oOo The old Indian woman glanced furtively at the distant sky line, and then centered her gaze upon the deep crystal waters of the lake. The Ong? she said. I will tell you of the Ong. The Ong was a huge bird, greater than the houses of the white men. Its body was like the eagle's, and its wings were longer than the tallest pines. Its face was that of an In- dian, but covered with hard scales, and its feet were webbed. Its nest was deep down in the bottom of the lake out in the center, and out of the nest rushed all of the waters which fill the lake. There are no rivers to feed the Jake, only the waters from the Ong’s nest. All the waters flow back near the bottom, in great under- sweeps, and after passing through the meshes of the nest are sent forth again, Every plant and bird and ani- mal that gets into these under-cur- rents, and sometimes even the great trout are swept into the meshes of the nest and are there held fast to fur- nish food for the Ong. He ate everything, he liked every- thing, but best of all he liked the taste of human flesh, No one ever heard or saw anything of such poor a saline ls eso lg GEND’ CR ae LI = W warriors around the council fire. - All day long he had been sitting alone on the jutting cliffs which overhang the water, far away from the laughter and shouts of the camp, eagerly, pray- erfully watching the great lake. Sure- ly the Great Spirit avould hear his prayer and give him the moment he longed for, yet he had Deen here for days and weeks in unavailing prayer and waiting. The afternoon was well-nigh spent, and the heart of the young brave had grown cold as stone. In his bitter despair he sprang to his feet to defy and curse the Great Spirit to whom he had trusted, but ere he could utter the words his very soul stood still for joy. Slowly rising from the center of the lake, he saw the dreaded Ong. Cir- cling high in the heavens like a vast shapeless thunder-cloud, black as the night the monster swept, now here, now there in search of prey. The young brave stood erect. When the Ong was nearest, he waved his arm to attract its notice, He had not long to wait. With a mighty swoop and an awful rushing noise the bird dashed to earth, and as it swept upward, the young brave was seen by all to be THE GREAT ONG. mortals as were drowned in these wa- ters, for their bodies were carried to the Ong’s nest and no morsel ever escaped him. Sometimes he would fly about the shores in quest of some child, or woman or hunter, yet he was a great coward, and was never known to attack anyone in camp, or when two or more were together. No arrow could pierce his featners, nor could the strongest spear do more than glance from the scales on his face and legs, yet his eraven’s heart made him afraid, for his toes had no claws, and his mouth no beak. Late one fall the Washoe Indians were making their final hunt before going to the valleys and leaving the lake locked in its winter snows. The Chief's daughter was sixteen lds and before Jw®ving the lake he ust -sélect the greatest hero in the tribe for her husband, for such had been the custom of Washoe chiefs ever since the tribe came out of the Northland. Fairer than ever Indian maiden had been was this daughter, f and every unmarried brave and war- rior in the tribe wished that he had performed deeds of greater prowess, that he might be certain of winning the prize, That last night at the lake, around the big council fire, each was to smoke the pipe and recount to the Chief the noblest achievement of his life, and when all were heard, the Chief would choose, and the women join the circle and the wedding take place. For many years the warriors had looked forward to this event and the tribe had become famed because of acts of reckless daring performed by those who hoped to wed the Chief's lovely daughter, It was the morning of the final day, and much game and great stores of dried trout were packed ready for the journey. All were preparing for the wedding festivities, and the fact that no one knew who would be the bride- groom among ull that mighty band of warriors, lent intensest excitement to the event. All were joyous and hap- py, except the maiden and the hand- gome young brave to whom she had given her heart. In spite of custom or tradition, her love had long since cone out to one whos t had been ho voung to press the path when ot the tribe gave battle to their Lreditary foes, the Plutes. He never a done deed of valor, nor could he claim the right to W th the years. clasped fast in its talons. A great cry of horror arose from the camp, but it was the sweetest note the young brave had ever heard. The bird flew straight up into the sky until it became a mere speck to the enthralled beholders below, When it reached a great height it would drop its prey into the lake and let the current draw it to the nest. Such was its custom, and tor this the young Indian had prepared by un- winding from his waist a long buck- skin cord, and tying himself firmly to the Ong's legs. The clumsy feet could not grasp him so tightly as to prevent his movements, At last the great toes opened wide, but the Indian did not fall. Again they closed and opened, and the enraged bird thrust down his head to see why his victim refused to fall. In a mighty rage the Ong tried to grasp the man in its mouth, but the strong web between the set bird's toes sheltered him. Again and again the bird tried to use his horrid teeth and each time his huge body would fall through the air in such twistings and contortions that those who watched below stared in bewilder- ment. But what the watchers could not see was that every time the huge mouth opened to snap at him, he young brave hurled a handful of poisoned arrow heads into the mouth, and down the big throat, their sharp points cutting deep into the unpro- tected flesh. The bird tried to dis- lodge him by rubbing his feet to- gether, but the thong held firm, Now it plunged headlong into the lake. but its feet were tied so that it could not swim, and though it lashed the waters into foam with its great wings and though the man was nearly drowned and exhausted, the poison caused the great bird such agony that it suddenly arose and tried to escape by flying toward the center of the lake, The contest had lasted long, SIX HUNDRED DOLLAR BILLS. | How An Innocent Man was Sus- pected. A little story was told at the New Willard Hotel in Washington the other day by a New Yorker who was travel- ing on a Pullman car between St. Louis and his home, which goes to show the danger of convicting a man on circumstantial evidence. The principal figure in this incident was not con- victed, but had it not been for a for- tuitous circumstance it might have gone hard with him. “It seems that one of the occupants of the car on getting out of his berth to dress missed his vest, which was a rather serious affair, Inasmuch as It contained in an inside pocket a roll of money which consisted of six brand- new $100 bills. “A little later he picked up the gar- ment on the floor, but on searching, the roll of money was gone. It was a clear case of robbery, and the man naturally raised an excited outcry, which drew the attention of all his fellow-travelers. Early in the game the proposition to search everybody in that coach was made and adopted w..h but a single dissenting voice. One man stood out fiercely and indignantly against it, and said that he would never consent to such an indignity, but would oppose it with all the force he could erploy. “This man was at once an object of suspicion, and many whispers directed at him went around. Every other indi- vidual aboard voluntarily submitted to being searched, yet nothing was seen of the s olen bills. At this point some amateur Sherlock Holmes cornered the porter, and by adroit questions and threats made that rascally employe own up to the ‘heft, and also made him disgorge $600 in handsome notes that appeared to be right from the Print ing Bureau. The owner of the money was overjoyed and all hands congratu- lated him on recovering his money. “About this time the obdurate gen- tleman who had resolutely declined to be searched secured the floor. ‘Now, my friends,’ said he, ‘I will tell you why I risked your suspecting me of the | theft, and v. hat did this man do but | go down in his hip pocket and fetch | up a roll of money that he counted out | in our presence, and, as sure as I am la living man, in this roll there were | just six—no more and no less—brand- | new bills, each of $100 denomination. | Positively there was no way of telling | them from the bills that had been re- covered. Then we all knew why he had declined to be investigated.” eet. Brief Thauks to the Ladies. Jonesboro (Ark.) Evening Sun. The members of the Citizen’s Band ask the ladies who gave the supper for the benefit of the band on Wednes- day night, August 9, to please accept their sincere thanks, It is the wish of every member that when these good | ladies have done all the good deeds | here that God would have them do, | that they be gathered home to join the heavenly band, where all be joy, happiness, and good music, which all who live as these good ladies have lived shall enjoy, and may the in- fluence of these good ladies ever guide the members of the Citizens’ Band to a higher stand of morality and fame, and may we never cease striving until we have reached the topmost round of the ladder of fame, when God, in His wisdom, shall call us home, and when we have played our last tune here on earth, may we be gathered with these good ladies around God’s throne, where we can play on God's instruments of gold, where our music will be sweeter, through the ceaseless ages of eternity. and the darkness crept over the lake, and into the darkness the Ong van- ished. The women had been long in their huts ere the council fire was kindled, and the warriors gravely seated them- selves in its circle. The loss of a young brave could not be allowed to mterfere with so important an event as the marriage choice, and from most of their minds he had vanished. It was not so very unusual for the Ong to claim a victim, and besides, the youth had been many times warned by his elders that he should not go hunting alone as had been his habit of late. But while the warriors were work- ing themselves up to a frenzy of elo- quence over their bygone deeds of daring, an Indian maiden was pad- dling a canoe swiftly and silently toward the middle of the lake, Nona, the Chief’s daughter, understood no more than the rest why her lover had not been dropped into the lake, nor why the Ong had acted so queerly, but she knew that she could die with her lover, She took her own frail canoe because it was so light and easy to paddle, though it was made for her when a girl, and would scarce- ly support her weight now. It mat- tered nothing to her if the water splashed over the sides; it mattered nothing how she reached her lover. She kept saying his name over softly to herself, “Tahoe! My own Tahoe!” When the council had finished, the old women went to the Chief’s hut to bid his daughter come and hear the decision her father was about to ren- der, Their consternation was great, nor did the tribe rest until the rosy dawn tinged the Washoe peake and disclosed to the warriors the vast body of the Ong floating on the wa- ters above its nest, and beside it a tiny, empty canoe. But gently ap- proaching the shore was the strangest craft that ever flonted on water, It was one of the Ong’s great wings, and the sail was the tip of the other wing! Standing upon it clasped in each oth- ers arms, was the young brave Ta- hoe and the daughter of the chief, In the shouts of the tribe,shouts in which warriors and women and children mingled their voices with that of the great Chief, Tahoe knew that he was the hero, and that Nona was his bride. The decision was rendered, but the Ong's nest still remains, and to this day the drowned never rise in Lake Tahoe. CHICKAMAGUA ANNIVERSARY. One of the Great Battles of the Rebel lion—~Tragic Death of Poet-Soldier General Lytle, Forty-two years ago the latter part of September was fought and won by Rosecrans the great battle of Chicka- magua. Chattanooga, the objective point of the campaign, has been well considered the very gateway of the entire South. Bragg, in command of the Confederate force, was outwitted and outma-| neuvred, and the town of Chattanooga fell into Federal hands, entirely by strategy. Chattanooga was then but a poor, struggling village, never having been | even heard of by one in a thousand of those who composed the Northern | army. It is now a wealthy, prosperous | city of over 60,000 inhabitants and the | home of many Northern families. An | electric line runs from the city to Chickamagua Park every 30 minutes. | The celebration of the anniversary | of the battle, from the 19th to the 23d of September, where the tales of the ampfire and the picket line were once more recounted, has been of surprising interest to thousands of old veterans and their quondam foes. BRIGADIER-GENERAL WM. H. LYTLE. The battle of Chickamagua, which followed Chattanooga, was most desper- ately contested on both sides. Bragg was reinforced by a veteran corps from Virginia, under Longstreet, and Buckner’s Corps from Kast Ten- nessee, until his forces outnumbered Rosecrans’ by over 12,000, and yet the Northern army, by wise and vigorous marching day and night over moun- tains and through passes, and by the concentration of widely scattered forces, inflicted such terrible losses that Bragg was incapable of any but the most cautious following when Rosecrans fell back to occupy Chat*- nooga, for which he had been conter ing. Among the many both sides who gave braver, none more mourned than the Union Brigadier-General, Wm. IL Lytle. About to give the order aid. tra,” generally believed to have been composed the night before the battle, but which, as a matter of fact, w earlier production, has been cl one of the most masterly lyrics American poetry. I Am Dying Egypt, Dying. I am dying Egypt, dying, Ebbs the crimson life-tide fast, And the dark, Plutonian shadows Gather on the evening blast. Let thine arm, oh! Queen, support me, Hush thy sobs and bow thine ear, Hearken to the great heart secrets, Thou, and thou alone, must hear, Though my scarred and veteran le- gions Bear their eagles high no more, And my wrecked and shattere gal- leys Strew dark Actium’s fatal shore; Though no glittering guards sur- round me, Prompt to do their master's will, I must perish like a Roman— Die, the great Triumvir still Let not Caesar’s servile minions Mock the lion thus laid low; "Twas no foeman’s hand that him, Twas his own that struck the blow. Here, then, pillowed on thy bosom, Ere his star fades quite away, Him who, drunk with thy caresses, Madly flung a world away! slew Should the base plebeian rabble Dare assail my fame at Rome, Where the noble spouse, Octavia, Weeps within her widowed home; Seek her—say the Gods have told me, Altars, Augurs, circling wings, That her blood with mine commin- gled, Yet shall mount kings. the throne of And for thee, star-eyed Egyptian! Glorious sorceress of the Nile, Light the path to stygian honors With the splendors of thy smile. Give the Caesar crowns and arches, Let his brow the laurel twine; I can scorn the Senate's triumphs, Triumphing in love like thine, I am dying Egypt, dying! : Hark! insulting foeman’s ory; They are coming—quick, my falchion! Let me front them ere I die. Ah! no more amid the battle Shall my heart exulting swell; Isis and Osiris guard thee, Cleopatra! Rome! farewell! I————I—————————— Nursery Nonsense. P—— Two magpies sat on a garden rail AS long ago as a week; And one little magpie wagged Kis tail In the other little magpie’s beak, Then doubling like a fist his little claw hard Said the other “Upon my word, ‘I'hig 1s more than flesh and blood can stand From magpie or other bird.” So they picked and they seratched each other's eyes Till all that was left on the rail Was the beak of one of the little mag- | | brave officers on | up their lives for | their beloved causes there was none | to | charge, he was struck in the head by a | bullet and fell dying in the arms of his | His poem of “Anthony and Cleena- COFFEE DOES HURT ‘Make the trial yourself—leave off Coffee 10 days and use POSTUM FOOD COFFEE in its place, That’s the only way to find out. Postum is a sure rebuilder and when you cut out the coffee and use Postum instead, you get a taste of health, for the aches and ails begin to leave. You may THINK you know, but you don’t until after the trial. 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