| ft trom the way that tin horn | with this supper money. No Eee | ViCUDS. 1 begin to fear that Bellefonte, Pa., November 7, 1913. THE COLOGNIZING OF KANSAS. [BY REX BEACH.) to beat a farv gume,” said Kink, | “apd that's with an ax. I've! tried them all, and | never bad BO success but the oncet.” “Did you ever break the bunk,” 1 inquired. “1 did—with a stick of dynamite.” We were putting che final touches to the last cleanup, blowing and weighing the peid, Kink drying the wet dust and rewoving the black sand by blowing it iu a scoop. while 1 at- tended to the scales. Mrs, Martin had gone to town for the mall, so we had full chauce to adventure whither we chose, aud our fancies led us idly into the past. “The play come up like this,” be con- tinued. “I crow-hops into Tularos one day. spurning all things sordid and trivial, for | bave $400 of the realm, eight months of a thirst and a spirit- ual cordiality for emotion and stimu- lus. | am that drawed and haggard with onwee that the bartender re- marks it. | eee but one way | **What's doing In the way of epi sodes and distractions of mind in this camp? says |. i * ‘Nothing,’ says he, ‘except faro and roulette and stud poker.’ ““Them devices is pueryle and | meager. | want something vigorous | and wan's size, something to turn my | liver over [I've ben dead eight months. Ain't you got no opery | house or Iyuchings or ragtime or | feuds? ! **No.' says he. ‘This here camp is | sure a sylvau refuge for the jaded. | There ain't even been a sheep herder or a chink massacred since old man | Stubbs bad the treemors, and now | that be's took the cure the future | books dark and unepgaging. There's | nothing but them mercenary gambling | games.’ *l nosed around for an hour, but I | never see such a stupefied camp, and, | being that bulged out with hunger for | emergencies, | am forced agin the | green cloth to save my mental bal- | ance. | **What's the limit to this snare? I asks of the invalid In the operating | chair, having found the layout “*A dollar,’ says he. | “ ‘Being twenty-eight years old, with | much of my life's work still undone, I | ain't got time to dribble along that | a-way,’ says |. ‘| Intend to annex | your bank roll quick and spend it be- ! fore the coin goes out of date or the | pictures Is wore off of the bills, so if | you've got a hundred hid out any- | where I'll roll you for it all in a lump.’ | “He grones into the drawer, listless ' and feeble, but collects a hundred up | into a pile and deals the cards. | lose | the first turn. He's setting sideways | in bis cbair and don't even onfurl his legs. i *“I'bat fluke only serves to postpne | the evil day for you,’ says I. *Turn them fer another buundred' Again I | lose. i **l had figgered on cleaning you up, | hitting you a belt with the surcingle | aud letting you go before this, but I don’t begreteh the waste of time. You | alm to belp we get some enthusiasms | out of life, don't your | appreciate | your co-operation. Now | got you. | Let ber go. “1 coppers the bullet and lets the filly run open for u hundred each. He pushes out the top card and the next | two lays queen, uve. He drags in the | Hi sport will begretch a grub stake to my tem ain't bad its Gill of excitations er. | * ‘What do you mean? *‘Um-m?” says I. “While | am looking about the store 1 spies some pea soup sticks. Ever seen ‘em? They are split peas ground up like sawdust and in greased pauper, about eight inches long by uu inch in diameter. They look jest like ca'tridges of giant powder—same size, some color and everything. They're mighty handy to pack on a trip. All you do is break off a piece | and boil it up. I've et cords and oceans of it. | have 20 cents left, and 1 buy one soup ca'tridge: also about four inches of fuse. * ‘What time does No. 10, the east- bound accommodation, pull out? I in- quires of the man as | leaves, “ “Ten o'clock.’ says he. “‘Tm-m! says I. At 945 1 stam- pedes into the gambling joint, which is filled like a spade Gush. My bair is mussed up, my collar open, and my eyes sort of riled and locoed. 1 stand around for a few minutes roting queer, twitching my muscles and lick- ing my lips. nervous, till | see that the | whole room bas spotted my dishybilly. Then | edges over to the galaxy at the faro table, where my dyspeptic crook Is taking good money away from some punchers. **Gimme a light,’ says | to one of ‘em, and when 1 have it | continues to the dealer: “'Do you still hunger for excite ment? **1 smacks my lips over it,’ says he. And his eye is on me, cold as a rat- tier, while he slips his hand into the gun drawer. **Well, bere it is!’ 1 yells, yanking j out the roll of pea soup, with the fuse hanging to it. | touches it off with the blazing match, amd it begins to sizzle. “*We'll all go up fu a bunch? 1 screams in the tones of a busted tug whistle, giving a laugh Hke the rav- ings of John McCullough, that I heard in a phonygraph once. However, the dramatic polish of them wmerriments Koes unheeded, because the crowd is moved by one uncommon impulse, and | the sound of their hoofs is like the roar of thunder. Noise busted out of them cowmen ‘like they'd blowed off a cylinder head. They didn’t holler, but | horrid discord just pizened the air. “In a gun fight a man can hide back of the bar or craw! under the stove or into the neck of a beer bottle if he's | scared enough, but sech protective stratagems is wholly vain agin dyna- O37 hard earned savings of my last four | ~ months without n symptom of joy iu | bis eye. Then wheu | sets back my | chair he yawns and says: “‘If you happen futo anything that wliil bust this monotony lemme know. I'm most dead.’ “Naturally | am somewhat para- lyzed at having my anticipations mire down this a-way inside of three min- utes. Yes, | am left at the post; and. being young, | am prone to anger. | frisks myself for loose change where with to continue the enrnage, while my indignities rise up in my nose, but 1 am disappoisted. | am let our com- plete, thinks |. till | find a lone twen- ty dollar gold plece iu my vest pocket a8 | gees out the door. | turus around » “*Here! You overlovked this one,’ says 1. and 1 throws it af him as bard as | can. Then | hikes out to the rail. road track and sets ou a handcar, In- venting synougms for the worst words 1 knowed ‘T'nlk about blues, | am the dumanp wiggle stick. “It's along about dark when | ex- hanst all the bad unmes in three lan ®uages and ecall the fact that | ain't et none since morning. | goes back to the gambiing room nud braces Mr. Dealer. ¢ *‘I'm as holler as a gun bar',’ says 1. He hauds out a dollar, looking sour and growing, without even the compli- mepts = the seasou. The reluctant way be does it offends me, but | swal- Jers my pride for an appetizer and ambles Into a grocery store across the way to buy sp ontres of crackers and cheese; alsc a salad course of baloony sausage. After I'd substituted my own for the baloony skin | feel better. Having bad the feast of reason, | crave the tlow of soul. | hunger for the poets, so | eat a pound of French mixed candies with verses on ‘em. “‘Are you the sport that lost the $400 this afternoon? asks the grocery creature, full of prying indecencies. “*No, sir; | am the isospondylous, malacopterygian sucker who done so. Why? * ‘Well, nothing: only that's a brace game.’ “*A brace? says 1. “ ‘Sure. It's a pheny box.’ “iWwe'll all go up in a bunch!’ | screams.” ’ mite. It appeared like everybody got a fair, honest start, because they all run a dead heat to the door, where they met and wedged, then clawed their way out into the night and far away. As for the dealer, a cold draft fanned my artificially fevered brow from the window through which he had departed. He ran plum out of town, wearing the window sush for a necktie. Not a soui was left to tell the tale. *1 scooped off the bank roll and step- ped to the back door. There was con- siderable currency Iying on the crap table, and silver glittered on the wheel, but | passed them by. it was not for me. | had busted the bank and was content. For all | knew the other games was op the square, and mine was only a mission of vengeance Five minutes later | climbed Into a side door Pullman on No. 10 just as she pulled out from the water tank Long about daylight a brakey collect: ed $2 from me. You see, it's & custom out there for to charge the blanket stiffs a regular tariff, “What's a blanket stiff? Why, he's a half hobo that travels with his bed- ding and is 'ristocratic in his predilec- tions for box cars instead of riding a brake beam. Likewise he cavils at the blind baggage. Well, I'm jest get- ting fixed to count my money when we pull into a siding In the foothills and stop. 1 hear a voice outside, * ‘Whoa, Balaam! “I see the head of a burro looking In the car door, Inquiring and sleepy. Somehow | allus want to laugh when I look a burro in the face, he's that simple and unassuming and ‘Have. “'Um-m! says 1. 'l might 'a’ knowed | you-used-Plum's-soap’ looking, but 1 FEES i Eg : g § % : g z F { : 3 i : fille tpgiierifnl Feboieaiiiiny i” sete Hi Bre. regia sieiieResatsit g 5 eis § g ; 4 & i f 4 . Lh if i “*How far you going? says he. “‘Eund of the division,’ Mike an- “ ‘Two dollars apiece!’ says Mojave. ‘I don't like your classifications, for Balaam ain't a mule nor I ain't a burro.’ “All right. Call him a mocking bird, only give me $4. **1 ain't got iv’ “*What! Well, get out or this car. G'wan, now, before | throw you out. What you mean anyhow, crawling in here broke? “Mr. Brakeman 's some wrathy, but Mike don’t move, only to reach out and get Balaow by the halter. The brute is still eating succulent bunches of excelsior, dreamy and amiable, while peace and friendship look out of his brown eyes, and his tail swishes with content. All Is sunshine for Balnam. **Out you go, you blamed hobo! says the rliroad man, making for Mike. * ‘Look out! There aln't going to be doors enough In this car for you! says Mike. And, giving Balaam’'s halter a twist, he says, 'H'ist, boy! “Balaam h'isted. He throwed down his mouse colored head, and the whole back end of him come loose. He sure severed his counections and cut his home ties. His little hocfs hit the brakeman in the stnmmick so that the breath come out of him with a ‘whoof! like the squawk of ac auto- mobile boru The geutleman riz up, laid both hands upon Balanm's tracks and sat down hard in the other cor- ner, then doubled up ilke he had only one joint in his back, wrapped his arms around himself three times and began to kick like a hen with its head cut off, while he made little gasping noises like wind leaking into an old pump. Mike scratched Balaam, and the little felier waggled his ears saga- cious, winking at me, meanwhile chew- ing the juice out of another batch of shavings that growed near by. “‘You sound like you was ripe | enough to pick, said Mike to the rail roader, ‘lI don't like 'em when they go “pank.” . “It seemed like the man couidn't reach no amicable settlement with his breath whatever, and !t was ten min- utes before he'd arranged a satisfac- tory working basis with it. Then he ¢i wled out, hiccoughing cuss words aud threats all bashed up like a beef stew. In mebbe half an hour he come back with his pardper, but Mike was intrenched bebind Balaam. The men them pursuits natural. | got the abil- ity.’ 2 “*No; it's simply the introduction western modes and civilization jungles of the decaying east. open up in Kansas.’ Thereupon he gave me the blue of a plan i of E i 2 z g §8 lays waste with delight every hamlet it plays. It costs nary a cent to see it, which same appeals to farmers of all ranks. Mike is lit up like a Dewey arch, a thousand candles strong, with a long fur trimmed overcoat, pointed yaller shoes, tan gaiters and a pearl deal immediate. ‘T was cut out for | == “Does it take that much of a stack | gray felt hat. For a theatrical make- up he has Jobn Drew run under the bed. “l am Papriky Carramba, the Ari- ‘zona bandit. You see, | am some black, anyhow, so 1 incase mysolf in a greaser habit of speech, a bewhiskered buckskin suit and am a dangerous desperado. “Here's the a quartet by rogram. We open with he niggers. Ob, yes; I near forgot the niggers! We have four | Senegambians from Topeka that sing | from all poiuts of the compass to a common center ‘Turkey In the Straw’ on the banjo, while the others dauce. They cost us fourteen a week i "Well after the music the Mexikin desperudo gives exhibitions of throw- Ing the bowie amd pistol practicz, aft- er which we have more music, and Mikes does ‘marvelous, mystifying | feats of sleight of hand too batling for the mind and too rapid for the eye. Then we have some buck and winging by the African team, after which Mike addresses the pacified and radiant hay diggers as follows: | **No doubt, Indies and gents, you bave been delighted by our educa. tional entertainment, but to give fleet | Ing pleasure aln't our only mission. | We have a higher motive. It is a blessed privilege to make the arduous | path more pleasant, and we are here to conduce tc thew scenic effects by abating the nuisances of life One man may like music and his neigh- | bor prefer the screech of a sled run- | ner on bare ground. This one may bave a sweet tooth, while his friend's | is holler and the nerve exposed; but, dear friends. all the world loves a sweet smell. f “‘We admire the jassamine and would fain preserve the fragrance of the rose Let us have done with the | sordid sceuts of the stables and im- ported cheese and tickle our tonsils with the breath of forest flowers. That, ladies and gents, is our sacred | errant amongst you. We are the dis- tributing agents of the Kansas Co- | logne company, unlimited. Remember, we have nothing to sell; we only ad- vertise the perfumery so that you can buy direct from yonr local druggists. We simply charge a nominal price to cover the cost of the bottles and the | | hand painted labels, giving you the | One of ‘em plays ee ———————————— i —— re er —— FURS. FURS. Good Furs at low prices are unusual at the beginning of the season. The continued warm weather has had something to do with the special low prices. Our assortment is the largest, everything new in Neck Pieces and Muffs to match. We are showing the Brown Fur sets in the long new scarf effects with the large pillow muff, Black and Red Fox sets, animal Scarf and Two-skin Muffs. White Fox set, Two-skin Scarf and Muff. Real Brook Mink sets in all the newest shapes in the Two-animal Scarf and Muffs. Childrens and Misses Fur sets in white, black and brown, in all the new shapes. Single Muffs, in black and brown, in barrel, envelope, and pillow shapes. LaVogue Coats and Suits La Vogue Coats and Suits. We are showing special new models in our Coat and Suit de- partment for November. Blankets and Comfortables. Comfortables and Blankets from the cheapest to the best, at prices that will interest all thrifty buyers. UNDERWEAR. Men's, Womens’ and Children’s Underwear in fleeced and wool. In all sizes at remarkably low prices. Lyon & Co. .... Bellefonte The Centre County Banking Company. Strength and Conservatism are the banking qualities demanded by careful depositors. With forty vears of banking ex- perience we invite you to become a depositor, had sticks and tried to storm him, but , tontents as free as this program, that donkey's buttress was plump im- | Which ain't yet over. pregnable. Compared to him Port Ar-| “*To conclude this evening's enter- thur was as easy of access as a polit- | tainment 1 propose to spar three fcal meeting, and Gibraltar bad signs rounds with Senor Carramba, demon- of ‘Welcome’ all over it. 1 never see | Strating in a refined and gentlemanly no real kicking before nor since. The alr growed congested and thick with it, and there was enough hoof in the atmosphere at any minute to run a glue factory for a year Mike was acting gunner's mate. finding the ranges and aiming him like a pivot gun, while the little feller hitch kicked, drop kicked, place kicked, punted and kicked goal from the field. He kicked the sticks out of their hands he kicked the taste out of their mouths, and If Mike had let him go he'd have kicked them so high they'd bave starved be- fore they iit. He kicked them togeth er into a plle, kicked them out the end door and resumed his browsing. “ ‘How's foot racing, Mike? says I, crawling forth from my retreat. * ‘Why. bello!" says he. shaking hands. ‘I've just been run out of a little town up here without my bat. Me and Balaam Is going east. If you're broke, too, I'll let you ride on my ticket. He's good fer a carload.’ “‘We are quitting the west our- selves,’ says I, tapping my wishbone with dignity, for | feels the bank roll agin wy ribs and am filled with fig gers of speech, “i“We"' repeats Mike, inquisitive and suspicious ‘You say “we like you had money. | seen it in a book dncet that only three people is 1b censed to say “we”—kings, editors end men with tapeworms. I add to it a man with great wealth. Which one of the four are you? Do you mean to say you've got money in your disreppitable person and stood by while me and Balaam worked our passage? “For repartee | showed a roll the size of a clothes bag and told my story. We counted the money, and it totaled $520 to a cent, my original stake and the gambler's $100 which 1 would have won from him if I hadn't been cheated. “*‘This here is our opportunity to forsake the old life and acquire hon- esties. We'll go into business, says Mojave, declaring himself in on the -~ manner the blows with which I won the title of middleweight champeen of the world. This Is not a brutal exhibi- | tion, but a clean and scientific lesson in that greatest domestic accomplish- ment, the “man and womanly art of self defense.” It Is indorsed by the leading society ladies of the great cit- fes and bas received the highest en- comjiums from prominent divines. While we are changing costume the four Moorish gentlemen will pass amongst you with free samples of the cologne. After you have smelled it they will offer for sale the few re maining bottles Remember. four ounces for the ridic'lous sum of 50 cents, hardly enough to cover the cost of the hand painted labels. Ouly those parties retaining bottles will be al- lowed to remain during the pugilistic symposium.’ "Well. sir, you never saw the ilkes. You'd ‘a’ thought their sense of smell had laid out in the wet and got rusty They couldn't get enough of it: four ‘ounces for four bits—ridic’lous cheap, too, when you cousider that it stood us $8 an ounce In Topeka—that is, the real stuff that the coous carried around did. but of course the four ounce bot- tles wasn't quite so precious, being as we filled them with filtered water and soaked the corks iv real cologne dur ing the afternoons when we wasn't busy. Yes, sir, they sure did like the smell of them corked up water bottles, and we was doing well. “*Quick sales and small profits is our motto,’ says Mike. We make 49 cents a battle, which is small enough, and we sail out of a place as quick as possible. All it takes to run the biz Is a barrel of spring water and a little eight dollar cologne to smell up the corky with, It's a secret process. “We used to drink Kansas cologne with our meals, it was that harmless, and I guess we disposed of several thousand of the ‘few remaining bot- ties." Nobody ever left the show be- [Continued on page 7, Col. 1.) assuring you of every courtesy and attention. We pay 3 per cent interest on savings and cheerfully give you any information at our command concerning investments you may desire to make. The Centre County Banking Co. Bellefonte, Pa. 566 The First National Bank. We have received a limited number of Wall Maps of Centre County Showing State Highways, County Roads, Railroads, Etc. We shall be glad to give them to our friends while they last. They cannot be sent by mail. The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa.