. All summer the work on the new line has gone on when It was not tied up by ln- i i finally got tracks down and cars started. Junctions, and during that time Cleveland So far the low-fare line has not been able j Electric stock has dropped from around 80 to get Its cars into the east side of the , to 66, but by a rallying of the stockholders city, where the heavy traffic lies, but tracks I was again brought to 70. are partially laid, and if Mayor Johnson I Roth sides are doggedly determined to wins In the supreme court he will have win out, but the nervous stage has been several long streets that will afford the ! reached. The Cleveland Electric company low-fare line a firm foothold In the front ! realizes that it has all at stake, while yard of Its adversary. - j Mayor Johnson only smiles. m rrai crisis came wnen a . lew weeas , Johnson t'olnta the Way. ago the mayor on a busy Saturday sta- Why Cleveland should have a street rail- j way fight at all seems strange to outsiders, because the city probably has the finest street car service In the United Slates. , Large, clean cars, plenty of them, good schedules and long rides for 6 cents cught ' to make the Clevelanders satisfied, says Awful Agony of Piles Poaltlvelf Relieved by The Pyramid the visitor, but Cleveland has been taught Pile Cure. AMERICA'S PLLSINQ ENERGY Etrtnuoni Life in Stw York Goiii'.deredth Country ' Type. HICHLST MANIFESTATION OF GET-THEPE F.aanbntle Impressions of a Meaaher of the British Parllameat Kote4 Dirlig a Visit to the Metropolis. Thomas Power O'Connor, Irtsn member of the British Parliament, recently visited New York, Boston and Philadelphia and gives tha readers of his London paper his impressions of America's gigantic activities as reflected by life in New Tork City. In part, he says: I will never forget the first meal I took In a hotel on the evening of the day I landed In America as a member of the Irish delegation In the Interests of home rule. Imagine a room of glaring white marble; Imagine a brilliant, nay. a dasxllng and blinding, electric light pouring down Its rays of almost Port Arthur searchlight In tensity on all this white marble; then Imagine a band playing In this room of dszzlins; color and light; and, finally, let there come Into the room from outside a tumult and a tempest of noises which sug gest a compound of an earthquake and a gigantic locomotive factory, and you have some idea of what I felt as I sat down to that meal. Outside there was not merely a single set of street cars, but, apparently, on that particular spot there were Junctions and partings, commlnglings, and combina tions of all the tramway systems of New Tork. There was clanging of bells, as though a hundred belfries were shouting out their evening summons to prayers and warnings to sinners; there was, besides, a cataclysm of sounds as though the earth were being tortured or uplifted by some fierce tornado of force and sound; In short. It was pandemonium outside; and inside in this room, heated to an appalling tempera ture, the loud band played, and the electric light biased on the white marble walls and floor. i Kalian Qaletly Asntd Great Kolae. I looked around with the feeling that either I was abnormal or everybody around me was abnormal. Either they were luna tics or I. For to sit down and eat calmly, as If nothing were occurring, In the heart and core of this earth shaking tumult, and amid this crash of elements, seemed to me about as unexpected as If, at the worst hour of the San Francisco earthquake, you found your women and men making eyes at each other as they passed on the opposite sides of a street Into which cupolas and domes were toppling, and there was a crash of elemental furiea But I looked around at my fellow guests In the res taurant, and there they were, talking In the low, soft tones which are so charac teristic of the American at least at home; eating their food slowly snd tranquilly. and after the sober fashion so character istic largely of Americans; and. In short, conducting themselves as if the conditions were normal Instead of being the horror, tumult, and chaos which they seemed to me to be. I felt Inclined to pinch my self as I swallowed the oysters that came up on their bed of snow white Ice, and ask myself whether It was really true that I was seated at a dinner table and 0f a m . vrrWV); TTfTnTTWTTq Furs! Fu :rs: .... A Set of Aulabaugh Furs Would make a very acceptable Christmas gift. We are offer ing the best fur values in Om aha, and Aulabaugh's is a safe store in which to buy furs. .3 P SCARFS Siberian Squirrel Brook Mink $3.50 to $12.00 ..$4.00 to $25.00 Russian Marten . . Black Marten Japanese Mink .. . American Mink .. . Lynx (all colors) . Ermine (genuine) .3.00 to $10.00 $8.00 to $22.50 $7.50 to $35.00 $15.00 to $60.00 $25.00 to $45.00 $12.00 to $75.00 a i Muffs to match, ranging in price from $G.OO to. $50.00 i Furs! AULABAUGffi Beautiful Brook Mink Coats at..... $G0.00 Eegular retail merchants ask $73.00 for these coats. Siberian and Sable Squirrel Coats $75.00 Near Seal Coats, up from $35.00 Astrakhan Coats, up from $35.00 Otters, Seals, Persians and an endless variety of Fur Coats at prices below competition, quality considered. . All of these, from the cheapest to the b?st, are reliable, up-to-date garments the work of a first-class furrier. 1508 Douglas Street Furs! ; Ensrance Through Kern's Millinery Store A T1I1L rACXAOI MAXLZD niS. There is no reason surely no good rea son why any man or woman should con tinue to suffer with piles when -a repu- ; table .company -of druggists Lav placed 1 In every high-grade pharmacy a positive i and unfailing cure for this dread disease j at a price est. Tbey have done mere. They offer to relieve the sufferer temporarily and start him well on the way to recovery, Dlvlni, tn anv n.llunt hn aonii fcl. m. .nrf artilre... . free tr.il k- h" J been the heM of feeling age of the wonderful Pyramid Pile Cure in a plain scaled wrapper. There are by Mayor Johnson that street car rtdes are ," "u """'" i"-ey " mougn noming; uuuium were occurring wnen at every second I felt the whole building not worth 5 cents each, and they are going to hold out for every concession that i possible. At present the Cleveland Electric company offers seven tickets for a quarter, transfers on all the lines and better rapid transit in .return .Tor a twenty-five-year franchise, but Johnaon won't listen "(b "It. The Cleveland Electric company wonted to kithln the reach of the poor- j " rect-m v-iin-iauii, wui dminBun pui ms iooi uown oi i it, asserting that It was a question in w hlch pontics snouia not appear. quiver under the reverberations of the tramways outside, and when the glare of the light and the. marble suggested not the life of everyday reality but some wild and magnificent and frenzied spectacle in a great melodrama or perhaps panto mime. Swifter ltd of Life la America. And this sense of people living their ordi nary lives In the midst of an environment t V$ While the fisht has waged mot bitterly I that to m "uggested earthquake, eclipse. some migniy aisiuroance oi nature.- was the ; between Mayor Johnson and Pieaident Hor- I flln that I carried with me In my Inner I ace Andrews of the Cleveland Electric most mlni aI1 through the days I spent in company, who Is regarded as -one of the iew 1'0rk- It Is true that I gradually and I best street railroad men In the Tnited J even w'ft,y began to accommodate my States. Courteous to an unusual derrae, mlnd t0 lta environment; that I also be ' thoroughly honest snd fair In all his burf- ' c,me aeaf t0 the anarchic musio and blind j ness methods. President Andrews has con- j to tn d"llln light; but I never entirely ducted an honorable fight, and the mayor j lo,t th ''in that I was living under ' has always received him as a man who, ; conditions that had no more resemblance to i like himself, fights In the open, but there ; thoB8 of ordinary life than as If I were 1 are directors of the Cleveland Electric who thrown on a volcanic eruption or a city , think he ought to change his methods of ! ln tne throes of some mighty catastrophe, j warfare, and there has been no little talk To compare the tide of life as It runs In t of friction at certain board meetings, but 1 L,rJn to compare the swirl of some herlted the world's heavy weight of in evitable woe. Others have their noses deep in newspapers or magazines. Conversation you scarcely ever hear; Indeed, to talk amid this deafening tumult. Is as if you tried to talk going through a long and low roofed tunnel ln one of our trains. Si lent, then, self-absorbed. Isolated, sad these human beings seemed to me. like so many playthings snd almost victims of destiny. Whirled through the air, deafened by the noise, swayed as helplessly as houses where the volcanic forces of nature are shaking everything into chaos, puppets of some resistless and glgrantlc force that plays with their activities and their wills as potently and as wantonly as the storm with the leaves of trees ln the bleak time of coming winter. Deafealnar Xolse Everywhere. A. gigantic energy outside and independ ent of man that is my first Impression of this terrific city of New Tork. That Is the Impression I have of most of America. When you get down to the office ln Wall street and the other business streets of New Tork you get the same Impression of deafening noise, of overwhelming and be wildering speed, and tn contrast with all this, of universal and brooding sadness. Tou find not one. but half a dozen lifts ln a single building; they rush up and down at intervals of a few seconds. They have there, es on the subway, the ordinary elevator which stops at every floor, and then the express elevator, which rushes at a speed that almost makes your heart stop, up past twelve or twenty floors with out a pause. And inside the elevator stands a man or boy, self-absorbed, silent, barely answering a question, suggestive again of some victim of omnipotent and resistless and gloomy destiny. TRACING PCSTCFFICE ROBBERS Proposed Series of Postase Staaips Bearing Xame of Cities Where Sold. Andrews still remains at the head. mountain stream wtth the roar I of the unbounded ocean. ind fury , , ,lrr - I -i I Waara afott Piles Sufferers Zai. Aet efr Im Lata. tnough of the curative elements in this I ' Toy Republic for gale, j An attempt was made lately to sell by suction in Ixmdon what was described In , the prospectuses as "the smallest empire on ! tha face of the earth." It Is Lundy island. a speck In the Bristol channel, which be- Travel on the Sanvray. Take the question of locomotion. We have our underground railway; we had It twenty to thirty years before It was ever thought of In New Tork. and I remember well the ! longs to the Rev. H. C. Huevon whose' T Vw ' , " . ..... " ', " 1 wnose . Krounj railway, and how, com ng from so .father bought It ln 1S36 and left it to him. " , . ,,'...,.,, , trial package to greatly reduce the swell- i A little empire for a little emperor," es.- rublin. I wss overwhelmed br the sight as in. of the affected part, to heal much of ; -"ctloneet a. he started to j a symbo, of tn mllrnt ,n4 " , c . flMrr ha thai KaaAlltlasal n.9 ( U.J 1. a . 1 v tha soreness and ulceration. Arter tne " nuu wonderful new land Into which I had been sample is gone jour druggist will supply ; ,n"d" .wl , attd d,le- ; cast by fate. But the underground with us , you with a boi of the ryramlds for 60;- .u uwini j has as much resemblance to the under 1 """' 1' :8i.:::.?eL . I round-they call it In New Tork the su" Read Mrs. Bonds letter, which tells i",u c,Jmp" ": hum how she suffered and was relieved. If not cr ,ne "ory H unheard and the auto posltlvely cured, after using one SO cent I n,obll, I1"11 lB entirely absent. As the cli box i mate is peculiarly healthful and the air al- "I have triea your plie cure and find ! wayl fr",h- u wa ""'ed that the Island them all you recommend them. I am would l ,n ldeaJ lte tor murium, verv thankful to you for ever nutting ' Notwithstanding these attractions, the them within my reach, for I have had one , hleh,t bld n,d ,or ,b Uland box and I have not used all of them yet. and I feel like a new woman today, and I tell everybody about them. When I started them I could not walk across ths floor, but now I ran do my work all right. -My work was a burden to me before I started them, but I can tell you that I can mci much better now. Tou can rely on me. I will tell everybody ubout Pyramid Pile Cure. Tours sincerely, Mrs. J. Bond, Toronto, Canada, IS Pears Ave." There is positively no risk or danger with the Pyramid Pile Cure, for there Is nothing but curatives in the prepara tion. They are suppositories which, placed In the affected part, act as a soothing ointment working upon the In fected and ulcerous tissues, giving them pew life and stimulating a stronger circu lation ef the blood. By tha use of the Pyramid pile Cure the patient Is cured at home without los ing a day's work, no matter what his occupation. The cure may be acsom pltshed In absolute privacy. We use no names for advertising purposes without the voluntary consent of the patient. Tha Pyramid Pile Cure la quick, per manent and painless. Do not delay, but . vend your name and address today, and we will furnish you at once with the free trial package. Pyramid Prug Co, T Pyramid Building. Marshall. Mich. Tha S cent slse packages are for sale at all druggtsta fr about t!,i0, and this did not meet ths owner's Idea of the value of the property. The sale was called off and Mr. Huevon decided to remain a little emperor himself a little longer New Tork Bun. Trath Travels Slowly. A New Haven man was praising the lata Judge David Torrence of Derby, Conn. "Judge Torrence," he said, "uttered many an epigram from the bench. In a case concerning a noise nuisance a scien tist was once testifying before him about the speed of sound. " 'Sound.' said the man. travels at the rata of tuO yards a second.' " 'Atl sound r asked Judge Torrence. " 'All, replied the scientist. "The Judge smiled, "'I'm sure you're wrong,' ha said. 'I have noticed a great difference between the speed of certain kinds of sound. Thus, slander travels at the rate of quite 1.000 yards a second; flattery. 600 yards, while truth makes only a few feet a second, and, slow as Its progress Is, truth often fails to reach the goal, no matter how short the distance.' "Indianapolis Star. I ( DOMESTIC O I HI AN , A M STEAM L ano!t;;"Aswjr CENTRAL COAL M Maalaas of tha Ciratle C'yale. If powder won't remove freckles, why not try dynamite? The average political platform is made up of gang planks. Woman Is the one problem that science can rever solve. Money won't get a man Into heaven but It may keep him out of Jail. A girl Isn't grown up till shs begins to worry about her complexion. Old as Is the evening of life, but second childhood Is the next rnornl'. Lots of roea would sacrtik-e principle to succeaa. and consider it dirt cheap. Love will find a way, preferably la the dark. Every man should be his own fool killer. Many a man feels like consigning his au tomobile to the place that is paved with good intentions.--New Tork Times, way ss the slow crawling of a suburban line has to the speed and splendor of the Flying Dutchman or the Irish express. Again and again, when traveling In the subway, I had this overwhelming sense of wonder why people conducted themselves In extraordinary conditions as if they were witnessing or doing nothing In particular or out of the way. Tou get ln the train at Twenty-eighth street. Tou have Just barely time to Jump into the carriage when it Is off ac-aln. Nobody stops; nobody talks; nobody hesitates; every person man or woman, or even child makes for that train at once, at once takes a seat, and In a second It Is driving onward again. But this Is not enough. Tou have passed two or three ststions when you come to Four teenth street, and then you get out and Jump Into another train. This is the ex press. Instead of stopping at every sta tion it runs tight through half a dozen stations and two or three miles at a speed that almost makes you dizxy. People who I are going ln the other direction do exactly me same ining. j ney also get out at Four teenth street; they alsu are carried ln the opposite direction at lightning speed, pass Ing station after station without stopping, and getting over two or three miles ln al most as many minutes. Like llrtlass of Ikestlar This mad rusn of speed and Its effect upon you cannot be fully realized unless you can manage to get l ito your ears, as you read theae llnea, the almost appalling noise amid which all this rush backwards and forwards of trains takes place. Every three minutes almost you bear the rush of one train following another Into the same station. As you fly past, three other trains fly past, too; and all this noise combines and commlnglee until you feel that tha world Is being shaken to Its center, and that there Is a frenzy of noise that might make even heaven's artillery sound tarns and gentle. And inside these trains you see people not talkative, not gay, not ex panalva. as the American is usually sup posed to be, but silent, absorbed, as I thought, sad. This girl, with all the deli eacy of beauty for which American woman hood is celebrated, has an air as serious and alfcorbd aa though she were an el derly financier engaged ln world-wide op- jeraiuina. i pis cnua sits silent and self I abstf-bed, aa though It bad already in. A number of reasons have been suggestei , to explain the fact that all the United Etates postage stamps for 1907 to be ISFiied from the 6,000 presidential postofflees will bear each the name of the state and city ln which the postoffice Is situated. Twenty- six of the 8.000 postofflees will have these names engraved upon their stamps, while ln tha case of the other prtofflces the names will be printed across the face of the stamps after they have been engraved. The chief reason for the change is said at the Postoffice department to be the be lief that It will help to do away with the big postoffice robbe.ies and make It much er to trace criminals. The postoffice robbery ln Ct.lcago a few years ago Is a good example of the ease with which stolen postage stamps can be disposed of. for no trace of the perpetrators was ever dis covered, although nearly $100 OiO worth of stamps were stolen, and these mostly of small denominations. At one time the authorities thought they had found a clew to the robbers. A Chicago mall order house a couple of years after the robbery received a $f.,000 mail order, ln payment of which was tendered a package containing that amount of 1 and 2-cent postage stamps. The order being so un usual ln character, the head of the firm informed the I'nlted States authorities, and efforts were made to find out from whom the order had come, but without avail. It was regarded as fairly certain that these stamps were a part of those taken from the- Chicago postoffice. but there was no wa of proving it. s But this is only one of the purposes the ' change Is expected to serve, say stamp au thorities. Another Is to enable the Post office department to determine the amount of business done by the different pjstoffiees X great deal of complaint h;is been made ln the pajt on the ground that certain offices were doing a very much greater volume of business than they were credited with doing, and postmasters hsve had more or less trouble ln showing that they needed Increased facilities for handling their mails, as in the opinion of the congressional com mittees having the matter In charge the receipts from the sale of stamps did not warrant tha Increase. "It Is no exaggeration to say that New Tork City's postoffice does millions of dollars' worth of business every ytar for whlcn it gets absolutely no credit; that is, as far as the sale of stamps Is concerned." said Joseph 8. Rich, an authority on stamps. "Hundreds of mall order houses ln the metropolis each day receive from out of town points thousands of dollars' worth of stamps, ail of which are bought at in terior poslofflcea "These stumps remain tn New Tork and are transferred to smaller houses in part payment, and soon afterward the stamps are doing du'y on mail s nt through the New Tork office, but for which that office gets not a cent la revenue. "Chicago suffers ln the same ay, as do most of the offices ln the larger cities where an extensive mail order business U carried cm. "By this means the government will be able to find out Just how much buaineas Is being done ln certain minor offices where thi! postmaster's salary depends upon the amount of stamps he sells, and there Is still another use to which the new plan can be puL "There are many small plaoea having postofflees to which they are not entitled b the amount of mail matter that passes through the office. For Instance, take a small cluster at houses located not far from the city. Say they have a postmaster, and the number of letters passed through each day Is small. "Well, along comes a postal Inspector, looks the receipts and records over, and comes to the conclusion that the business done does not Justify the maintenance of a postoffice. Then he tells the postmaster that thre is a possibility of putting the settlement on the rural delivery list. "The postmaster goes to one of the prom inent residents and tells him of the likeli hood of losing the postoffice. " 'Now,' he says, you use a couple of dollars' worth of stamps each day in your business ln the city. 8uppose that Instead of getting them there you purchase them of me. I will get credit for the sale and the postal business here will appear to be picking up. "This is a reasonable proposition. The resident doesn't care to be deprived of the convenience of a near-by offioe, so he con- untn. "The same proposition is msde to two or three other reidcnts of the place, also agree. "The result Is that the next time the In spector comes around he finds that a ma terial increase has taken place in tne saie of stamps, and will then say to hlmsel': 'We'.l. this little place seems to be grow ing. I'll Jut wait and see about that rural delivery Idea.' "The postmaster goes from one resident to another and induces each to buy from him all the stamps he uses. By this ma neuver he assures the permanence of the noatoffice at that particular village, al though ehere has not been the slightest increase of business to Justify it. 'But some large postoffice will handle the mall matter, and when the postmaster of the large office asks for a greater allow ance owing to the growing business he Is told that the apparent business done as told by his sale of stamps does not Justify the Increase." This plan of engraving the nami of the city of Issue on postage stamps is not en tirely new. as It has been followed In Mexico for yeara In Liberia also tne names of five of the principal towns are engraved upon the stamps. Washington Post. They party arrived at the selected spot they were nowhere to be seen. It was decideJ to wait for them and, concealing thorn s' Ives behind the rocks, the members oi the party lay quietly with everything In readiness. In about forty minutes, which seemed to the anxious hunters several hours, the herd was seen coming slowly down the canon. When the animals were within 300 yards of the automobile they scented danger and stopped to reconnoiter. The leader, a magnificent bull, with high and wide spreading antlers, sniffed the air suspiciously, and then he hesitated a moment and turned aside to make off. The big rifle, which had been resting on s boulder, cracked spitefully. The handsome beast made one wild leap Into the air and then stretched out quivering on the rocks, while his frightened companions broke for cover. The bull was one of the inest specimens killed ln that vicinity for sev eral yeara The antlers, which were of the twelve-pointed variety, will grace the halls of the order that Is named for the animal which ' gave them up without an opportunity to defend himself. New Tork Sun. temptations come ln his way. But sharks are not always hungry. One day I wa drifting off the Island In a yacht and tha weather was very clear. We noticed a large shark swimming under the boat about twenty feet below. With nothing else to do we set out to capture the fellow. Uniting a hook with half a chicken, a loaf of bread and a ham bone, all tied on the hook with marlln, we lowered the at tractive morsel right ln front of his nose. All stood ready to take a quick turn around the bits when he made off. Well, this unappreciative monster refused to no tice it, even when we lowered It on his nose and carefully slacked It down over his nose within easy reach of his mouth. Soon he slipped away Into the blue depths. Then another came. It seemed to us they enjoyed the shadow the yacht made, Aga'n we tried, but with the same luck ss with the first. 1 had never seen a shark be fore refuse anything ln the eatable line. Forest and Stream. ELK HUNT IN AUTOMOBILE Montana. Man Forsakes Pony for Chocwagoo and Baas a Bla" Bark. An elk hunt on foot or on horseback Is sufficiently exciting, but to hunt down the noble antlered animal by means of a tour ing car is an unusual experience. This, however, was undertaken by a party of five men near Billings, Mont., recently and a magnificent iecimen of a fast disappear ing kpeiies of animal was bagged as the result of the exciting chase. Hunts of the common field vanety "a la automobile' have long since ceased to bs a novelty, but an elk hunt by the aid of this means of locomotion is decidedly out of the or dinary. The party, consisting of the driver and four hunters, chartered a White steam car and started off before daybreak for the place where the elk were ranging Many years ago Paul McCormlck, a prom inent resident of Billings and a pioneer of Montana, put several elk ln this pas ture. and since that time, under the rigid protection enforced, the animals have mul tiped and are scattered ln goodly numbers over the Immense preserve. They are by no means tame; on the contrary, some of the older bulls are exceedingly vicious, and it was for this latter class ln particu lar that the aulomobilista were looking. The purpose of the hunt was to secure venison for a big barbecue given at the Montana state convention of Elks ln Bill ings. After arriving on the hunting grounds the party spent several hours ln fruitless search, but suddenly, while driving over the open range, five line specimens of the elk family, headed by a big buck, sprang out of a small coulee by the side of the trail and made a break for the tills. Al though the car was sent after the animals at tha best rste of speed it was possible to make, no perceptible gulp was made upon them, and they disappeared down a narrow defile ln the rocks without being struck by any of ths uhots fired at them. As it was Impossible to follow tbs quarry, enept on foot. It was decided to go by a circuitous route of several miles to the mouth of the canon, down which the elk were heading, ln the hope that they would continue their course to the range on the opposite side of the, hills. After their firnt fright had subsided the animals prvoteded slowly, for when the DIVES INTO SHARK'S MAW Careless Kanaka Sailor Meeta His Fate In BwlmmlnaT to Re rarer Boat. Some years ago I was living at a seaport about ninety miles from Honolulu. One day a boat from a coasting schooner lying about a quarter of a mile from the shore get adrift and went sailing down the wind. When the sailors observed what had hap pened they ran aft and Jumped overboard and swam toward the runaway tender. One, tm-o, three and four Jumped Into the water, Disappeared for a moment and then the Kanakas' heads appeared. We could count only three heads swimming to the boat. Where was the fourth? They were all excellent swimmers and we wondered what had happened. The three men climbed aboard the boat and rowed back. They were some time rowing about the schooner ln an aimless way and then came ashore. Thy told the sad story of the loss of their mate. They had seen bloody water neat the schooner and an enormous shark swim ming about. Bo unconsciously I had really seen a man Jump into a shark's mouth. Evidently the men Jumping into the water attracted the shark's attention and he took the last man as he hit the water. - For many years there was a one-armed native working at odd Jobs about, the wharves. One day I inquired of a naUve friend how the man became mslmed. "Mano," was his significant reply. This Is the word for "shark" ln the Hswalian language. The man had been a great diver. One day he and a companion were divine, for squid near the reef. A shark attacked him and as he tried with his outstretched arm to shove himself clear of the monster t. arm was bitten off nearly to nis shoulder. An island schooner was capsized ln the channel. The schooner's boat was cut adrift, Jjut was bottom side up. The native crew and a white skipper clung for hours to the last hope they had. The skipr' while ln the water endeavoring to right the boat had both legs bitten off by a shark. Although he was got on the bost again, he soon expired from loss of blood. To my mind there Is no question thst certain sharks will est humans. I don't think they are exactly lying awake nights watching for man, but one will make a suppr on a goat, horse, seagull, dead or alive. If he Is hungry and these Devastation of iypy Moth. The gy rsy moth Is pursuing Its devasta ting mnrch through all New England and has now attacked the trees of Maine. Or chards and forests of spruce and pine are alike Its vtctima Its ravages among coni fers are especially fatal from the fact thst, as stated by D. M. Rogers of the nation J bureau of entomology, where such trees are stripped by the moth their death follows ln a single year. Minnesota Is far from Maine; but it was once as little thought that the pest would spread from Cam bridge all over New England as It Is now thought It may find its wsy to the North Etnr state. Minnesota should therefore, if only as a matter of self-protection, urgj its representatives at Washington to an active support of the measures, however costly, which the Department of Agricul ture urges for the extirpation of the moia. Brntallty. Here the far western orator waxed fer vent. "Fellow citizens." he exclaimed, "ordi narily I psy no attention to campaign, sian ders, but the candidate on the other ticket has lied about me so persistently snd ma liciously that forbearance has cased to be a virtue and I am going to handle him without gloves." "Ton can't!" hoarsely bellowed a man with short hair, a thick neck, and a bull dog face. "Why not?" demanded the orator. ' 'Cause It's agin the rules. Anywhere In this state you've got to have gloves welghln at least two ounces!" Chicago Tribune. Qalle Legitimate. I have a position now that pays ma very well." "Indeed! What Is It?" "I have been engaged by a lance depart ment store to take charge of a profitable blackmailing scheme." "Great Scott! Aren't you afraid to tell It?" "Not a bit of It. Tou see It Is to write the advertising circulars of their moumlns; millinery department." Baltimore American. Making a Distinction. "There la not a particle of evidence, your honor." said the sttomey for the defense, "to show that my client was within a doxeri miles of the scene when the crime wsa ccrmmltted " "1 beg your pardon," Interrupted the other lawjer, "but his brother-in-law testlflea specifically that he saw him there." "I know it." rejoined the defendant's at torney, "but his testimony Isn't evldenoo." Chicago Tribune. ni i mm hi TTTUITT T V TIDC HERE ARE A JnlMALsJLs' 1 L A L J A FEWi Bllleita Safe!) Razors msJi Henckel's Emperor Razor. $2 each f,7'"iZ'"?X your money away on cheap affairs. 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