Bellefonte, Pa., April 26,1901. - Ee ———— THE WIND. Have you ever heard the wind go *“Y0000000."’ *Tis a pitiful sound to hear! It seems to chill yon through and through ‘With a strange and speechless fear. It’s the voice of the night that broods outside When folks should be asleep. And many and many’s the time I've cried To the darkness that brooded far and wide "Over the land and deep ; “‘Whom do you want, O lonely night, That you wail the long hours through?’ Aud the night would say in its ghostly way : what here in.” “y ! monotony." fidence he admits that h 1d like to d Yo oo00 1 ‘That won’t be for three months yet.”? “Do you find it So monotonous?" it ones he he One Sine pn Y0000000.1" “Well, suppose we were to have a row “Not when I’m with you. Bat it makes which he gloats is that he personally has here, what would you do with the missus? | the moments when I’m not, all the harder killed ten whites in a single battle. My mother told me long ago You can’t ever tell what these niggers may | to hear.” 1s0 a matter of pride to his old age that h (When I was a little lad) take i i ’ ; a pride ¢ ag e e into their heads to do next. They’re| She looked at him tenderly. How he has led forays wherein as many as 500 “That when the night went wailing so, Somebody had been bad : And then, when Iwas snug in bed, Whither I had been sent, ‘With the blankets drawn up round my head I'd think of what my mother said And wonder what boy she meant! And “Who's been bad to-day 2” I'd ask Of the wind that hoarsely blew, And the voice would say in its awful way : of th their **¥ooooo00! out hege, but I think that’s a selfish view | smiled at him and touched her pony with Joo00e0} to take of it.”? the whip. 0000000!" That this was true I must allow— You'll not believe it though 1 Yes, though I'm quite a model now, I was not always so. And if you doubt what things I say, Suppose you make the test; Suppose when you've been bad some day And up to bed are sent away From mother and the rest— Suppose you ask “Who has been bad ** And then you'll hear what's true; For the wind will moan in its ruefulest tone: *“Y0000000 ! Yo000000! Yoooo0000!” was edge now. — Eugene Field. A WAR TIME CASUALTY. The Major had received his first commis- sion from the ranks, for active service rendered his country. The Captain had received his first commission from the four hundred, for active service rendered one of the country’s representatives. The Major | | was a gentleman by instinct and inclina- tion. The Captain was a gentleman by birth and education. The Major admired the Captain tremendously, although he only ife. vent would have been shot before admitting it | tive women did the most beautiful drawn work even to himself. He admired his graceful elegance at official balls, and the careless ease with which he responded to a toast. The Major’s wife admired him also. And that was where all the trouble began. The Major’s wife was a provincial belle, the reigning beauty of a middle western town. She had first met her husband, when, as a captain he had been sent there on recruiting service, and she had married ‘him partly throngh flattered vanity, partly because it is rather nice as one progresses in married life to speak of one’s husband, successively as ‘‘the Captain,’ ‘‘the Major’? *‘the Colonel,” and perhaps ultimately as “‘the General.” Anybody would have picked the Major out for a soldier if they bad seen him masquerading in any costume under the sun. He hada way of standing with his weight on both feet, and wearing admi his chest in front, that was unmistakable. When he told a person to do a thing, they | 7p, did it first and questioned it afterwards. kind His appearance was that of a sinewy old hound, that still had a few stiff runs left him. The Major's face was not pretty. His bair was grizzled and scrubby, with a cowlick over the occipital bone, his brow was prominent, his eyebrows a bushy gray and under them shone a pair of clear gray eyes. He had a typical Western American nose, high and acquiline, from the alae of which there ran deep wrinkles to the cor- ner of his month. The mouth itself, firm and concise, was hidden beneath a long fierce grey moustache, with a corkscrew twist in it. The Major was a good officer, . a nervy poker player and drank straight rye, which never intoxicated him. The Captain was the kind of a man that Jou may seein aclub window on Fifth Avenue between three and five. A pretty &ood sort, as a rule. There 1s one particular kind of endurance requisite in the makeup of a soldier, that i8 harder to acquire and less anticipated by the average newly commissioned officer or enlisted men, than all of the others put to- gether. That is the endurance of monotony, Boredom up to a certain point becomes al- most a dementia. One realizes that if they don’t get diverted in some way they will get crazy. ‘When the regiment reached the hilippines there was a good deal for them to do for the first six months, and they did it well. After that, as about twenty per + cent of them were on sick report, different companies were sent around to towns in the interior for garrison duty. This is not Th an exacting ocoupation as a rule, The Major's battalion was sent inland to a peaceful little village known as Moban. Yon won’t find it on the map. There are ed to many things in Filipino campaigning that | the o are not to be found in pring. Then the Th Major did * the most foolish thing in his tired whole military experience. He sent for his wife. - In Manila, Mrs. Major was having a pretty good time. There were many at- © tractive men, and few American or Euro- pean women. Balls were frequently given upon the different Men of War, also at the ~ hotel. Tourists were beginning to arrive at the ‘‘Diamante’” and “‘Esmerada’ and every evening she could drive out on the ‘Taneta in her little victoria. This was by far the most interesting part of the day’s program. She was living in the Ermita with a friend, the wife of a Captain man, and at six o’clock his little Filipino coach- man would come aronnd, gorgeously array- ~ ed in his white livery, with diminutive 0p | pak bat and bare brown” legs. Then she and her friend would drive down around the ~ loop, past the campus, where in the former days of the Spanish occupation the wealth and beauty of the city were wont to as- semble to witness the execution of “los in- surrectos,’’ then along the south walll of . the city and back tothe music stand, where three nights in a week there was a rather _ good concert given by one of the regimen- tal bands. After the concert was over ey would return to their casa and have a jolly little dinner. Often some of the offi- silks upon room wind the i popu hard than hustl and their them skin “did little come on th she’s been cheer seen toms had & own were to t from heen Both ious. cers stationed in the neighborhood would th . Th i ing | emphatically, Yes! Twenty dollars a rio spend the evening. “Yeu, Mim, | uot’) voce it sons Ee aon inking | empl is $1,000 a year. The households “Major had a very good time at Manila. In Moban she only had the Major. When the - Major told the Doctor that he was going to send for his wife, the latter looked grave, ‘‘T wouldn’t if I were you Major,”’ he said. ““A garrison town in this damn coun- ‘try is no place for a woman. She’ll be little been . ‘She needn’s stay if she doesn’t want “you 400," 1 : the Major. ‘‘But this is different*”’ said the Doctor. “Why man, there isn’t another white wom. p! an in the place. Women crave women’s society don’t you put in for two week’s leave and run down to Manila. That’sa much bet- on a hike and raise the deuce around. It’s all I cando to keep him from starting a war | other. One’s self restraint is weakened in on his own hook now.’ the tropics. The ten commandments were ‘Well, I don’t believe they’ll leave us out almost a year now. dying of dry rot. The old man will surely call us back before the rainy season sets just as apt to come down on us some night as not. The outposts have held up several “No danger, Doctor, I’m watching ‘em and if there’s any sign of a muss, I'll send the missus down to Manila.’’ - : ‘‘Well, have it your own way, old man, but I’m against it. cheer us up a lot to have the little woman “The last letter I got from her,” said the Major, ‘‘she wanted to come down and see the place. I think we can manage to give her a good time.’? So, master’s steamer arrived in Major’s wife and Filipino maid were land- ed, and the Major met them with an am- bulance and a mounted escort. through the palm groves with the knowl- fusilade from the bamboo thickets. She had never admired her husband so much as his peace. At last the crisis came. can charger and twirled his long moustache as he told stories of the country, and listen- ed to the latest news from Manila. For the first two found much to interest her. They bad during that time her husband “had been stationed near a city. American war, she had rily to her father’s home; so that this was her initiation into arm , or rather garrison horseback ride with one of the officers of the battalion, always, however, accompan- ied by an armed escort. There was a con- of the day was spent in a siesta, on a cane bottomed conch, which she had drawn out | President’s house. noon sun begun to shimmer through the myriad little square shells that served as a refreshing bath in a big osier, that was always kept filled for her use by the chino 2oolies. Then her many dainty tropical gowns, and stroll over to the market place and play with the little brown children. She rather enjoyed white woman before. Their unrestrained as pleasant as it was sincere and ingenious. the poor emaciated fever and dysentery pa- tients lying uncomplainingly upon ‘their would forego her siesta home sick boys or write letters for them to ized h humor to be found in only the American soldier. Jack,’’ remarked a blonde giant, with a was readjusting a bandage on his ankle, women there is jes goin’ to waste, back in the States?’ “Yes,” replied the other, “an if this yere readin’ novels. An’ now look at her. Wh She sez ter Bill this along the side o’ ‘why’ says she, ‘you did have a close shave didn’t ye 2’ half inch and she’d missed me, and then I couldn’t a had you dress it.’ tickle her right smart.” his eyes, waiting to detect the first syp- first three weeks of garrison life, she seem- duties in the hospital grew more and more perfunctory, and as her interest in her sur- roundings grew less, her interest in the Captain increased. woman and had the true Western contempt and admiration for the more refined pro- duction of the Eastern States, and the Cap- tain’s easy assumption of stiperiority an- noyed and attracted her. ment arose, his indifferent silence after she irritating then the repartee of one of her a ways bevond the outposts, their horses was intensely hot and the heat from the ing timacy had nearly reached its proper limits, ing of the Captain and herself, and how it was all to end. She was wondering if it would not be better that she was tired of the place, and return to Manila, rather than let this fast growing attraction ripen into something more ser- and wondered if she could not keep things it would be if he did not have this the thought of how diverted his friends at home would be if they knew how he had vinci fioneiss. him and saw the smil e glan at him and saw smile. bored to death.” ‘ “What are you thinking of 2’? she asked, et a a woman's got ey che | in argent dl rt 3 an army man.’’ “What a pr speech; I don’t see where You § get the inspiration in this stifling off 1 could always have inspiration so near me,’”’ he answered, looking at her more than they do men’s. Why tenderly, “‘I wonld be. willing to endure but Ican’t help one any more than the never intended to apply under twenty de- grees North. Out here, one is obliged to modify their daily habits to fit the place. Why shouldn’ts we modify our code of ethics as well? Anything, rather than much longer, anyway. We've been The men are all would miss her, she thought. The Captain sighed deeply. ‘Come,’ he said, ‘it is getting late. The Major will be worrying about youn.” He glanced at the watch on his wrist and de- cided that it would be necessary to push along if he wanted to mix himself a tepid drink before retreat. “Poor fellow,’ she thought. ‘‘He doesn’t dare trust himself to say much more.’ She ose gents with the triangle tattooed on chests lately.” Of course it would The Major bad noticed the fast growing intimacy between his wife and the Captain and at times a thought would come that deepened the heavy lines across his cheeks. Once he glanced at himself furtively in the little cracked hand glass that hung over his teak desk. He noticed the scarred weath- er beaten skin, hacked and crossed with a thousand little lines, and thonght of the Captain’s smooth, handsome features. A few weeks later an ugly story reached that at any moment one might get a | his ears. Then he overheard a conversa- tion. The lines.grew deeper, but he held There had been a rumor afloat of a possible up- rising among the natives in the vicinity, and one night the Major went out in per- son $o inspect the outposts. As he was re- turning, he cut across the grass plot behind the President's house. Suddenly low voices reached his ear; he paused to listen. The voices were those of natives and they were speaking in Spanish. During his serv- ice upon the Mexican border, the Major had acquired a knowledge of the Spanish language that he had later perfected by practice and study. “No, Isidro,” said a low voice, that he recognized as that of his wife's native maid y ‘that is not the way. Kiss me thus, as the wife of the senior commandante kisses the handsome Captain.’ “Does she indeed love the Captain? I do not wonder, for the senior commandante is old and ugly.” ” S$ ‘Yes, caro mio, she loves him madly. Whenever the senior is away they are to- gether——" ‘Be off there, damn you.” The Major's voice cut the soft night air like a rusty saw, : Three days later the Major received in- formation of an armed band of insurgents who were coming from the North. He left his wife in the care of the Doctor and or- dered an advance of two companies. One of the companies was Captain Morley’s. The column left Moban about an hour be- fore dawn. Late in the afternoon they came upon the enemy, who were strongly entrenched just outside Loiban. The fol- lowing morning the Major requested Cap- tain Morley to ride a little way from: the lines with him to make a reconnaisance. He left his orderly behind. "When they had ridden across the rice paddies and down into a little hollow that hid them from the company, the Major turned to the Captain. “It is a pity, Captain,’ . he said, ‘‘bus one of us will be killed by the insurgents today.” : The Captain looked at him in astonish- ment, then laughed. ‘“‘Are you a fatalist, Major ?’’ he asked. *‘Sometimes,’’ said the Major, grimly. * 0% * The sergeant of the com pany looked after the disappearing officers with great disap- proval, as long as they were is sight. Then he gave a grunt and expectorated upon a lizard with great accuracy. “Now that’s a piece of cursed foolish- ness,’’ he said, to the men around him. ‘How do they know but what these bam- boo is full er niggers? An they ain’t got nothin’ but their six shooters,” Ten minutes passed. Then suddenly two shots rang cut, followed by a third and a J | fourth. : FV) ) : hat’, Te ee Sh ab St th ye” 2 ie imccmpes in’ the fellers an’ doin’ no end o’ good. | 38 ie scrambled to his feet. ‘Come along, oys. mornin’, when she ; They dashed through the hamboos and the scar hort Sask mavver Flowad across the rice field, and then they saw the Y, Major. He was sitting on his pony with a smoking revolver in his hand.” About twenty feet from him was the Captain ly- ing on the ground. Nothing was to be seen of the enemy, but then, the insurgents use smokeless powder, The men approached warily. “I'm afraid the Captain’s done for,”! said the Major, gravely. ‘“Sergeant, detail twenty skirmishers to beat out that thicket. The rest of you men fall back behind the rick dike. Steward, carry the Captain to the rear. Here you,” to a private of the hospital corps, ‘just throw a bandage around my arm.” He held out a ;bloody arm, and the man broke out a first aid package and hound it as directed. The hospital steward was leaning over the Cap- tain. There was a great bloody hole di- rectly over his heart and his hand still clatched a smoking revolver. “Must have been a Remington,”’ said the ‘‘corps man; ‘too big a hole for a Mauser.” A week later some friends of the Captain were sitting around the fire place of their club on Fifth Avenue and disoussing his untimely end. “Well,” remarked one of them at last, ‘‘its tough luck, but I hope when I go my finish will be as good a one. Beatum est pro Patria mori.” By Henry Cottrell Row- land, M. D. two weeks later, when the quarter- the tions His wife delighted. It was exciting to ride He rode along side on the big Ameri- weeks the Major's wife been married about three years and During the Spanish- returned tempora- Every morning” she would take a not far from the post, where the na- Eva, in pino cloth, and wove exquisite upon hand made looms. The middle a tiled veranda, just outside her 8, in the upper story of the former When the late after- OW panes, she would get up and take sters. she would dress in one of nterest she excited among the native lation, moss of whom had never seen a ration of her beautiful golden hair was en there was the hospital. She was a Sold hearted little woman, and the sight of little cots, was more painful to her to the men themselves, She would e the hospital coolies out after fruit cocoanuts, and many an afternoon, to read to the poor friends and families. The men idol- er and would discuss her among selves with the quaint affectionate the color of amberoid, to a mate who you ever think what heaps of good woman hadn’t married the Major,and out here she'd probably be jes settin’ e sofy in the parlor eatin’ carmels and dian, dark ‘Yes’m,” says Bill. ‘Another Tt seemed to e Major watched her with his heart in of ennui, nor in vain, for after the fall a victim to the lethargy to which thers had one by one succumbed. e:morning rides bored her. She was of seeing nothing bu natives, and her She was a Western When an argn- 1 C neck. poken her mind was more difficult and kind. One day, they had ridden quite walking with drooping heads, for it ground was almost equal he radiation of the direct 1ays over their heads. They had much together of late and the in- ——— were silent. The woman was think- The Marriageable Income. The question asked by one of our corres- pondents and discussed by others of them, if an income of $20 a week is enough for a young man to marry on, is answered by the great majority of married people in this city and this country, and the answer is to tell her husband She thought how he would miss her from which proceed the best moral in- fluences and in which are nurtured and de- veloped the virtues which keep sweet and pure and vigorous our American society are maintained on incomes more often less than greater. A thousand dollars a year is a grand foundation for a house and all the varieties of furniture tha matrimony brings to it.—N. ¥. Sun retty woman toamuse him. He smiled at looks dancing attendance on this little pro- Took pleased.’ tremely. The reason h a prisoner of war at F he has to be. He who est and most blood-thirsty Indian chief that ever fought the gov a quiet and peaceful life that is in striking contrast to the old days. rather proud of it. palefaces were slang set, bred-in-the-bon Such is Geronimo’s well to hire an interpre get an intelligent talk ous of him. Also it is necessary to hire Geronimo. He does not talk for nothing, a fact of which the writer was apprised immediately upon A dollar bill loosened the first question asked how he liked his present position, he gave answers rather difficult to reconcil First, he liked the place. Then he said that the soldiers treated hi corollary, he added that he In the subse questioning him. his tongue, but to death crop out again. far as winning goes, unfailing with skill, He is a reckless hetter bluff. Soldiers and cowb with the Indians. One curious trait of the old chief is that g winning at cards or has a large sale of trinkets he gives the pro- dren in camp to spend Much of his money goes Eva, and his fa- The daughter of from her father. ed a white man, in the eyes of the when he makes a bi ceeds to the little chil for school books. to his favorite daughter, vcrite squaw, Ketona. Ketona gets little love This is because she marri and what was still worse father—a cowboy. Geronimo is said to be 80. He does not: know his age. He was with Victoria when that chieftain went against the Mexicans and later he developed into a leader him- self. He is a horn leader of redskins for the reason that he is nos man but also a medicine m a man who can talk with unseen beings to make a really deep impression on the In. he the privilege. lives with none: at home. to send her to an eastern months in the year. Geronimo does not work; that is, such as raising a crop of corn or millet. He gets rent free a two-room h ter plan.” She flushed. ““You shouldn’t say things | all appearances, Geronimo, the famous |, Yes, and the minute I left Morley | like that.” warrior, is 8 good Indian nowadays, Not (the Captain) would have the battalion ont ‘‘I shouldr’s feel them either, I suppose | from choice, however, for it bores him ex- Geronimo is small in stature, possessed of a keen face and a lune in his e color that a He does his hess Geronimo In His Old Age. The Noted Indian Chief a @ood Indian at Fort Sill. And Yet He is Far from Dead. He Would Like to do Some More Fighting, but ia the Meantime He is Getting Many of the White Man’s Dollars. One Daughter at Eastern School. Altho ugh by no means a dead Indian or a much hotter place than Luzon.” likely to be for a long time to come from e is good is that, as ort Sill, Oklahoma, was once the mean- ernment, now leads In fact he is In moments of con- htered. He has a deep- e taste for murder. English that it is ter if one desires to m badly. Asa wished to die. quent conversation his allega- of ill-tregtment and his pining for ped out with suspicious fre- quency. It is said by the officers that he repeats this to all whi their pity is aroused, ‘beadwork and trinkets the market rates. Apparent] pleasant life. him with kindness and lowing him all the. der the rules oners of war. this respect, tha also a paid emp draws $35 per month as a scout, is not permitted to carry a load has no work to do and ‘spends time making beadwork articles to sell to white visitors. Out of this trade makes no less than asked if he bad an rainy day, glish : ‘‘Me no save mon te visitors, whereby and they buy his at an advance over y the old chief bas an easy and The officers at the fort treat consideration, al- privileges possible un- governingthe conduct of pris- His position is peculiar in t although a prisoner he. is loye of the government. He though he ed gun. He most of his and other fancy y the soldiers think, he $2,000 a year. When y money laid by for a be replied in his guttural En- ey. Me spend it for squaws and heap gladness. Me like to have gladness and see fun.” Eva is his favorite daughter. he means his wives. In the Ind ular gladness is synonymous ling, and a great deal of the money goes into the game and never comes He is a very poor gambler, so but he plays with that courage which, when coupled make the most successful game- By squaws ian veinac- with gamb- old man’s and runs a strong He never hesitates about a bet and if you raise him he will 1 in the eyes and if he thin will raise you a stiff sum. read by his face whether or not he has a good hand. But the weakn game is that he almost inva his hand. Poker and mo vorite games and the Geroni ook you straight ks you are bluffing One can never ess of his poker riably overbids nte are his fa- mo tepee is the of many highly exciting sittings. oys often sit in the games only a fighting an, and it takes piercing eye. The ye is of that peculiar steely rouses unpleasant sensations in the mind, His faceis wrinkled and his hands are small and rough. His color is a red. Geronimo smokes cigarettes these days and would drink fire-water had He has six wives, but of them. His favorite daughter, Eva, lives with him when she is He gives her sufficient money school eight ouse to live in, bat he keeps his ponies therein and resides, himself in a tepee. who are held as priso All of the Apaches ners live in tents and keep their horses in the houses furnished to them. The Apache vill plain in sight of Fors Sill. tepees catch all of the dust and in the win- ter the ‘snow flurries into the doors. It would not be a white man’s notion of com- fort, but the Indians like it. A few weeks ago Geronimo Eva was taken ill with some and was placed at the at the fort. age is on an open In summer the 's daughter skin disease government hospital A large boil appeared on her Geronimo told the white physician in charge that it should white medicine man told should not. watching the old warrior knife and opened the sore. placed him in the but the girl im Among the Apach excellent doctor and other. While little in civilization, be opened. The Geronimo that it When the doctor was not pulled out a jack- The soldiers guard here for three days, proved daily thereafter. es Geronimo is called an they will’ have no sympathy with modern the old chief appreciates one of its inventions, the camera. He charges $5 for his picture. He always looks his toughest in his pic-. tures. He likes to strike an attitude of devilish ferocity when being photographed. The older he grows the greater is his desire to make a fiendish appearance. Five years ago, when he first came to Fort Sill, he was content to wear white men’s clothes and consented to have h imself photograph- ed wearing them. Now when he poses he like the old-time redskin of the Apache tribe. This is because he sees that his war clothes attract more attention from white visitors. them their money’s worth and to to their expectations. : In talking about his war experience he pees — *‘I do not know how many white men I have killed. It must be bundreds. I have killed many women, too. But I never killed a white baby. I like children. I will fight some more some day. Iam for five years more on the battlefield. I will get ous of this some day and then will go'back to Arizona and kill some of my enemies.’’—New York Sun. Natives Plants of Hawaii. Sandalwood Once Abounded, But the Supply is Exhausted by Excessive Cutting. A description of the native plants of the Hawaiian Islands is contained in a bulle- tin in course of preparation by the Depart- ment of Agriculture, says the Washington Star. Of these, it is said, the most impor- tant are the woods of the islands. They served to make the enormous canoes, in which the natives crossed from island to isl- and of the gronp, and occasionally made voyages to other islands in the South Pacific. Others were used for outriggers and masts. Idols were carved from the softer as well as the hard woods. The hardest varieties furnished the mallets for beating kapa cloth. These mallets were elaborately carved and of a different pat- tern on each face. They were used in such a manner as to stamp the pattern upon the cloth. From the forests came the bark, leaves and fiber out of which kapa cloth, mats, fishing lines, nets, ete., were made. From the various trees came the dyes which they used in coloring the kapa cloth, and in tattooing their skins. The materia medica of the kahunas, or native doctors, was gathered exclusively from the forests and fields. The islands once abounded in sandal- wood, but the great demand for this wood in Canton, China, for incense and for the manufacture cf fancy articles caused a trade which quickly destroyed the forests of this tree. Between 1810 and 1825 this trade in sandalwood was at its height, and while i$ lasted brought great wealth to the King and chiefs in guns, ammunition, liquors, boats and small ships, which they received in exchange. It brought from 6 to 10 cents per pound. It was the first export that at- tracted commerce to the island. So great was the destruction of these trees that it was found necessary to lay a ‘“‘abu’’ on the few remaining ones. A great many sandal trees have since sprung up in the islands, but nowhere in such quantities as to justify a revival of the trade. After the sandal- wood was exhausted there was exported to China a false sandalwood, called by the natives naio. The wood and roots of this tree, when dried, possess a fragrance strong- ly resembling that of the sandalwood. It has also good building and excellent burn- ing qualities, and is used for torches in fishing. The ohia-ha is a durable timber, and is used for railroad ties and. posts, while kela isa very hard wood, closely resembling ebony. For fence posts the wood of the mamame is said to be the most durable, while it is also a good firewood. The hala- pepe was once used hy the natives, who carved their idols out of its soft wood. So, also, was used the wood of lehua, the most generally prevailing tree on the islands, It is very hard, is a good building material and the best of fuels. —— An Avalanche of Letters. Prospective Homestead-Seekers Anxious to Settle Lands. Not less than 10,000 letters of inquiry have been received at the interior depart- ment from persons who want to know about the opening of the Kiowa and Comanche Indian reservation. hed . Secretary Hitchcock gets as many as 75 a day marked ‘‘personal,’”’ many of which are from old soldiers who wish to learn whether veterans of the Civil war are to have special preference over other would- be settlers. Nearly all inquire whether it is true that a lottery system ig to be em- ployed in place of the usual rush. The reservation will be thrown open to settlers not later than August 6th, and some method of admitting settlers other than the ‘“‘rush’’ will be discovered by the secretary .of the interior. A number of plans have been discussed, but none has appeared entirely satisfactory. ‘As to the veterans’ preference, he has one under the law as it stands. He is permitted to make his original entry by agent, not being re- quired to enter in person until six months later. In case of entry by rash, this will be an advantage to him; but if a system of drawing lots is adopted, it is thought that some other regulation onght to be made for the old soldier. There are to be alloted 14,000 quarter-sections, one to a settler; but it is certain that the applicants will number 75,000. ~ When these questions are settled the President will issue a proclamation setting forth the terms of entry. Meanwhile the department is working under pressure to get the Indians settled as required by the treaty. There are abdut 5,652 square miles in the reservation. There is much good land for agricultural and grazing purposes, and the report that valuable minerals have been. found in the neighborhood has at- tracted many prospectors, some of whom bave gone upon the reservation without permission, Sheep Raising by Electricity. A machine for aiding in the raising of sheep is being experimented with at the agricultural experiment station of Mioh- igan, at Lansing. Two lambs and part of the time an old ewe have been Jaeured in the pen during the summer, e field is lanted with lucerne, growing thick and Pn The pen is so arranged that it crawls the full length of the pasture in one month, traveling about two feet an hour; at the end of this time it is switched around and travels back again. As it moves the sheep eat every bit of the fodder, eagerly cropping next the forward side of the pen as it rans over new ground. A bit of canvas duck is hung over the corner of the pen, so that the sheep may he well sheltered, and, curious as it may seem, they have become so accustomed to the moving of the pen that when they lie down to sleep they snug- gle up close to the forward end of the pen, so that they may lie as long as possible without being disturbed by the rear end of the pen as it creeps toward them. When the pen has passed, of course, the lucerne that has been cropped by the sheep imme- diately grows up again, and by the time the pen has made its monthly eireunit the pasture is again in good condition. The advantages of this electrical pen lie in the fact that the sheep are kept from running over, half eating, and tramping down a large amount of pasture, and it keeps the sheep quiet, so that they lay on flesh rapidly. —————— The Mighty Pen. - More steel is used in the manufacture of pens than in all the sword and gun fac- tories in the world. A ton of steel produces about 10,000 gross of pens. Lt, : os EE ———— spoke in the Apache language to this ef- ech : ! The Death of a Deer. ~ A Picturesqe Fight Between a Buck and Two Dogs. A heavy storm swept over the forest, sifting a new layer of snow upon the frozen world. After is, the sun peeped out, if good | grew warmer, and there was a new gurgle and clinking in the ice-armored ‘brooks. Listlessly the deer shuffled up and down the yard, but the warmth had hardly stir- red them when the wind lifted anew, blow- ing with a savage bitterness from the north. At dawn the snow had crusted, and when the big buck tried to tread down new paths, he éut himself unmercifully about the hoofs. With lolling tongue he was looking out along the forest, debating, when a wild cry—a sharp querulous howl- ing—lifted above the murmuring of the wind among the trees. 000f—000-0000 ! Wooo—o0f—o000 ! Is was a dog. He drew himself together with a shock. Nearer came the sound. With wild eyes he looked along his trail. The dog was in the yard. It was coming ! Turning on his heel, he fled, and at the in- stant the voice of another hound was added to the clamor. The buck shot dewn the open path,stars- ing the other deer. He dashed among them, pushing right and lefty agonized in the effort to escape, yet still intent to lose his track among theirs. But at that in- stant a hound appeared in front; there was a wild babel of dreadful sounds. He saw the dog spring upon the fawn. It fell, struggled madly, and then the hound wor. ried it upon the ground. Frenzied, the buck turned aside. The dog was in his path, and one stroke of his sharpened hoof would have slain the creat- ure at its work. But his own precious life was at risk. He fled, and, unconscious of the cutting crust, crashed through the forest. Bump—crash—bump—bump ! In mad terror he raced along. Once he heard the fawn blat piteously, and the cry quick- ened him. Bus he had hardly reached the crest of the slope, when again he heard a hound give tongue. He was pursued. He saw the hound leap from the last path in the yard and come racing after him, some- times galloping along the crust, and again breaking through. The buck was almost spent ; the hound drew nearer, its tongue hanging from its red and dripping jaws. As every step it gave tongue ’til the forest was filled with the sound. The buck could go no farther. He turned, his neck ruffled, a red, ugly gleam in his eyes. He was cornered, driven to his last stride, and must fight. Boo-00of! roared the hound. It sprang at his throat, bus the treacherous crust gave way, and there it lay at the feet of the buck, wallowing and defenceless. : For an instant there was silence. The dog, bewildered, lay there, the buck loom- ing above it. Then the deer, lifted both forefeet together, and: with a powerful, sweeping stroke, heat it down. Again and again he struck, furious. The snow grew red beneath his hoofs, and silently he keps on—a wild remorseless destroyer. Before long the huddled bundle of fur beneath his feet neither moved, nor made sound, yet still he kept on. He saw nothing, heard nothing. Fury possessed him. A man appeared in the brush. He held a striving hound in leash—the mate of the one lying dead in the snow. A$ sight of the stamping buck the man shouted, while his dog made strenuous efforts to break away. “Down there!” cried the man beating the creature about the head, but its efforts only grew more frantic. It whined, trembling with eagerness, and then bayed hoarsely. At the note the buck halted an instant, staring about, his awful fear renewed. He saw the hound break from the leash and spring toward him. - Then - wheeling, he fled away again. His only chance was to regain the yard, to find the tracks of the other deer- and to turn the dog upon their trail. But as he circled down the slope, the inexorable creature at his heels gaining at every bound, he felt his strength deserting. He plunged on, his tongue out and his eyes wavering. He reached the yard and raced along the path. At the turn he almost fell upon the fawn’s inert body. Recoiling in horror, he turned down another path. I¢ ended against a wall of snow, and the dog was close at his heels. There was no re- treat. He leaped again upon the crust, and wallowed into a nearby path. Down this he raced, and again it led to the fawn. He tried another path, yes could not shake the hound from his heels nor find where the other deer had left the yard. Once more he tried and failed—and the hound ° had him by she throat. “Blindly he strog- gled, striking out with both feet, One crushing stroke fell upon the dog ; it gave a long drawn howl and fell before him. Again he fell upon the enemy, striking and slashing him with his sharp fore-feet, and as he stood crushing it beneath him, a rifle cracked in the woods. Then he died.— Maximilian Foster in Everybody's Magazine — Farm Labor in Puerto Rico. The difference between the daily life of a farm laborer in Puerto Rico and of one in the United States is, according to Seec- retary Wilson, very marked. The usual hours for work in the field for Puerto Rican farm hands are from 6a. m. to 7 D. m. Most of them begin in the morning with- out having - eaten anything. What's more remarkable, many of them eat very little till the close of the day. A few take early coffee. At 11 o’clock a half hour is allowed for those who wish to eat break- fast, and can afford to do so. This meal consists of rice and beans, bread and ch or sweet potatoes and fish. Where the plantation boards the hands, as sometimes occurs in the sugar-harvesting seasons, the daily ration consists of one-half pound of rice and one-fourth pound of beans, or three pounds of sweet potatoes and a half pound of dried fish, or one pound of bread and one-fourth of a pound of cheese. The laborers on the coffee estates rarely eat meat, except on Sundays. E— Tragedy at a Wedding. While One Sister was Being Married Another Lay Outside Church Dying. While Miss Lizzie Mitchell, of 112 As- wood street, was being united in marriage to Thomas Mee, a well-known man, of the West End, at St. James’ church, Pittsburg in Main street, at 8:30 o’clock Tuesday morning, her sister, Rosie, who was huery- ing to the wedding, fell. and broke her neck. The accident ocourred in Mill street just outside the church. Persons who saw the woman fall hurried to her assistance and carried the body into the home of Mrs. O’Dowed and the doctors were summoned, who pronounced the young woman dead. A messenger had been dis- patched for Father Price, who was perform- ing the wedding ceremony, to attend the dying sister. The newly married couple were not told of the accident until they had reached the station to take the train for a wedding trip, which was indefinitely postponed. Riise Mitohell was 23 years old and very well known in the West End. a