another. cowboy stood unhurt save for a red streak, Bellefonte, Pa., January 31, 1902 IN OKLAHOMA. There are several ways of seeing Oklaho- ma. There is only one way of knowing the Territory. ; : The Congressman and the red-haired girl proved that. They traveled from New York to Blufi- ville on the same car. He was looking for wheat statistics. She was in search of new experiences, and incidentally of a brother who bad started a lumber yard in Blufi- ville. : Both travelers saw Oklahoma after a fashion, hut only the red-hairéd girl learn- ed to know it. “That was because the Congressman, with masculine logic, con- tended that the way to see a country was to travel about it, while the girl, with feminine intuition, divined that the real way to accomplish the end was to sit on a lumber pile and look at the country through the eyes and the words of the men who made it. There were a few Eastern women in Blufiville, but they were married, and sev- eral years in the Territory had rubbed off the old hall mark; so Wilson’s sister made rather a sensation. Billings, the saloon-keeper, first. ‘Say, boys,’”’ he announced, ‘‘There’s a red-headed girl sitting on a pile of two-by fours up in Wilson’s lumber yard,and she’s a peach.”’ The boys were doubters. They strolled, singly and collectively, past the Jumber yard, and Billing’s reputation for veracity soared ahove par. Dawson wasn’t contented with walking in the yard. He lighte. a large cigar by way of steadying his nerves, pulled his hat further over his eyes and turned into Wil- son’s office. A half hour later he was back in the saloon. ‘‘She’s his sister, Miss Betty Wilson, from New York, and she’s the real thing,” he said, with a deep conviction. : Meanwhile, the girl on the lumber pile was feeling vaguely disappointed. She looked off across the plain, whose monoto- nous level was broken only by occasional farm buildings, and she wondered how one could live in a treeless country and not go mad. Then she turned and looked down the wide, dusty main street of the town. saw her was flanked by rows of one-story woolen buildings, and ended in an open square surrounding a squat brick court-house, at whose door two sickly poplars stood guard like exiled and homesick grenadiers. From the main street the town wandered off in forlorn little shacks and tiny, neat, cigar- box cottages. dotted indiseriminately along broad, dirty roads that hore sounding ti- tles. It was all ugly. drearily ugly. The girl had launched with one of her brother’s mar- ried friends, and eaten chicken croguettes and salted almonds in a four-room shack whose good rugs and books and pictures and | china seemed as much out of place as a faun in a button factory. Betty wasn’t old enough to see the dramatic interest of the surf line where east broke against west,and she went away from that luncheon exceed- ing sorrowful. Salted almonds and em- broidered doilies, and not a cowboy or an Indian within sight. Was this what she had gone out in the wilderness for to see? The street in front of the lumber office was lined with wagons and cow-ponies,and crowds of roughly clad men thronged the wooden sidewalks. On the opposite corner a number of horse-traders were gathered round a bunch of broncos, and teamsters had balted their loaded wagons to talk with the swaggering, lond-voiced group. Suddenly something happened, and the red-haired girl sat up. A long, lean man, in riding clothes and sombrero, stood fac- ing three burly, thick-set traders. “Yon’ll swallow that or an ounce of lead,” roared one of the trio, drawing a re- volver. The crowd surged back out of range. ‘You're a d——horse-thief, and I can prove it,’’ said the man in front of the shin- ing steel barrel. He moved quickly, as he spoke, and a hullet buried itself in the buildings behind him. The three men lunged toward him, and he backed up against a wagon full of cord- wood. Something flashed in his hand. There was a second shot, then another, and Two men, lay in the street. The " broadening on his cheek. The third horse-trader brought his heavy whip butt down viciously upon the cow- boy’s right wrist and the revolver spun across the road, but the disarmed man reached for a stick of wood with his left hand, and the lasi of his assailants went down in a crumpled heap. The crowd closed in. When it opened out, two men were being loaded into an empty wagon. Oue, supported by friends, was limping toward the drugstore, and the cowhoy, followed by an admiring throng, was slouching carelessly into the nearest saloon. A loose-jointed, keen-eyed man dropped down upon the lumber pile beside the red- haired girl. ‘Pretty scrap, wasn’t it 9"? he drawled, as he lighted his pipe. The giil recogniz- ed the sheriff, to whom she had been in- troduced, with due ceremony, earlier in the day. : ‘*Aren’t you going to arrest anybody ?’’ she inquired breathlessly. ‘‘What'd I do that for?" asked the Maj- esty of the Law, in mild surprise. ‘Do you allow fights like that on vour town streets 2’ Tari He shifted his pipe, and expectorated cheerfully. ‘‘Why, Jim licked, didn’t he?” “The cowboy did." ““That’s Jim--and they were three to one agin him, weren’t they ?”’ *‘Why, yes; but——-"" / “Well, if they couldn’t take care of themselves, they needed killing, and Jim don’t seem to need me to take care of him. Nobody’s badly hurt, anyhow, and I can’t see as I’ve a call to jug anybody for that row. It kind of settled itself.’ When the red-haired girl went to bed that night she was distinctly cheerful, Af- ter all, things did bappen in Oklahoma. All sorts and conditions of men floated in and out of Wilson’s lumber yard. Some of them wanted lumber. Some liked Dick Wilson, and showed it hy loafing in his of- fice. After Dick’s sister arrived, they came thicker and faster than ever. She fraternized with them all, and held court on a pile of joists which made a good place from which to watch the street. Every man within a radius of seventy-five miles around Bluffville took his turn at entertaining her, but the men who most persistently acted as gnide, philosopher,and friend, were the philosophical sheriff and Tom Bailey, gambler, dead shot, and Har- vard graduate, Some brothers would have shied at Tom. Dick Wilson only grinned. “T | It | ‘‘He’ll spoil your taste for Willy boys, | Betty,”’ he said, ‘‘but he’ll not hurt you, and he knows the Territory. Don’t hart him.” So the couple sat together under the shade of the lumber shed very often, and the gambler told the red-haired girl about the people who passed, and about a good many people who didn’t pass. ‘“That’s Slim Jim,” he said one day, as he and Betty looked down the street from their vantage point on the lumber pile. “Did you ever meet him ?”’ ‘No, but I’ve seen him fight.” ““That’s good. He’s a dabster at it isn’t he? But eating is his long suit. He can eat more than any man in the Strip, and there isn’t a boarding-bouse keeper who will board him at regular rates; but he can’t get an extra ounce of flesh on those bones.”’ ‘‘He’s an old Texas man. He says he can go broke anywhere with perfect impu- nity. All he needs to do is to tell the first man he meets a hard-luck story,and pump up a cough. They put him up at a hotel and take up a collection for him.”’ Just at this point in the conversation the sheriff hove in sight and came across the yard with his lazy, side-wheeler motion. ‘“Now wouldn’t you think that man was slower than molasses in winter ?”’ asked the gambler musingly. ‘‘He’s made out of steel wire and raw hide. He's quicker on the trigger than any man in the coun- try. He has a mind that works like chain lightning, and an iron nerve, and eyes in the back of his head, but just look at him.”’ The sheriff dropped in a disjointed heap upon a friendly joist. “I was telling Miss Wilson about Slim Jim,’’ volunteered the gambler. “Oh—uwell, it’s a long story. He's a character, Slim Jim is. Don’t you get stuck on him, though, Miss Wilson. He's tarnation shapely, but he’s married. Did Tom tell you about his marrying? No! Well, that was the only time anybody got the drop on Jim. ‘You see, it happened, just a little while after the run for the Stri ,and Jim’s never been sorry but once. That’s all the time. She was a Yankee, and came down to visit her sister. There wasn’t another pretty girl within miles, and the boys went clean daffyabout her. There were picket lines of cow-ponies hitched to her brother-in-law’s fence all day and every day. ‘‘The girl picked out two young fellows who had good claims, side by side. They | were hoth sooners.”’ | ‘“*What’s a sooner ?’’ asked the red-hair- | ed girl. | ‘‘Chap who gets in and stakes his claim | before the Government signal is given. He | has no legal right to his claim, and any one who can prove him a sooner can turn him out, and stake his claim. Well, for a while this girl couldn’t decide which of the two fellows she liked the better; but, finally, she made up her mind. Both of the duffers had told her their sooner stories. She got the one she didn’t want to marry to tell his story before witnesses. Then she disproved his title, staked his claim, and married the man next door. That was Jim. They’ve got a nice half-section, but Jim says that sometimes he feels as sick as he looks, and that he wouldn’t advise any man to marry a busicess woman. If he were a woman he’d get a divorce, but a man can’t very well do that, even in Okla- homa.” The girl looked thoughtful. Divorces are easy, down here, aren’t they ?’’ she asked. ‘‘I lunched with the banker’s wife the other day, and she said something about the time when she and John were divorced. She didn’t seem sen- sitive about the thing. but 1 didn’t like to ask questions.”’ The gamblerand the sheriff hoth chuc- kled. . ‘Why, bless your heart, she wonldn’t have cared,’’ said the sheriff. ‘‘She and her sister both got divorces, just hefore the run. ou see a man and his wife can stake only one claim. That's a quarter section. Now those two couples wanted two half-sections. So they got divorced, made the run, staked four claims; and af- ter the claims were proved, they married again. Each family had a half -gection. See 2? The red-baired girl gasped. There was a direct simplicity about Oklahoma meth- ods that startled her. “Did many women weakly. ‘‘Droves of them.”’ ‘Tell me about a run. What's it like 2’ The sheriff blew a cloud of smoke. “What's it like Tom? You tell her,” he said, turning to the other man. The gambler crossed his knees and clasp- ed them with his white, scholarly hands, that gave the lie to his rough clothes and hard face. ’ “Like ?’’ he said reflectively. It's like a lunatic asylum on a spree. It's like a circus chariot-race and a steeple-chase and a county fair rolled into one. It's like Judgment Day with very few sheep in the deal. You get all sorts at a run, but three fourths of them are has-beens. There are men from all quartess of the earth, but they’ve nearly all failed somewhere else and are playing for new stakes. Then there are the women who bave been drudging for someone else, and are making a break for homes of their own. Some men and women are going into the thing, just for fun. Oh, they are assorted qnalities, and sizes, all right enough. There are lots of fine men and splendid women in the gang, but I’ve found that it’s a good rule not to go into ancient history with Oklahoma neighbors. Now I'm long on ancient his- tory. My ancestors were great stuff, and I lived np to them for a while. It was the effort of doing it that brought on a moral collapse and put me where I am.” *‘Did you ever run ?’’ asked the girl. The gambler flushed. “Well, bardly. I'm a good shot.”’ ‘‘But you can’t get a claim by shoot- ing. Duda pr , Tom laughed. “Oh, you mean was I ever in a run. Yes I ran for the Strip. I didn’t want the land. What would I do with it if I had it? Bat I wanted experience. I got it. That run was great. Just ahead of me, when we broke away, was a fat old darkey on a raw-boned mule. She had on a bright red calico dress,and she was riding astride, lam- ming the mule and yelling like a caliope. The mule ran like a prairie fire, and was still going when I dropped out. I didn’t run far. The plunge at the start was what I wanted. It was like going over Niagara. It was the greatest mix-up I was ever in in my life, and that’s saying a good deal. I don’t know how my pony ever kept his legs.”’ “You staked, didn’t you ?”’ drawled the sheriff. *‘Oh, yes, I staked; but a woman staked the same quarter-section, and I didn’t care anything about it, so T wouldn’t contest. The woman was a dressmaker, and found she was losing her eyesight; so she decided to have a go at the Strip. We rode into the filing station together, and I held her place in line for her while she got a night's run?’ she asked ed sleep. Ste hasa very decent little farm now.”’ ‘“Were all the men as nice to the women as you were?'’ The red-haired girl's voice was soft, and her eyes were approving. He langhed. “Well, no; I can’t say that the Sir Gala- had act was popular. Still the men did try not to interfere with the women if it could be avoided.” ‘There were the Gateses,’”’” put in the sheriff dryly. Both men looked amused. The gambler took out a fresh cigar. *‘Tell her about them,’’ he suggested, as he felt for a match. ‘‘Never met Mr. and Mrs. Gates, did you ?”’ inquired the sheriff. ‘No, I think not,’’ said the girl, wrink- ling her forehead in an effort to remember. ‘‘Well, your brother knows them. That was a case,{where a man and woman con- tested a claim, and no politeness about it neither.” “They both made the run. Mrs Gates was Miss Johnson then, a crisp, pugnacious Yankee schoolmarm. She staked her claim Gates happened to take the same quarter- section. That started the fight. Now when a claim is contested, the claimant who has put up a shack and broken ground first stands the best show; so as soon as they had filed, Gates and Miss Johnson went tearing back to the claim to begin opera- tions. She took a workman, and they knocked up a shack at the southwest cor- ner of the claim. Gates ran his up on the northeast corner. He had to pass the other shack on his way to town. ‘She had some horses and began plough- ing. So did Gates. She hated him hke poison. He made the air blue every time he thought of her. The contest dragged a- losg. Those things last forever down here. Every day the two parties got more bitter. There wasn’t anything too bad for one to say about the other. When she got up in the morning she looked at the smoke com- ing out of his chimney, and talked to her- self in a way that would have made her Yankee ancestors shiver. While he ate breakfast he looked across at her shack and said things that weren’t fit for publication. Hating each other was their chief occupa- tion. Between times they ploughed. *‘One morning Miss Johnson got up and looked over at her enemy’s shack. There wasn’t any smoke. The next morning the same thing happened. She knew Gates hadn’t gone away. because if he bad he'd passed her place. The third morning came. No smoke. Miss Johnson's curiosity fairly sizzled. It was too much for her. She put on her boots and went across to the ene- my’s cam. There wasn’t any noise about the place. She stooped at the door and lis- tened. Not a sound. She tried the door- knob. It turned, and the door opened. She pushed the door open and went in. There was only one room to the shack. On the side of the room opposite the door was a cot. On the cot was a man. He was tossing and turning. His cheeks wascrim- son. His eyes had a sort of vacant stare. **Miss Johnson stood holding the door and watched the man. He didn’t pay any attention to her. By and by she went in to the room, walked over to him, and felt his head. He was burning up with fever, and didn’t notice her at all. She looked around the room. Everything was in an awful mess. ‘She stood and bit her lip for a minute. That’s a way she has. Then she came to a conclusion and trotted over to her shack. Pretty soon she hurried back with a medi- cine chest, gave the sick man some medi- cine, rolled up her sleeves, and waded into that room. When it was tidy she put wet cloths on Gates’ head, and gave him some more medicine. Night came along,and she rolled herself in a blanket and slept on the floor. The next day she made gruel for the sick man, and kept on with the medicine. She kept that up for four days, going home only long enough to tend to the horses and cow. “On the fifth day Gates opened his eyes, and saw out of them. She was standing by him, and when he saw her he swore feebly. She set her lips. ** ‘You shan’t die on my land,’ she said. ‘It’s my land, and I'll dieon it if I d——please,’ snarled Gates. Then he faint- The woman won out. A man’s stubborn- ness ain’t any match for a woman’s. Miss Johnson wouldn’t let Gates die on her land. He tried to assert his rights and do it, but couldn’t. She nursed him back to life,but they wouldn’t speak to each other. When he was getting well, but couldn’t do any- thing for himself, he used to watch herand grin sometimes. Then he would scowl. ‘*At last he was able to get np. She went home. That afternoon he walked in at her door. ‘“ ‘I reckon you won't give up this claim?” he said. ‘No. Will you?” ‘I'd see you in——first, but marry me?’’ anaiptal ‘ ‘It’s a good deal the same thing for me, ain’t it?’ asked Miss Johuson, “Still she married him. That’s the way that contest was squashed, and they're as happy as turtle doves.” “It’s a funny country,’’ mused the red- haired girl. ‘It’s all that,”’ agreed the men. A dilapidated cart, drawn by a phantom horse, wandered down the street and stop- ped in front of the lumber office. In it were a dignified Indian,in gay raiment;ashrink- ing, frightened-faced squaw, wrapped in a blanket, and a scantily-clad Indian baby. The old Indian climbed out of the wagon. As he left, the pappoose wailed shrilly,and the fond father cuffed it over the head. Then he disappeared into the office. “Old Lone Tree,”” explained the gam- bler. ‘‘He’s the meanest Indian unhung. He'll lie and steal and murder,and beat his wife, and do it all with imperturbable dignity. He’s a Government pet, and always comes out on top. You can shoot a white man down here, and not hear much about it; but wipe one of those dirty, vicious In- dians off the earth,and vou’ll set the whole machinery of the Government working. Don’t talk to me about the noble red man.’’ ‘Slim Jim gave Lone Tree that scar on his cheek,’’ the sheriff added. ‘The tightest hole Jim was ever in w.s three years ago, when six Indians held him up fifteen miles out on the Creek road. Even a drunken Injun ought to have known better. Three braves were gather- ed to their fathers, and three more were laid up for weeks. There was a big fuss about it, but it was finally decided that Jim shot in self-defence.’’ The office door opened, Old Lone Tree stalked into the yard and across to the lumber pile where the red-haired girl sat. He looked her over calmly, while she blush- ed. “How ?’? he grunted.. ‘The two men nodded coolly. Lone Tree sat down on the lumber and smoked his pipe, looking superbly reserved and digni- fied. He was spectacular, but a barrier to will you conversation. The Indians in Oklahoma “That was the situation for two weeks. | shake one’s faith in Longfellow and Coop- er. They are dirty, ill-smelling, thieving, brutal; yet with it all, they do, at times, look the part. Lone Tree finished his pipe in silence. Then he made another exhaustive survey of Wilson’s sister, and nodded. She wasn’t sure whether the nod expressed approval, but she offered him a smile at a venture. He accepted it without any sign of appre- ciation. “‘Day,’’ he grunted solemnly, and went away. As he climbed into the wagon the pap- poose once more gave a frightened cry. and Lone Tree struck the little one a brutal blow with his whip. The squaw moaned like an animal in pain, gathered her baby in her arms, and sat huddled in the bottom of the wagon, while her lord and aster statuesque, serene, drove away into the sunset. “Some day I shall kill an Indian,” said Tom Bailey quietly. ‘'‘I feel it coming on.” The red-haired girl’s education went on apace. One day she was invited to a meet- ing of the Woman’s Club, and found it un- commonly like Sorosis, though, sartorially, not quite up to the standard of the mother club. A frightened little woman read a long paper upcn Icelandic literature, spelling all the names, because, as she explained, no one could by any possibility pronounce them. Then there was a discussion upon corporal punishment for children, which became so animated that only the strategic genius of the president prevented its end- ing fatally. Sandwiches and chocolate smoothed the troubled waters, and Dick Wilson’s sister escaped. It was depressing to find that even Oklahoma could not far- nish new color effects to woman’s clubdom. At the lumber yard she found the sheriff uous life. They moved along and room for her on the lumber pile. down and sighed for sheer satisfaction. Af- ter that she asked a question that had heen bothering her. “Why Blaftville? bluffs.’’ The three men looked lazily at each oth- er. Each hoped one or the other wonld as- sume the effort of explaining. The sheriff finally came to the front. “Didn’t you ever hear how the town came to be here? We called the railioad’s bluff. Some of the sooners staked it out and nabbed town lots. The railroad com- pany decided to locate its towa nine miles east, and not stop here. Then there was a fight. The trains had to be stopped here, and the boys stopped thers. They tore up track and broke up bridges. The railroad company sent a posse down to guard things Some of the hoys engaged the posse up at the north bridge while the rest of the boys blew up the south bridge. One night they moved a house, and set it squarely on the track. The engineer of the express train didn’c see it until he was almost on it; so he threw his throttle wide open and ploughed right through the house. The engine never left the track, but it looked more or less like thirty centsafterward,and the passengers were scared. ‘‘People wouldn’t ride on the trains, and the trainmen wouldn’t run them, so the railroad company had to give in. It ought to have known better than to buck up against a crowd of Oklahoma boomers.’ ‘‘How long ago was all that?’ “Five years. We celebrated the town’s fifth birthday last smmnmer,spent five thou- sand dollars—everything wide open, fire- works till you conldn’t rest, circus, baloon ascension, show at the Opera House, four deaths from pistol shots, scores of black eyes, drunks in bunches of twenty-five. It was a great occasion. Sorry you weren't here.’ “Some day the bottom will fall out of this boom, ’’ prophesied the gambler. “That's right,” assented Dick. ‘‘We draw from 75 miles east and 150 miles west now, but a railroad will cut in somewhere, and we’ll go out like a candle. It’s a great town, now, though." : “Good place for a man in my profes- sion.’’ The gambler’s tone had a touch of sell-disgust in it. “Why, why, wh—" | girl looked embarrssed. “Why do I follow my profession ?’’ fin- ished the gambler cheerfully. ‘‘Well,why not. I'm on the square. My word’s my bond, and the boys know it, It’s all a gamble, in one way or another, and I’m not sure but what the avowed gambler is the only really honest man in the bunch.”’ The month’s visit came to an end one October day. = The red-haired girl kissed her brother tearfully, while all the bystand- ers turned their backs and diligently stud- ied the landscape. Then she shook hands with a large and varied assortment of men, among them Old Lone Tree. who eyed her stolidly,and grunt. ed ‘‘Day,’”’ but who bad ridden twenty miles to make the eloquent remark. Tom Bailey was the last man to step up. His face wore the expression that he usual- ly reserved for a raise on a pair of deuces. A habit of bluffing calmly stands a man in good stead on some occasions. “You’ve been very good,’” said the red- haired girl. ‘Yes, I’ve heen good. make up for it.”’ There aren’t any The red-haired I'll probably night he rode his pony fifty miles for no apparent purpose. On the train the red-haired girl met the Congressman. “I¢’s a wonderful country,’’ he said. “It is,?? she agreed. ‘Such crops,’ mused the Cdngressman. ‘Such men. ’’ sighed the girl, She finds New York slow.—By Eleanor Hoyt in Everybody's Magazine. Will Ask No Pension. Close friends of Mrs. Benjamin Harrison in Indianapolis state that she has requested those who niave been supporting her claim toa pension to abandon their efforts. A bill granting her $5,000 a year was intio- duced by Senator Fairbanks recently, but if is probable now that it will be with- drawn. Opposition to the grant, both among members of Congress and relatives of the late President, have induced Murs. Harrison to ask that the project be drop- ped. Opponents to the pension contended that Mrs. Harrison was not entitled to the operation of the precedent by which widows of Presidents have received government assistance. She was married to General Harrison after he had retired to private life, and therefore was not the wife of a President and is now only the widow of au ex-President. Furthermore, the Harrison family point- ed out that the General made generous provisions in his will for Mrs. Harrison and their child, leaving to his widow an income of $10,000 a year and a house free of incumbrances. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. are picturesque, but not inspiring. They | A Modern Romance. Philippines Won His Renounces Claim to Crown. | The Archduchess Elizabeth, in view of | How a Veteran of the her marriage to Prince Otho von Windisch- | Bride. Gratz, who is not of royal blood, on Wed- | nesday took the oath renouncing all claims | a well-to-do Woodhull farm lad, near Roch- Bea a lier destendapts to the Ans. | ester, N. Y. kissed his sweetheart good-bye The ceremony occurred at noon in the | 22d after exchanging promises to be true, Privy council chamber of the palace, in the | ete wish his seging i Jor the P Bilippines Dlseeice o He Ser, putlber Of staten- | wooderaft, was assigned to Sa be men and the foreign diplomats, e arch- | i y ditches took the pr ee el Yefore 4 | and was in fifty-two engagements and skir- Less than three years ago Robert Mason, Tom Bailey, and Dick loafing tranquilly. | It was a relief after the glimpse of a stren- | made | She sat | emperor ve | on condition that nothing definite should ' be decided until the archduchess attained | her eighteenth birthday. | September. and the wedding was fixed for | the present month. Not a muscle of his face stirred, but that efucifis. { mishes while under Lawton’s command in The emperor's gifts to the Archduchess Elizabeth include securities valed at 320,- 000 pounds, ($1,600,000), a yearly allow- ance of 50,000 pounds, ($250,000), jewelry valued at 200,000 pounds ($1,000,000), a gold dinner service and several residences. Born September 1st, 1883, the Arch- duchess Elizabeth Marie was but five years cld when the tragic death of her father, the Crown Prince Rudolph, occurred. She was brought up by her mother, the widowed Belgian Princess Stephanie, at the imperial court, under the fostering care of the Em- peror Francis Joseph and the Empress Elizabeth. The assassination of her grandmother by means of a dastardly anarchist’s dagger at Geneva, befell the royal family in 1898. These circumstances bound together the aged Kaiser and the child of his only son in the closest affection, and after her moth- er married a second time, two years ago, hecoming the Countess Lonyay, the ties between the two have, it is said, been strengthened all the more by constant com- panionship. The Archduchess, before she came of age, last year, had already made her choice of a husband, and gained her grandfather’s con- sent to her betrothal to Prince Otho von | Windisch Gratz, for what is purely a love match, Prince Otho, though belonging to one of the most distinguished Austrian noble houses, being only a cadet of a junior branch and a sin:ple Uhlan lieutenant. The gave his consent to the marriage This was last Under the pragmantic sanction, by vir- tue of which, in 1723, the emperor Charles VI, settled the crown on his daughter, Maria Theresa, and her heirs, it became the rule that the Austro-Hungarian throne shall always descend to direct male heirs. The Archduchess Elizabeth could not, con- sequently, have succeeded in the sovereign- ty of the Austro-Hungarian empire, nor would she or her children have any claim except through the absolute failure of male heirs. The emperor has grandsons in the direct line, his younges’ daughter, the Archduchess Marie Valerie, who is married to the Archduke Francis Salvator, of Tus- cauy, being the mother of three sons, of whom the eldest is the Archduke Francis Charles, now nine years of age. On the death of the Crown Prince Rudolph, how- ever, the succession passed to the emperor's brother, on whose death, in 1896, his elder son, the Archduke Francis Ferdinand be- came heir presumptive. ? In the ordinary course of events the Arch- duke Francis Ferdinand will become the next Emperor of Austria, but when he made his morgapatic marriage with the Countess Chotek, in 1900, he renounced by solemn oath any claim to the throne on the part of his descendants by that marriage, and in all human probability the crown will descend to the Archduke Karl Franz Joseph, now iourteen years old, and the son of the emperor’s second nearest nephew the Archduke Otho Francis. Killed With a Sledge. St. Louis Business Man Murdered in a Bathing House. Robbery the Motive of the Crime—A Colored Man Employed in the Establishment Under Arrest— His Statement. A. Dean Cooper, of St. Louis, treasurer of the Graham Paper company, died as the result of injuries sustained in a mysterious manner while in the Vista Turkish bath establishment at 3518 Franklin street Thursday. William A. Strother, the col- ored man in charge of the bath house, who tells conflicfing stories about the affair, is under arrest, and a diamond ring worth $1,500 and a valuable pin belonging to Mr. Cooper have heen recovered from their hiding place in the cellar of the bath house. Mr. Cooper's injury consisted of a frac- tured skull. A sledge hammer, covered with blood, was also found in the cellar and taken possession of by the police. Strother made a statement to the police that about midnight a boy brought Mr. Cooper a note, which he refused to answer. The boy went away, and soon after a man and two women entered. When he re- turned from the cellar where he had gone to fix the fires, Strother says he found Cooper on the couch unconscious. Doctors operated on Mr. Cooper and re- moved pieces of bone that were pressing on his brain, but the injured man died with- out regaining consciousness. Mr. Cooper was the owner of the bath house where the assault was committed, bat it was not managed in his name. Mr. Cooper, who was interested in various lines of business, was considered one of the wealthiest men in St. Louis. The Widows of Presidents. The report made to the United States Senate favoring a pension of $5,000 per year to Mrs. McKinley, recites that Martha Washingion was given the franking privi- lege, while Louise C. Adams was accorded the some right by an act of Congress. The widow of William Henry Harrison receiv- ed $25,000, less any amount that had al- ready been paid on the salary of that year, together with the franking privilege. Dolly Madison was given the franking privilege, and Mrs. Polk received a pension of $5,000 year. ' Mrs. Taylor was given the franking privilege. Mrs. Taylor received a pension of $5,000, while Mis. Lincoln gota pension of equal amount, together with $25,000, less the amount that bad been paid on that year's salary of the President. She was also given the franking privilege. Mrs. Graut was given $5,000 annually and the franking privilege. Mrs. Garfield received $50,000, less the amount that had been paid on that year’s salary of the President. Special allowances of this kind also have been made to some of the widows of the Vice Presidents. Husband 18, Wife 16. Porter B. Moon, of Jersey Shore, aged 18 years, and Myrtle C. Austin, of Ebensburg, aged 16, eloped to Corning a few days ago and were married. The young lady while visiting at the Crawford house, Jersey Shore, met Moon, who is employed on the New York Central railroad. Landlord Letts, a cousin of the young lady, seeing the attention she was receiving, thought hest to send her home, but instead of going to Ebensburg she accompanied, it is said, her lover to Corning and the two were mar- ried by the Rev. W. H. Reese. | the islands. Owing to the uncertainty of | his location it was a difficult matter to | keep up his correspondence with home, and { during the last eighteen months letters al- { most ceased. During all this time Mason never doubted his sweetheart’s promises, and 1n every engagement carried her like- ness over his heart. Upon returning to Manila some months ago Mason received word from a compan- ion who enlisted with him that caused him to apply for a discharge and hurry home as fast as steam could carry him. Arriving unannounced at Woodhull Saturday morn- ing he heard for the first time that his sweetheart, whe had promised to remain true to him always, was to wed another that night in the Methodist church at Al- mond, her home. Procuring a horse, he set out for that place, and by hard riding through the snowdrifts, managed to reach the church door just as the ceremony started. He waited until the bride and groom reach- ed the altar, when forcing his way through the loungers at the door, he stalked down the aisle, his erect figure, bronze face and worn, mud-bespattered uniform the centre of all eyes. Miss Shepard, the girl who had pledged { herself to him before he sailed to war, | gave a startled ery and sank to the floor on her knees. His rival, who had made such successful love while he was facing the bolos and spears of the bushmen, started violently and had only partly 1ecovered when Mason, pushing forward, whispered a few words in the ear of the trembling bride and ordered the would be groom to leave the church. His refusal to do so caused Mason to draw his heavy army re- volver from its holster, and deliberately cocking it hie gave the groom two minutes by the clock in which to leave the build- ing. By this time the entire assembly was in an uproar, women weeping hysterically and men dropping down behind the benches to be out of range of stray shots. The groom, seeing the determined look upon the veteran's face, decided to take no chances, and muttering a few words hur- riedly left the building,after which Mason’s revolver went back into his pocket and order was again restored. The minister was about to dismiss the assembly when, after whispering a few more words to the bride and receiving her nod of assent, Mason asked the minister to continue the ceremony. In another min- ute the words were said that made Mason and his old sweetheart man and wife, alter which followed words of congratulation from the many old friends of the groom, who had not uutil that time recognized him. Sam Jones Attacks Potter. Says the Bishop will Soon Be Broadening the Commandnients. Evangelist Sam Jones, in a letter to an Atlanta (Ga) paper makes a vicious at- tack on Bishop Potter, of New York, for his attitude towards Prohibition. He charges that Bishop Potter represents no one but the ‘‘Four Hundred’’ of New York, preaches the doctrine of the voluptuary, seeks to broaden the Ten Commandments, and liberalize the moral law. The letter says :— “‘Bishop Potter, of New York City, isa great man; he'is all sorts of a man; he is everybody’s man. It is not because he is an Episcopalian that makes me say, what I say, but it is because of his views, so widely cirenlated, which, I am sure, the devil himself approves. ‘‘Bishop Potter, of New York. knows as little about us poor white people in Geor- gia as we care about him in New York. He runs with a different crowd and trains with a different gang. The good, God- fearing people of Georgia are for Prohibi- tion. and we don’t like the names he calle our pet theory, such as ‘impudent fraud and impudent failure.’ “The business of a minister of God in this world is to champion and fight for everything that’s right and to denounce everything that’s wrong. There is not a good man in Georgia who indorses the sen- timent of Bishop Potter, of New York- May Bishop Potter vaporize about educa. tion and transformation and so on but what good people of Georgia want is Prohibition. “I tell you, in New York, when they take a Bishop around with them, and dine him and wine him and stuff him and toast him, it doesn’t take him long to imbibe the views of wine-bibbers and gluttons and to preach the doctrine of voluptuaries from the platform. How long before the Bishop and his gang will be broadening the Ten Commandment and liberalizing the moral law so they wonld bave it read : ‘Thou shalt nct steal less than a million dollars. “Thou shalt not break the Sabbath. but ‘bend it double if there is money in it. ‘ ‘Thou shalt not have more than one wife at your home. ‘* ‘Thou shalt not covet, but get all you can get and keep all you get. ‘ *Thon shalt not he guilty of idolatry; worship the true and the living dollar.” ? ——Not many miles from Morrisdale lives a woman 57 years of age. She has reared a large family. She owus a good farm of 75 acres, has money in the bank and she could spend the balance of her life at ease. Last fall with theaid of a son she | prospected for coal on her farm and found a three foot vein. She opened a drift and developed the mine. She dug and loaded four and five tons a day sold it to farmers and people in the vicinity at five cents a bushel. In speaking about it to a friend she said she could load and run the coal out all right but she bated the mining; this part of the work was the most irksome because she had to lie down to mine. She does her own ploughing. She frequently walks to Philipshurg, a distance of ten miles, Sliver Causes Arm Amputation. Mus. Devillo Dexter, of Delmar, Tioga. county, several weeks ago ran a sliver info the middle finger of her right hand. The finger became so hadly affected that it had to be amputated. This did not stop the infection, and the other day the arm was amputated near: the elbow. Only a few months ago her husband lost the sight of an eye by being struck with a nail he was. driving. — Subcribe for the WATCHMAN