Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, January 20, 1898, Image 8
SEA WOLVES AT WAR Planet BATTLE BETWEEN * SPERM WHALE AND SWORDPISH. The UflalkM Kept on th. fnific* by llntttr While tha Tbrailuii Stubbed falsa to Death—Thrilling Combat Wlt aaaaad la tha facUi Ocean. "Did you ever see a school of thrash era after a whale, with a swordflsh as sisting the sea wolves?" Some of the party had witnessed the sight, others had not; all, however, were cognizant of the close association existing between the thrasher and swordflsh, but the story was asked for. "It was from the deck of the old brig Firefly, plying In the fruit trade between San Francisco and Tahiti, during the seventies that I saw this sea battle," said the shipping man. "We were oft tho Marquesas and lolling along with the equatorial drift, not enough wind blowing to keep the sails from slatting against the masts. The heat was something deadly in its inten sity, and there wasn't enough energy among either crew or passengers to even read. "Suddenly we were roused by a call from the lookout: 'Something coming up, sir! Two points off the lee bow, and at the break of the horizon!' "In a moment we were all on our feet, and leaning over the port taffrall. i Far down near the horizon could be seen a flurry of foam and a jumble of dark objects. These would appear and disappear, with each appearance the white spray we had first noticed show ing clear against the blue of the equa torial sky. " 'Number of native canoes out after a whale, I make it,' said Captain Tur ner, as he handed the glass over to me. "I got a steady sight on the object, which were rapidly approaching us. With the second flurry of foam, as the black spot appeared on the surface I could make them out. It was a big sperm whale being chased by a school of thrashers. " 'But the whale doesn't sound long enough to have thrashers after him,' ■aid the captain. 'lt must be natives in canoes and the swell hides them from the deck.' "To make certain I went aloft. In the 112 re ilgg ng. and from the top could make out the fight distinctly. But, just as the captain had said, I was puzzled at the short lapses of time transpiring between the whale's fluking and his again appearing on the surface. "The whale was headed straight for os, and working along at a rate that within half an hour would bring him, with the thrashers abreast of the brig, providing he did not change his course Thiß, fortunately for our excited curi osity, the whale did not do, and at a distance of less than 300 fathoms, the people of the Firefly were treated to such a sight as seldom comes, even In the varied incidents which goto make up a life at sea. "We had all been offering conjectures as to why the whale did not sound to a depth the thraßhers could not fol low. When the big fellow had ranged just off orr quarter the question was answered. "Fluking high and bringing his tail down with a swash that would have crushed the life out of any thrasher caught beneath the blow, the whale attempted to sound. He could not have reached five fathoms deep, when, with a bellow of pain, he shot to the surface flinging his huge bulk high in the air. Simultaneously a cry went up from all of us. Dangling from the whale's belly was a swotdflih, its sword embedded deep in the blubber. Twist ing and throwing itself, the swordflsh seemed endeavoring to work loose from the whale before the latter could again land its great body in the sea. This It succeeded in doing a fraction of a second only separating the fall of the swordflsh and that of the whale into the ocean. This was sufficient, how ever, for the swordflsh to gather depth and with another prod, keep the whale on the surface. Then with a rush the school of thrashers were upon the whale. Setting their teeth <nto its sides, half of the school woald tear great chunks of blubber from the bel lowing leviathan, while the balance of the school, with fearful blows, would thrash at the whale with their flukes, the swordflsh in the meantime keeping up a steady stabbing from beneath, until at last. In sheer agony of pain, the whale would sound, dragging the swordflsh, with Its sharp saw tooth blade of bone sunk deep in the blub ber with it. "It seemed Impossible, however, for the whale to reach any depth, impeded as it was by the twelve-foot swordflsh hanging to it and with a bellow It would again come to the surface. Three times, while life remained In the whale did we see the huge bulk shoot out of the water, the white body of the sword flsh hanging from its side. "Stranger still, though, was the tac tic* used by the swordflsh, to so wound the whale's blowhole as to incapacitate It entirely from sounding. Twice, when the whale had been stabbed at the sur face *nd the thrashers had taken good hold, the swordflsh, ranging close to the whale's head, threw Itself out of the water and with its sharp-tooth-sd sword endeavored to cut open ttie whams' blowhole. That the swordflsh had succeeded In one of these attempts prior to our getting a close view of the fight, was evidenced by the scattering spray In which the whale sent forth its 'blow' on rising. "The whale had hardly gone three miles astern of us, before its body, floating, still on the ocean, showttl that swordflsh and thrashers had con tioersd." OLD GRADDLfIS HAD APHASIA A li«uu»iMlratluii in Nervous Falliology That Cost 98.40. Old Hardy Oraddles, who had limped around in the Teton Basin for years on a muscle-tied foot, at last wearied of the wobbly exertion, went down to Salt Lake to have the defective mem ber treated. He came back after an absence of a month, and his neighbors gathered about him to hear the strange tales which he would have to tell of experience In a great city. He describ ed the Temple and the Tabernacle and the Dooley Building, and quite en chanted them. "What was the finest thing you see?" finally asked Si Redee, In recapitula tion. "Well, men," said Hardy, "the best —reely thebest —thing I see was a fel ler in the hospital. He in-trusted me a lot, an' I heerd all about him. He had aphasia," speaking the last word with a proud deliberation. Redee look ed at Watts, and Watts glared intently at Red Pete Ruble. The last mention ed broke the spell. "What's that? A for'n country, ain't it? Seems I heerd of It afoie in a jog gify." "Naw," said Hardy, scornfully. "It ain't a place—it's a thing. Somethln' out 0' gear, you know." But they did not know. They were even worse confounded than before. "Like a Russian thistle, mebbe," said Pete, dubiously, still clinging to the geographical theory. "No such. A man fergits how to talk or somethin'." "Deef an' dumb man? I seen" — "Naw. Naw. Man that kin talk jis" fergits how. Fergits everythin'." "It can't be did," declared Pete with decision. Haidy looked at him pityingly. "Ecg it all, I scy it kin; I seen it Here—l'll show you. Who's got a $lO note?" Among them they got together $8.40, and Hardy said that he could illustrate to some extent, perhaps, with that amount. "Now," he said, taking possession of the money, "you all know that you give me this money, don't you?" They did and said so. "Well," rolling his eyes and assum ing a rigid attitude, "I've fergot it. Fer got all about it. That's aphasia." "Humph!" grunted Ruble. "Seems a fool of a thing, don't it? Gimme my ?2.<0." Hardy gated at him in a stony, va cant way. "Give me my $2.40," Ruble repeated with some show of sternness. "I —I—seems like I heerd somethln' about a si:m o' money some'res," Har dy responded, in a hesitating way. "1 here's a dollar and a half comin' to me," Redee uttered fiercely. "Gents," said Hardy, sorrowfully, "I can't remember it. I'm sorry. I don't know what you're talkin' about. I've got that there aphasia." They gathered around him, clamor ing for their funds. They now began to understand. But they could not con vince him. "I'm sorry, as I say, gents," Hardy said, meekly. "Eut its scientifick. It ain't my fault. On the subject of any money you might 'a' give me —an' meb be you d d give me nome, p'raps—my mind is like a blank sheet o' paper. I am a poor victim of a pe-cu-liar disor der, as you might say. Good-day." He was a man of six feet, four inch es, and, although along in years, he had been the hardest and best fighter in the Basin, even in hi 9 crippled time. They looked at him gloomily, therefore, as he walked away, and no man dared say him nay. Only Red Pete Ruble expressed the general sen timent when he made certain feeling and torrid remarks which imparted to the world at large the fact that he was utterly disgusted with science In all Its forms. Intensely I'rauticule Wall® |P \ Ilarry Dnuntown (to country sweetheart) —Miss Milkyweigh, do you play and sing | "When the Cows Are in the Corn?" Miss Milkyweifcli—Lord bless you, no. I get the dogs and chase 'em out. A Political Trip. should it be your one ambition to write a humorous verse, pick out some ancient subject and express In language terse. The editor may rejoet It, if the me ter's out of joint; but if you fashion it like this, he'll surely see the point. 1 , A L»p<«e. Employment Agent—"See here! How , Is this? You stayed two weeks in your , last place. How did that happen?" 1 Domestic —"Sure, Oi dunno. Oi must , av overshlept mesolf." —New York , Weekly. I j Escaped l»y a llalr'a Krenrtfb. ! Dulby iwould-be novulisi) —"I've just ) finished a new novel. If you have a , mon.ent to spare I'll show you the I proi.rs." Wilby—'"Oh, never mind ■ j about the proofs. I'll tnks your word tor it."—Chicago Record. ' HIS ADVICE —DON'T. XI« llml l'n luted lie I lon'* T ill nn.l IZvidenc* to l'rove It. The man sitting en a salt barrel hml j a hand on whk . only two fingers were j left, and sizing him up for a veteran : of the war I him if he hadn't been wounded by an exploding shell. "No, not as I remembers of."he re plied, as he held up his hand and turn ed it over and over. "I thought that might have been the case, but you probably got caught In some sort of machinery?" "No, not exactly machinery, sir." "Gun explode in your hands?" "No; no gun didn't explode." I gave it up at that, but after a few minutes the man looked up and said: "Stranger, you've eeua a lion, I reck on?" "Oh, yes." "Seen 'em caged and looking es harmless as cats?" "Yes; they generally look that way." "That's the way I sired up one in a cage in a circus. He lay there, looking so sleepy and good-natured and harm- j less that I thought it was a swindle on the public and I'd try to rouse him a bit." "And so you poked him?" I queried. "No, sir, no poking. I Jest, calcula ted to gin his tail about three twi3ts and make him feel that life wasn't all j beef and bones and sunshine. I wait- I ed for my chance and then I reached 1 my hand in. How far Is it from a li on's mouth to the middle of his tall?" "Several feet at least." "I thought it was about a rod, but I know better now. I hadn't more'n got hold of his tail when he got hold of me and was gulpin' down them mls3in' fingers. He wanted the hull hand and arm, but they beat him off. I thought at first I wouldn't explain matters, but then I thought I would. I look a good deal like a fcol, don't I?" "Hardly that." "Well, you do, and that's why I ex- I plained. I was fool 'nuff to want to twist a lion's tail, and you may be fool 'nuff to want to poke one in the eye, and so my advice is—don't." How Tliey Love Eaili Other. "Pid you see that an evening parer said that I had created the part?" "That was referring to your complexion, dear." A HtidgeL of I>eiiuition9. Dude —Another name tor a tailor's goose. Diary—A continued story that ends before it's finished. ' Hyphen—The one plausible excuse i for breaking your word. Nothing—A thing that isn't a thing because it's no-thing. Dollars — Stamped cclns made to rep resent financial circle 3. Bachelor —A bird of freedom that ' some of the caged ones envy. ' Drill—A bore—especially to the of ficer who trains raw recruits. 1 Cigarette —A rank concoction with a light on cue end and nothing on the other. Scruple—One-third of a drachm, al though some men take a dram without any scruples. Tf|i«'H Out of the I'omloir. "I didn't want to keep you waiting, Mr. Westend, so I came down just as I was," said Miss Darlington, sweetly, as she entered the parlor. "Oh, what a whopper!" exclaimed her small brother. "You know you on ly had on" — And then Tommy was violently hus tled out of the room. 1110 I'liiloaophy. . "And so, Pat, you think Dennis had , the wrong side of the argument? But ' what reason have you tote so sure of this?" "Faith, he hadn't another worrud to say after 01 hit him wid me first brick." ' I'not*. We hear of people every day Who overstep the rules. And, by their doings, show that they are various kinds of fools. The woman in flesh colored tights Who dances, kicks and sings; The man that on the frail trapeze So perilously swings; , The brazen one who stands before A multitude, and twists A slimy snake about her neck; „ The tough with heavy fi3ts, r Who meets another In the ring, And pounds him till he dies; t The man that on a parachute Ij Drops from the starry skies— I These and a hundred others we i Look at In speechless awe. And then declare them all to be 1 i The biggest. fools we ever saw. a e But, after all is said and done, d Is ti e fcol that thrills us so a j Moie foolish than the gaping one Who pays to see the show? Tl<.» Fm'th apppnrs to be booming fre. Us jst now. At Ox.'oid. North Uiui.Uu, a cyclone ;;a:ispoi'te(i , through tho air a two-atory frame j house, and set It down on a more i sightly site, 200 yards distant from the point of embarkation, the family being at dinner and undisturbed by their little whirl. We may look out for this item again, when it has gath eied its second wind. When it comes j around the next time the house will | probably be of bricks. Alabama mod- j e3tly enters leading by her apron ' stilngs a woman who wa3 struck by lightning without knocking a spawl off her cheek. The encounter occurred seven years ago and the wom.m has never mentioned it —in fact, she has not spoken since—but her eye 3 al ways blaze like blazes and shine with the intensity of an arc lamp just be fore a thunder storm. Georgia peeps In and exhibits a Macon woman who. In breaking an esg to make a pudding, ended at an early stage the career of i chick with four legs. Texas weakly attempts to rival Georgia by cackling md clucking about a Galveston woman who exhibits as a production of her awn hennery a chicken in good health having two beaks In good working or ler for bugs and currants, and three >yes always on the lookout for pro render. There nre others. The newspaper correspondents are funny fellows. They frequently as tonish "the natives" of a locality by making It famous when the na:lv s know how entirely bottomless is the paper tub upon wh cli the fame o' t! <ir locality is set afloat. The corespond ents are funny in so many ways, too. Every man on Puget Sound and every ooy in 'lacoma. Puyallup and Steila coom knows that Tacoma's nietenti ous hotel, the iacoma, has been an elephantine consumer of cash; an un usually expensive luxury for the man agers or owners; yet the corieipond i ent gravely wires to the world at ia;ge j ihat Dan Lament, et als., have tele ' graphed for an optional lease on the I Tacoma hotel! As if that lease has not been blowing abovt the country for years searching for some one tore ! lieve the owners of some of their hotel deficits. I —. A Horrible Ri.ilroad Accic'ent is a ilnily chronicle ml >ur pn| ef; n't-o the deal li of some "leu ß lrieii<t. WHO luid ■ lit'ii with Coiifiinipiion, wlicrene, it' lie or ■"lie hud tnkeii O t» H Cure tor Tlirom und l.ungdisi-HHes in lime, lil'e would have lieen rendered Ii a | pi-rand |•> rha | wived. Heed I lie warniiijr ! It von have 11 eoiigl. ior any alleeiion of the Throat and builds 1 Call on T -I Keeler.Laporte; \V. L lliilliiian, 1111 IK r >w; H Lani'aeter Forkfvillej C. B .Ifiininir*, Eciella; •Ino, W. Buck. Soiuvtown, ami >ret » trial paeka>re tree. Lar>:e size 50c and '2sc HU'IEL FORTER. Canton Street, SHUNK, PA. W. E. PORTER, Prop'r. First elate in hII i»t appointment. Rates very reasonable. Good sialilii | Specia l iiiiention given to transient truw , ALL THE BE."! FORMS OF MODERN LIFE mum ATE WRITTEN BY THE PENN MUTUAL P IBSUHABCFI CTI. OF PHILADELPHIA. If you want Life Insurance, don't fail to find out what this old and well-tried company can do for you. Its agent will cheerfully give you the desired information. A postal card addressed to the under sigi.ed, giving name, age itnd address, will bring you full particulars. M. A. SCUREMAN, Dushore, Pa. LAPORTE LIVERY AND EOARDING STABLES. Connected with the Commercial Hotel. First-class Horses and Carriages. Kates reasonable. CHAS. COLEMAN, Prop. BLACKSMITH AND WAGON SHOP ! Just opened at the Laporte Tannery. I Custom work solicited. AH work ; guaranteed. o. w. BENNETT, Prop. Ouod Mews. No other Medicine was ever given euch ' a lest lie Cure. Thousands <• bot I ties of this great German remedy are be* in . disiiilxiud KI KI: 01 ( IIAJIOE, to those a'H oted with Consnni|ition, Asthma, i t'ro i|>. severe Coughs, l'nei luonia nml nil i llir«>at and Lung diseiieeß.giving the piO* pie proof thm OtioV Cure will . ure ihim : For sale only hv T. J. Keeler, Laporie; W.L. Hoflman,llillsgrove; >t.S. Lancaster ForksvilU; C. B. .letiliings, Estelln; Jno. IW. Buck, Soneßtown. Sam plea I'ree. Large Unties oUc uuJ 25c. January Reminds us of •EW HEATING STOVES. Pipe, New Stove Repairs~Coal Sieves, Coal Buckets, Horse © }j| Jf Blankets, New Bedroom Suits 'Mi Apple-butter Crocks, Yardan- Hu iei s > F et 'd Cutters, Stone Jugs, 111l 1 ia ' rs ' L; mps. THIS SOLID OAK $2 25 to oi r cu:-timers. Jeremiah Kelly, HUGHESVILLE. HAVING PURCHASED THE GRIST MILL Property Formerly O wned by O. W. Mathers at this place , 1 am Now Prepared To Do All Kinds of Millinf cr Vti) floit Notice With W. E. Starr ai Miller. Please Give a Trial. FEED OF ALL KINDS 0.1 H\ i J W. E. MILLER, FORKSVILLE, PA. N. B. All parties knowing themselves indebted to me will confer a great favor by calling and paying the amount due, as I need money badly at once. Respectfully yours, W. E. MILLER. January 1898! Will close all our winter goods and Ladies' Coats and Capes oui : at nearly half price, in fact, a good many articles at At Less Than Half Price. Our stock is very large and prices will lie no ol ject. We her< ! mention a few prices exactly as we intend to sell. this is no bluff oi ' fake, but a FACT, that you can save nearly 40 to 50 per cent, by buying now: Men's suits at $3.25, regular price 50.50; Men's overcoats a ?2.75, arc worlli SO.00; Hoys' suits, 3 piece-, at 82.75. are really worst c 5 50; Children's suits at 75c and SI.OO. are worth nore than double Men's pants in all wool and all different styles SI.CO, are '2.00 aiu , .3.00 values; knee pants at big 1 argainp; Men's underbills at less thai iiaff price; all wool Micks- 2 pair foi 25c; heavy cotton seeks 4 \ air foi ''s 'the largest variety of boots and sin es in this section at prices t< ! suit' everybody, ltubl cr l.ools ai d slices we ?< 11 cheaper than any otliei store in the count} . We w i.l make you such low prices in Ladies Coats and Capes That you will surely le stirpri-ed. All we a;k it> to call and sc< .hem. We will! c glad to give you our best prices, ladies' coats n ,he latest styles at §2.75, regular pi ice $7.00, we only have about 15 o these coat, left in ll.car.d Hack, rocgh goods; Ladies plush capes a #5.00, regular price 89.00; extra lorgplmh capes at 87.50; a lig vanetj of Llidies' ceatsat 84.50 ai d g5.00; Ladies' cloth capes at 82.25, les than half pri. e, they are heavy aid good let gh. We have about \l Children's coats, age from 4 to 12 years, in very fancy patterns ai.d ii •: the litest styles, at nearly half price. We cannot mention all of ou I good! but whatever you may need in our line we will sell accordingly ' We will surely sell as we advertise as our stock is very large and w ' must sfcll. Prices Will be no Object. 4e have good attendance and are always pleased to FI.OW ou: ' stock whether you buy or not. You can buy here now for 8100 a much as cither places for 82.00. We find this to be a fact. _ \< r% The Reliable Dealer in Clothing Jacob Per B OO .S -^-« sville>