RR - the foot of a throne. Demorraic iat Bellefonte, Pa., November 13, 1903. ———————————————————————————————————— KEEP HUSTLING, You may strike a day or two When the world looks very blue, Keep bustling. Good hard work kills mighty few, Probably twill not hurt you, Keep hustling. If you have a willing hand, Orders you are sure to land, Keep hustling. If the merchant turns you down Do not leave him with a frown. Keep hustling. 1f “that draft’’ does not arrive Don’t you fret : you will survive, Keep hustling. — Business World. THE WOLF OF COYOTE HOLLOW. The first time Theodore Wolf beheld Coyote Hollow was on a hot forenoon after he had loped the length of Kernan’s Coulee, from the lower end of which the Hollow spreads out like the floor of a ballroom at To Theodore, as he looked, there came the heart-moving recog- nition that there lay a kingdom, which he, with his spotted cayuse for a war horse, had stumbled upon and could, by force of wit and activity, subdue to his rule. He had there come suddenly face to face with that deepest and most variable charm of the West—opportunity. As a youth of twenty-five, sent out to this northwestern corner of the desert to serve on a cattle ranch in a serious endeavor to recoup the losses of health that had fol- lowed his entrance as a rich man’s son into Cornell, Theodore had one by one discov- ered and fallen in love with the three graces of a new country,—freedom, oppor- tunity and a woman. First, he found that he could go as he pleased, and that so long as he rode bard on the task of bis choice, his health improved. Second, he saw men on all sides making and losing with easy grace, and soon felt the intoxication of a life which daily made rich men of adven- turers and brought conquests to the wide awake. His own education made him honors easy with fortune, and he was soon foreman for Dartford, an old-fashioned, narrow-minded cattleman, whose ranch was just south of Kernan City, whose range* was that desert where lay the big bend of the Columbia, and whose constant fear was the encroachment of irrigation and the day of fences. Third and last, Theodore had met that girl of the West who is born on the border, but, unhinder- ed by distance, is educated at a state uni- versity,and is less provincial than her town bred sister. That she was the daughter of Dartford; that Theodore’s people were urging him to drop his foremanship and re- turn to Cornell; and that Theodore believ- ed in irrigation as firmly as Dartford hated it, were mere incidents of an interesting situation. As Theodore drew rein at the lower end of Kernan’s Coulee and looked that first time on the shimmering flat of eight thou- sand desolate acres—a flat made more dreary by its repulsive name, Coyote Hol- low—his forgotten air castles, built in Cor- nell aronnd his reading on theoretic irriga- tion, sprang again before him. His pony’s hoofs struck on a shelf of rock from which a ragged trail led down fifty feet to the flat below. Behind him Kernan’s Coulee ran back like a gigantic drain hued out of the bordering basaltic cliffs which towered up like sky-scrapers on a long Broadway. At its upper end it was but a few feet above the boiling, rushing, full-bankedt Colum- bia, whose current was young from the snow-treasuring mountains. That Ker- nan’s Coulee had once been the course of the Columbia was evident. Now that river ran in a lower hed, and circled below the desert flat. But the man who should first ascend the Columbia to build an intake and lead a flume to Kernan’s Coulee, might turn the old river bed intoa modern irriga- tion canal, and the eight thousand acres of Coyote Hollow would blossom as a garden under the flow of water. Theodore Wolf was filled with wonder as he felt the possibilities of the thought, not only that 1t seemed so undeniably real,but that some one bad not seen it before him. Down yonder ran two lines of steel, where the railroad ran away till the eye lost it; why had not some follower of the railroad met this opportunity long ago? There were cattlemen all about; why had not one of these located the water right at the head of the Coulee, that he, when the old- fashioned ocattleman’s sun should set for- ever; might hecome an irrigation king ? Theodoresent his pony down to the flat and loped around the outer edge of the Coulee to the railroad station of Coyote Hollow. The station boasted of a detruoked freight car, which was used az a telegraph opera- tor’s room, a water tank aud a sidetrack, a cattle run and the agent’s house. . The cattlemen, in their local humor, called the detrncked car the ‘‘union depot.’” To this Theodore went with orders for certain cars wanted by old man Dartford to ship a con- signment of cattle. Then he rode back through the long Coulee and looked closely among the rocks at the upper end for a locator’s notice. There was none there. Next pay he posted a notice at the head of the Conlee and then went to Wenatchee to file his claim with the county recorder. By consulting the records he found that Coyote Hollow was state land, not being included in the railroad grant. The law allowed him to make a contract to buy at $1.25 an acre, one-tenth down and the balance on or before ten years at six per dent. He unhesitatingly drew $800 from his personal savings at the Wenatchee National Bank and made his first payment, thus becom- ing owner of eight thousand desolate acres which the cattlemen would have termed ‘‘a hell-and-gone snake hole.” «Theodore remained with old man Dart- ford till the spring loading was complete. Then he gave notice that he was going back East to see his folks. To Miss Dart- ford he gave notice also; that he was going East to persuade his father to join him in constructing the ditch and reclaiming the flat; that when he was king of that new kingdom of the desert, he should ask her to be its queen. Edva Dartford was as much moved by his plan as Theodore had been when he first looked, oclear-eyed and ready, at the opportunity itself. To her mind, irriga- tion was the natural destiny of the desert, and she had no sympathy with her father’s railings against the men who were to bring it about. Yet she knew that he would fight blindly and passionately against the fenced principality that would follow a great ditch across Coyote Holiow. . “I wish you success,” she replied to her *The words “ranch and “range” are used in ‘the far West correlatively. Range signifies open countrys a ranch is’ a home, which may consist ofone building or: several, with a small garden ‘or a Widély ‘diversified farm. 14 lover. ‘‘But, Theo! My father will fight vou day, night and Sunday. What shall I do then ?”’ *‘Help me convert him,”’ said Theodore, and that was his farewell. Plans which seem to be so destined for success that they become half realities to the enthusiastic plotter, become singularly cold and retiring when spread before strangers. It was with pain that Thso- dore found that his father smiled at his enthusiastic picture of a future for Coyote Hollow, but pat the plans gently by. The great ranges between the Rocky Mountains and the still further Western Cascades were a long way from New York, and the elder Wolf’s eyes were prone to gaze on Metropolitan stocks. But when Theodore, in desperation, sought out the president of the great transcontinental road whose rails split Coyote Hollow in twain, and laid his plan before the railway king, he found a friend. Said the king : ‘‘If water will run down Kernan’s Coulee, I'll lend you all you need to build your ditch.’” Then, seeing that others valued what his son bad found, the elder Wolf hastened to say that, if Theodore would go out West, again, sur- vey the line of the proposed canal and prove that water would run down hill in Ker- nan’s Coulee, he would himself finance the enterprise. But before going, Theodore carried his father to the railway magnate. The great man had, by his own efforts, builded an empire in the Northwest. He admired men who did things for them- selves. He admired Theodore at first sight for what he had done. Now, he entered into the conversion of Wolf, senior, as though the safety of his great railroad de- pended upon it. The president called for a map of his road, and, spreading it ona table, began the education of a New Yorker. “Eight thousand acres of iand can be re- claimed by a ditch twelve feet wide at the bottom, carrying a flow of water from three or four miles up the Columbia into the up- per end of Kernan’s Coulee. Granting that this oid Coulee has a slight down grade for its entire length, a natural earth- en ditch may be run in it with scrapers. “This ditch must deliver water to the high- est point of Coyote Hollow. Then the reclaiming of the whole flat becomes a mere matter of building lateral ditches here and there on the flat as needed. This big flume to the upper end of Kernan’s Coulee will cost $50,000 at least. The ditch down the Coulee will cost much less. Your son has made a contract for all that land at $1.25 an acre, or $10,000 all told. He has ten years in which to pay for this. He can sell every acre in two years after water runs on that flat.”’ “Is it possible !’”” exclaimed the elder Wolf. “Those eight thousand acres are worth at least $100 each the day water runs out of the lower end of the Coulee,’’ continued the king. ‘‘My railroad has an immigra- tion department that will help get settlers. But that’s not all. Eight thousand acres will support a good-sized town, in which half-acre home lots will sell for $500, and in the town site proper for much more. So, instead of the eight thousand acres in Coyote Hollow becoming worth $800,000, you must add the increased value for the town site. Your son has cut the trail of a proposition that is worth $2,000,000 if it is worth a cent.”’ Then the elder Wolf went home to figure on the wonders of irrigation, while Theo- dore went West to become a surveyor. While Theodore was in the East two, people watched for his return with eager eyes. Edna Dartford heard daily the rumors which reached Kernan City con- cerning Theodore’s purchase of Coyote Hol- low and his securing of the water rights of Kernan’s Coulee. Naturally, the town was divided on so sensational a step in local improvement. The: news had not gained circulation till Theodore had gone East. Then rumor shook itself and ‘became very busy. His people were very rich,said rumor, and he would return with ample means to build his ditch. Then the cattle- men roared, and said that if be interfered with the spring grazing of their herds on Coyote Hollow they would send the Stranglers after him. The railroad would build a town where the ‘‘unnion depot’ stood, said rumor, and a wise man ought to get in early. Then the speculators rush- ed off to the recorder, and found that Theo- dore had been there before them. Thus, in his absence, he became both bated and envied. And a certain spirited girl found herself hot and cold between the short- gighted prejudices of an ignorant father and the glowing word pictures of a boom- believing country editor. But another human heart beat warm for Theodore’s return. An Indian boy from the near-by reservation came daily to the ‘‘anion depot’’ to watch for the arrival of the west-bound overland. Little Wolf had learned much that was usefal from Theodore, and had adopted himself to be the White Wolf's little red brother. The Indians on the reservation had many miles of small irrigation ditches, and Theodore had taught Little Wolf to be a stick-stuck man and make new ditches for the tribe. The Indians had been grateful to Theo-. dore Wolf for this, and had named him Digging Wolf, a title at which the irriga- tion-bating cattlemen laughed in derision. Now that rumors were flying about that the cattlemen were on the trail of Digging Woll, the Indians had sent Little Wolf to meet the train and warn their benefactor. Theodore stopped in Spokane long enough to purchase surveying ivstruments and a camping outfit and to engage two com- petent assistants. With these men and ac- couterments he proceeded to Coyote Hol- low, where the watchful Little Wolf met him at the car steps, and delivered his warning. Theodore listened attentively, and then sent the Indian to the Dartford ranch with a note to Edna. Then he gave his atten- tion to pitching camp at the bottom of the Couiee to securing ponies and preparing to commence the survey. Edna’s reply really disturbed the young man. She wrote that he must not come to see her except by day, and then only with friends, so bitter was her father toward him. She feared her father would provoke a quarrel solely for the excuse of making Theodore a target for some sneak of a cow- boy. No cattle owner could afford to get the state of Washington after him by com- mitting murder; but for a little cash in hand a man might be found to take a shot at a cattleman’s enemy and then fade from the scene and be safe on other ranges. Next day Theodore and his two assistants rode to the Dartford ranch and were wel- comed hy Edna. of Indians hovered near, unbeknown to Theodore. Old man Dartford was sarly. ‘I hear you're fixin’ to play hell with your irrigation ditches,”’ said he to Theo- dore. ‘‘That fool dad of yourn must want to lose his money a lob.”’ The younger man had not worked in a cattle conntry three years to be frightened by a man’s temper. He merely replied in kind. ; J “I’ll make more money out of Coyote Hollow in two years than you have in all your life. And when I’ve done it, I'll Little Wolf and a band | give you a chance to sell your cattle and come into the game.”’ ‘*When I sell them cattle,’”’ said Dart- ford, ‘‘it won’t he on your account.’’ ‘‘All right,’’ said Theodore. ‘Bat I ex- pect to begin fencing Coyote Hollow next April. If you are looking for any grazing there next spring, you had better change your plaps.”’ The old cattleman sneered. ‘‘Fence hell! You won’t live to fence your own grave.”’ **Mr. Dartford,”’ said Theodore, looking into the sneering eyes. ‘‘I have bought Coyote Hollow from the state of Washing- ton. Itis my land. If you come on there after I say ‘keep off,” then you become an outlaw, just as I would be by coming here after you bad told me to keep off. And when I get ready to fence, I shall not worry about any disgruntled cattlemen.”’ **Threaten me, do ye?’ shouted the oid man. ‘“‘Think you can bluff old Dartford in bis own house? Git t’hell outter here, and don’t ever show up here again.” ‘‘Certainly,’’ said Theodore,and smiling- ly took his departure. Next day Edna sent him a photograph, and the big, broad shouldered cowboy who carried it asked Theodore for a job. ‘“You-all calls the old gentleman down so prompt,’’ said he, ‘‘that we boys figure you makes him some sour. May be I can help some in this stick-stuck game, and kind of bea guard around camp. The boys who used to ride the range under you likes your nerve. We don’t know this irrigation game, but we aims to see fair play a lot. May be if you organize your camp some warlike you scares trouble away at the jump.” Theodore was pleased to bear from his former comrades in this manner, and glad- ly employed the cowboy to bethe fourth member of the surveying party. In another day they were ready, and be- gan at the lower end of the Coulee. If became evident at once that the bed of the Coulee rose slightly. In three days they reached the upper end, and Theodore wired his father : ‘Water will run down hill through Ker- nan’s Coulee.” To which the father replied : ; ‘‘Congratulations. Draw on me for what you need. Push the work."’ With ample money to his credit at the Wenatchee National Bank, Theodore put three engineering parties at work above the Coulee to run the grade and plat the work up to the falls, at the crest of which he proposed to build the intake. Even in carrying the water this short distance there were difficulties to be overcome which necessitated every form of ditch construc- tion except tunneling; namely, earth work, flaming, pipe line and bridging. While the surveying and platting were progress- ing along the high bank of the Columbia above the railroad, Theodore built a sub- stantial camp with houses for all the men, animals and tools that would be needed for the construction work. In the main house Theodore had his room, which was both sleeping-room and office. Here the figuring was'done. To Little Wolf, who came frequently to ask about the progress of the work, it seemed right that a photograph of Edna. full length in white, should stand over the desk. The figures that Digging Wolf made under the guidance of the white girl’s spirit must come right. Thus, one day, Little Wolf was not surprised to find Digging Wolf and his engineers in high spirits over the completed plans. Theo- dore called him to look at the drawings. ‘‘Here, Little Wolf ! Come and see your white brother’s map. We will build a flame around that butte, high up—see, on my map? Then a pipe across the ravine— a pipe in which water runs down one side and up on the other. Then more flame, over this bridge and a ditch on down to the Coulee. When the geese fly north next spring, Little Wolf, we will have water running on Coyote Hollow.”’ “Water. Good,’ said the Indian. Then he thought a moment. ‘“Water run up hill, Digging Wolf ?”’ Yes, in a pipe.”’ “What makes it ?"’ Little Wolf looked at Edna’s pictureand wondered if she were a medicine squaw to do this. Theodore picked upa spirit level and handed it to the Indian. “Tell me, Little Wolf, why the spirit level bubble always goes up hill.” ‘‘Because the water in the glass with the spirit bubble is heavy, while the bubble is light. The heavy water goes to the bhot- tom and pushes the light bubble up.” ‘“Then,’’ said Theodore, ‘‘if I make a long glass tube and bend it near the mid- dle so as to make one side shorter than the other, and set the ends straight up and pour water into the long side and you pour water into the short side till the two wa- ters meet at the bottom in the bend of the tube, what would happen ?’’ ‘I see. The heavy water would push the light water up.” “That is the way we build our pipe across the ravine. The end next the river is higher than the end at the mouth of the Coulee. The water running down the long side pushes the water up and out of the short side.” Little Wolf thought a moment, to fix this miracle in his mind. Then he smiled at the thought of the Indians on the res- ervation and what they would say when he told them that Digging Wolf could make water run up hill ! The completion of the surveys establish- ed Theodore as a bona fide land baron. His call for workmen to commence grading in the Coulee and the erecting of flames, bridges and pipe line was the signal for a boom in Kernan City. By the middle of September construction was begun, and Theodore began selling land under a guarantee to deliver water on Coyote Hol- low by the tenth day of the following March. He gathered to his camp many of the men who had worked under him on the ranges. Their loyalty was unquestion- ed, and each one was paced in charge of a seotion of the work. Besides their wages and board he promised each of these sub- captains of industry a twenty-acre ranch at its cost to him—$1.25 per acre—with wa- ter right free, on condition that they rush the work to completion by the tenth day of February. As the fall season wore on, the work as- sumed proportions that astonished even the sneering fringe of cattlemen, who hung along the edge of the wheat fields that pushed out from the western base of the Rockies and left the cattlemen sovereignty only of the semi-arid desert that lay west- ward to the Cascades. The progress of Wolf’s enterprise was not so alarming in itself, since eight thousand acres was a mere dot on the range. But the enthu- siasm with which it was greeted by the merchants of Kernan City, by the in-pour- ing strangers and, lastly, by the railroad, was alarming. The success of this enter- prise would mean the undertaking of more such, each of which would fence the cattle- men from a part of the great, free range. A few of the cattle raisers saw the inevit- able and came to . Theodore Wolf, made contracts to buy irrigated land, and then made ready to sell their herds in the spring. A few sat down 1n sullen defiance, and gave out that they would run Wolf off the range ‘‘come spring grass.”’ Others were jealous of Theodore because they them- selves had not thought of irrigating that flat, and declared that ‘‘some one ought to shoot the d——tenderfoot and jump his water right a lot.”’ The intake was built substantially, and Little Wolf was set to guard it. He pitch- ed his lodge there, and felt that he was highly honored. The half mile of plank flame that was to carry the water to the edge of the ravine was finished in time to test the pipe line, and flood the remaining flames, before the frosts of mid winter caus- ed a shutting off at the intake. The holi- days found the woodwork completed, and only the stubborn grading in the Coulee to be finished. January drew to a close, with the work well along and Theodore’s men bent all their energies to complete the grading by the tenth day of February. But the stub- born ground grew harder, for the day’s rain of a winter thaw soaked into it and the night's cold froze it. A few yards of grading remained when the sun went down over the western edge of the Coulee on the evening of February 9th. **You have all day to-morrow to com- plete it,’’ said Theodore to his subcaptains. *‘If you do not strike gravel or a crack 1 the floor of the Coulee, you will win. If you do, I may have to offer vou three days of grace. I had the intake opened to-day and the flumes are filled and running over. If you do your work you will see water on the Hollow to-morrow.”’ The tired men were greatly cheered by that unexpected concession, and went to their weary beds mentally rehearsing every step of to-morrow’s work. Theodore went to his room and sat down before the photo- graph—her photograph--for a smoke be- fore retiring. How often had he sat there and faced unexpected problems in the work; how much of an inspiration her counterfeited presence had heen. To-mor- row! He closed his eyes and dreamed of the scene. A dog barked shrilly outside and a band of coyotes off on the Hollow answered with their shrill ery. Theodore heard the soft, rapid pounding of a pony’s hoofs in the soil. Then came a cry : : “Wolf! Wolf !”? Theodore recognized the voice of his In- dian brother, Little Wolf, and sprang to the door. “Digging Wolf will call all his men and arm them!” cried the Indian, drawing rein. ‘‘Then he will go to his wooden pipe which is buried in the ravine. The coyotes who drive the Injun from the good land— the white covotes who snarl when the Wolf builds a great ditchb—are coming to destroy 5? Theodore was frozen with horror at the red man’s words. ‘Digging Wolf bad better take the pic- ture of the girl and run. Little Wolf will call the men and lead them to the wooden pipe. Then, when the coyotes come, Little Wolf will lead the fight.”’ Edna! How that thought cut him. He grasped the iron and struck the great tri- angle which hung at the ranch door, and all Coyote Hollow resounded with its clamors. Half clad men came pouring out of the bunk houses, and all the yellow coyotes for miles around wailed in fright at the noise. *‘Good, Digging Wolf, good !"’ shouted the Indian. ‘‘Now listen to Little Wolf. It is thirty miles around the reservation to the south. Let ten men go to the wooden pipe with rifles to meet any stray coyotes. Little Wolf will ride to the Injuns and bid them drive back those coyotes, who call themselves men, and make them ride around. They must pass here to reach the pipe. But they cannot reach here before daylight. Little Wolf will follow them and build signal fires of sage brush that Digging Wolf may know how fast they ride. Then let the men put the plow again to the ground. If water runs on Coyote Hollow when they come, then these coy- otes who ride on horses dare not destroy the wooden pipe of my brother, the Digging Wolf.” Theodore recognized the value of the In- dian’s plan. Water once flowing on Coy- ote Hollow established his water right, and any man destroying his flume then became subject to the criminal laws of the state, and Theodore could recover damages from the raiding cattlemen. If he could finish his ditch by daylight, the cattlemen would not dare attack it. Turning to Little Wolf he threw his right band into the air, and with one word set the night’s work in mo- tion : “Go 1m The men aroused from their deep sleep by this night alarm, would bave preferred to take their rifles and give battle to the raiders. But Theodore’s sharp commands to harness and to push the final grading brought them to a sense of their responsi- bility to him. They groaned, swore and obeyed. There was no moon, but a cloud- less sky allowed every star to lend its aid, and men could see. Theodore sent ten men to guard the pip- ing and intake. Three men were sent to open the end of the flume and allow water to flow into the ditch at the head of the Coulee. The remaining leaders divided the lahorers and soon had the horses bar- nessed and clanking off toward the Coulee. Theodore roused his Chinamen and order- ed that a plenty of coffee be made and brought to the Coulee. The work was hard on tized backs and smarting eyes. Hardly bad the first six- teen horse plow marked a furrow to the end of the Coulee when Theodore saw, off to the southward, a signal fire. The clash had come, and the Indians had won. The raiders must now ride south and double the reservation. He urged his men to work carefully and not waste their strength. A plow broke, and men dragged it to the shop to struggle with it under a poor light. A horse fell, and there was delay in get- ting the creature out of the tangled straps. Another plow struck the basaltic founda- tion of the Coulee and disclosed a crack. That meant planking. And off a bit to the south was a second signal fire. The scrapers laid the rock floor bare, and the planks were brought to cover it. The soil was heaped up on both sides, and laid a foot deep on the planks. Then came the creeping snake of water finding its way for the first time down the long ditch in the bed of the Coulee. Theodore followed is, fearing at each foot of advance that it would find a bed of gravel or a crack in the rock beneath and disappear in the thirsty earth. Dead south now there was a third signal fire. But the water came on and on, till it overtook the graders, and until the horses splashed in it as they dragged their empty scrapers along to follow the plows, If no more planking were needed, the water would reach the gap and pour over it by daylight. That would complete the water right. They could take their time about subditches and laterals across the Hollow. Look—a fourth signal fire! The raiders wo CAI had turned the bottom of the reservation and were riding eastward ! Men and beasts settled down to a strug- gle that seemed broken only by the flash of each new signal fire which marked the ap- proach of the determined raiders. Theo- dore paced the remaining distance at each new signal, and felt that she race would be close. Just as a signal flashed up, show- ing that the raiders were on the lower end of Coyote Hollow and riding north toward the ranch, Theodore ordered the horses to the stables, and sent the men to get their rifles and shovels. Slowly they scooped the soft volcanic ash away from the advanc- ing water and led it in a small stream to the gap. Just as the first streaks of day touched Coyote Hollow, a thin stream trickled over the shelf, grew to a flashing cascade and then to a full flow, which tumbled off the shelf to the flat in an audi- bie, continuous roar. The tired men threw down their shovels and lay flat to rest. Theodore, the light of victory in his eye, went from man to man with a hand clasp \ and a word of congratulation. Soon the dust of the approaching raiders, who were making for the lower end of the Conlee to ride along it to the upper end, could be seen, and he called his men to sit beside him. At the mouth of the Coulee, rifles across their knees, the picked shots sat in a row and waited. The less nervy men were sent behind rocks, over which they rested their rifles. The raiders were riding slowly, for their pouies were spent. They came on steadily, passed the ranch house and halted before the waiting men at the Coulee. The lead- er was surprised when his horse stopped suddenly and drank from a pool at his feet. Looking up, he saw water flowing fcom the shelf. Looking again, he caught the glint of many rifles along the rocks. He was sarprised. as he had planned to pass the camp before the men were up. Theodore was equally surprised to recog- nize the leader as his future father-in-law, old man Dartford. ‘“You don’t suppose we’re goin’ to call that d—— puddle runnin’ water, do yer ?”’ shouted Dartford, sullen even under Theo- dore’s rifles. “Your cayuse knows it,’’ replied Theo- dore, and the men behind the rocks laugh- ed derisively. “Well, let’s see who can get to yomr d—— pipe first,”’ and the leader swung his cayuse around toward the river. ‘“‘Halt !”” commanded Theodore. The raiders heard the cocking of rifles behind the rocks, and stopped. Little Wolf, riding bard with a small band of red men, swung up to the pool and halted, facing the raiders. Raising his rifle, he covered old man Dartford. ‘‘Coyote ! Snake! Get down — get down!” The old cattle owner glanced from Little Woll’s rifle to the gleaming muzzles in the rocks, and then slid to his feet. ‘‘Get down and drink !”’ Slowly, cursing in his fary, but fearful of resistance, the cattleman knelt and drank. The voice of Little Wolf rang out clear and defiant : “What is i6?"’ The old man choked out something be- tween an oath and a groan. ‘‘What’s that ?’’ cried Little Wolf again. ‘Water !”” yelled the exasperated cattle- man. Then realizing that be bad publicly acknowledged Theodore Wolf’s water right, he raised his clenched hands above his head aud swore. But the laughter of Theodore’s men rang out among the rocks, alike drowning the sound of this puny man’s wrath and proclaiming that hence- forth a Wolf would be master of Coyote Hollow.—By Joseph Blethen in The Pil- grim for November. Webster’s Blue Suit. Daniel Webster went to college in a home spun suit, of which probably every thread was carded, spun and woven by his mother's band from the wool of their own sheep. It was a dyed-in-the-wool suit,and the color was indigo blue, the old New England color. In the south itis butter- nut, but though our Yankee grandmothers knew all about what butternut bark would do and the subtle power for the slate color that lay in sumach berries and bark of white maple and various dyes that root and flower, bark and leaf could be made to vield, through the agency of vitriol and copperas to ‘‘set’’ them fast, the universal standby, was the blue potpar excellence the ‘‘dye pot’’ that stood in the chimney cor- ner of every Kitchen worth naming. So Webster was fitted out in indigo blue from 3ollar to ankle—unbecoming for his swart skin—and set off grand and sophomoric. Before reaching Hanover there came on one of those drenching rains, which, like the Scottish mists, wet a man to the skin. The suit held its own (for has not indigo blue been ‘‘warranted fast’’ since first indigo was heard of ?), but it had parted with enough so that Daniel, too, was dyed blue from head to foot. Daniel Webster had a liberal stratum of sentiment in his make up, and for some reason this color of his young manhood became his favorite wear through life. He wore blue coats to his dying day. If anyone ever saw bim in a different one the fact has not been put on record. When a lad Daniel Webster was one day called up by his teacher for punishment. His hands happened to be very dirty. Knowing this, he wet the palm of his right hand, wiping it off on the side of his panta- loons. ‘“‘Give me your hand,” said the teacher, very sternly. Out went the right band, partially cleansed. The teacher looked at it a moment and said : ‘‘Daniel, if you will find another hand in this room as filthy as that I will les you go for this time.’” Instantly came from behind his back the left hand. ‘‘Here it is,”’ was the ready reply. ‘‘That will do,’ said the teacher; ‘‘for this time you can take your seat, sir!” Daring Robbery at Altoona. Miss Ruth Clark, the bookkeeper at Con- tractor Jobn Vipond’s office in Altoona, was using the telephone Wednesday, when she heard a noise behind her. Glancing around, she beheld a masked man lolding a revolver at her head. He demanded to know where the money was kept. She indicated a satchel on the table, and he knocked her down, sying a towel around ber head to prevent outery. As she fell she screamed. Ired Banker to whom she was talking over the telephone, heard the scream, and notified the polize. They found Miss Clark unconscious on the floor and the satchel, which contained $300 in pay envelopes, gone. The robber left no clue. The office is on one of the busiest thoroughfares in Altoona. This is the second time Miss Clark has been a robber’s victim. Less Expensive. ‘‘He said he’d rather face father than elope.”’ ‘‘And what did you say ?"’ ’ “I said that father would rather have us elope.’’—Cleveland Plain’ Dealer. Modern Walled City. Concrete Construction to Protect Galveston's Homes. To Ward of the Bay's Waters. A Three-Mile Barrier, Which will Prevent any Recurrence of the Awful Disaster Experienced by that Community. As a result of the terrible Galveston dis- aster of September 8th, 1900, which was attended by the destruction of thousands of lives and much property, that enter- prising city to-day is buildingan immense sea wall, which not only should prevent the recurrence of such a calamity, but also bring confidence for the future to its com- mercial success. The corner-stone of the immense undertaking was laid on Febru- ary 23rd of this year and the actual work begun on March 12th. When completed, the work will present a solid concrete wall, 17 feet high, along the Golf front, for a distance of three miles. Of this nearly 6000 feet have already been completed. THE WALL'S CONSTRUCTION. The wall is not of the same thickness at the top and bottom,but is built more like a basin, and will offer the best resistance to the water. Thus while the top of the wall is only five feet thick, the base is 16 feet, the whole extending in a curve. Riprap occupies 27 feet in front of the wall. As the right of way adopted called for a strip 150 feet wide the entire length of the route, the balance behind the wall is to be filled to a level with the proposed new grade of the city. The mile of wall already com- pleted has heen examined by experts, who pronounce it as one of the finest projects of its kind in the world. HOW THE WALL IS BUILT. More clearly to understand the various features of construction it may be said that the work is divided into five phases, as fol- lows: First, driving the round piling foundation; second, driving the sheet pil- ing; third, laying the concrete foundation; fourth, placing the riprap protection in- front of the wall proper. The round pil- ing varies in length from 40 to 44 feet. It is driven to the clay stratum, and this var- ies in depth below the surface along the beach. Soundings were made along the entire length of the right of way to ascer- tain the exact length of piling required to reach the clay. The round piling is driven in rows of four and three feet apart the en- tire length of the wall. Upon this found- ation, is placed the concrete foundation three feet thick. The driving of the round piling is the first work; then comes the driving of the sheet piling. The latter is driven out side of the round piling, or on the Gulf side, board to board, the same as a closed board fence, and serves as a protection for the round piling behind it. Following be- hind the steam pile-driver comes the small mixing machine. This machine mixes the concrete for the base of the wall. All the material used in the concrete is loaded di- rect from the cars into the mixing machine, which mixes the rock, cement, sand and water, and then distributes the mixture in- to the mould, where it dries and hardens. The big mixing machine and the small mixing machine are operated on the same principle, the only difference being that the big machine feeds the concrete into the moulds for the wall proper, while the small machine feeds the concrete into the moulds for the base of the wall, which is three feet thick, and, of course, the same width as the wall—16 feet. BREAKING THE FORCE OF THE WAVES. After the piling foundation and the con- crete foundation or base have been finished the riprap is placed in front of the wall be- fore the wall is put up. The riprap consists of granite rocks weighing from 200 to 1000 pounds each. They are piled three feet high for 27 feet outside the wall. This is intended as a farther protection for the foundation of the wall in breaking the force of the waves. In time this apron of riprap will gradually sink and serve as a double protection for the piling foundation behind it. After the piling and concrete foundations are finished and the riprap placed outside comes the construction of the wall itself. The big mixing machine, with a capacity of 250 cubic yards a day, is moved along on railroad tracks. From cars loaded with crushed rock and sand the big plant is fed. Cement and water are added. The revol- ving receptacle soon mixes these materials, and has the concrete ready for use. The concrete is dumped into skids and hoisted over to the top of the mould, and then dumped into it. These moulds are simply wooden hox affairs, built in the shape of the wall. After the concrete has been tamped and dried the framework,or mould, is removed and used again for the mould- ing of another section. Five railroad tracks are used variously in the construction of the wall. FILLING BEHIND THE WALL. Back of the wall the right of way pur- chased will be filled to a level with the top of the wall. On top of this 100-foot strip a 10-foot sidewalk and 40-foot driveway will be constructed, and the remaining poréion planted in Bermuda grass. It is proposed to build a railway along the out- side of the concrete top of the wall and to ‘construct a double driveway some distance on the outside of the wall. It is expected that the whole affair, in- cluding the construction of the wall, the filling behind the wall and the sidewalk and driveway improvement, will cost $1,- 500,000. $ He Wanted Bare Facts. There are two members of the Alfred Moseley Commission who have ideas of their own about American children. After luncheon the other day several of the dis- tinguished Englishmen were in the draw- ing room with some of their friends. In the group was a portly English gentle woman whose crest bears a coronet. There was also an American child, dressed by its American mother according to her notion of the latest English style. The hoy’s plump little legs were bare to the knees and a kilt covered his full kniokerbockers. Perched on a high chair, little Reginald bad his kilt pulled far over his knees. ‘‘Raise your kilt and let me see your pretty little limbs,’’ remarked the portly lady, with an amiable smile, The boy, trained to obedience, stood up and did as bid. Then, still holding his kilt and eying the portly lady from head to foot, he retorted : ‘‘Now, let’s see yours.’ Don’t Drive Her Home. The lady bug is man’s friend and should be protected. ‘‘With their little red wrap- pers decorated with black polka dots, the ladybugs are gay and attractive members of the insect world,’’ says the Scientific American, ‘They are always man’s friend, and get most of their living by preying on the destructive soft bodied plant lice, the most common of which is the green aphis, commonly found on house plants and rose bushes. The larvae of the ladybug also lives principally upon insects destructive to garden and field crops.”