eS ES Demo Yan. Bellefonte, Pa., November 17, 1922. NOVEMBER DAYS. ‘Who said November's face was grim? ‘Who said her voice was harsh and sad? I heard her sing in wood-paths dim, I met her on the shore so glad, So smiling, I could kiss her feet, There never was a month so sweet, October’s splendid robes, that hid The beauty of the white-limbed trees, Have dropped in tatters; yet amid Their perfect forms the gazer sees A proud wood-monarch, here and there, Garments of wine-dipped crimson wear. in precious flakes the autumnal gold Is clinging to the forest's fringe; Yon bare twig to the sun will hold Each separate leaf, to show the tinge Of glorious rose-light reddening through Its jewels, beautiful as few. Where short-lived wild flowers lived and died, The slanting sunbeams fall across Vine-’broideries, woven from side to side, Above mosaics of tinted moss So does the Eternal Artist's skill Hide beauty under beauty still. And if no note of bee or bird Through the rapt. stillness of the woods Or the sea’s murmurous trance be heard, A presence in these solitudes Upon the spirit seems to press The dew of God’s dear silences. And if, out of some inner heaven, With soft relenting, comes a day .Whereto the heart of June is given, All subtle scents and spicery Through forest crypts and arches steal With power unnumbered hurts to heal. —Luecy Larcum. THE INVISIBLE HUNTSMAN. To understand this story you must know Judge Wiltshire and his hunt- ing daughter. The judge, after a dis- tinguished career on the bench, had retired to the old Wiltshire home in Mirror River Valley, a broad valley surrounded by mountains, there to write a book on “Objective Evidence,” or on some such subject. His wife be- ing dead, Helen, his daughter, had come to keep house—and to be with him, for they were great pals. But it is not with the judge's liter- ary efforts nor with Helen’s house- keeping virtues that we are to deal, nor even with the comradeship be- tween them, though without this com- radeship the affair might have ended very differently. The setting of this story is the outdoor life they were both so fond of; and in the plot a bird dog is to play a strange part. It is not so strange, though, that a bird dog should come in, for both the judge and Helen were lovers of bird dogs, and both understood them with the understanding that comes only to those who hunt with them. And the judge and Helen hunted a great deal together. Nearly every afternoon, when the leaves had turned crimson and yellow, the judge, a tall, specta- cled, strong-faced man with iron-gray hair, and the girl, slim and very pret- ty in hunting togs, set out on horse- back, guns across saddles, and two or more setters barking ahead. And on these afternoons, while the western end of the valley flamed up with the sunset, they returned to the old house on the hill, dogs trotting behind, and the two of them riding close together, for, as has been said before, they were great pals. In the morning the judge worked hard in his library, while Helen busied herself about the absurdly roomy old house directing the darky servants, who worshipped her, or motored after the mail to the village, where the judge and his hunting daughter were great favorites. In the evenings they sat before the fire reading, or playing now and then a game of pinochle, the judge’s favorite game. And so, until his ambitious work was completed, their life might have gone on, had not Helen fallen in love—and had not the judge seen a bewildered dog in a lit- tered back yard. There is no reason to inquire why Helen should have fallen in love with Victor Clark. She just did. Remorse- fully, and the judge was to ascribe it to her isolation from young folks out here. She met Clark at the village ho- tel, a mile away across the valley, met him at the Hollow-een’ party she herself had got up for the poor moun- tain children. He was in these parts temporarily, having obtained control of large tracts of mountain forest. Before his rise in the business world he had been foreman in a lumber camp, Certainly he was aggressive enough and his rise dramatic enough to capture the imagination of any spirited girl. Followed calls at the house and rides along the mountain trails flaming with autumn colors, and then one night in the library Helen told her father: She was going to marry Clark. It took the judge completely by sur- prise. It often takes fathers that way. But, more, it filled him with misgivings. In the brief interval of silence following her declaration there flashed into his mind the picture of the bird dog in the littered back yard of the village hotel. Clark had invited the judge out to see the dog. Helen was not present. It was at Clark’s sharp command that the dog had crawled out of the box. There is no dog with so strong a sense of comradeship for man as the bird dog; for centuries the two have associated together almost as equals, in sports of the field. Yet this setter stood outside his box with drooped head and tail, and looked everywhere but in men’s faces. But Clark had seemed unaware of anything unusual. “Just a two-year- old, Judge,” he was saying. “Out of Wild Rose by Peerless. Trained him myself from a puppy. A stubborn brute to begin with, believe me, but I tamed him. Nobody ever hunted over him but me. Nobody ever shot a gun over him but me.” Then Clark had smiled, pleasantly enough for a man whose eyes were get none too far apart, and had turn- ed away, with never a glance for the mountaineers who had ceme out in the yard to see. And the heavy chain had scraped harshly as the dog turned re within ‘the darkness of his, 1 ] PTs mo - night—Ilooked at him with helpless ap- though this was off their accustomed This was the picture that flashed box. as he saw him. Now all these hopes : then he did not speak; instead, he dis- fled, and out of her irrevocable future j mounted and opened a gate. her eyes—so frank, so confident to It led into Ben Allen’s farm and, peal. He sank down into his chair and ' hunting route, he nodded to Helen to ominously into the judge’s mind. It |lit the cigar with hands that trem- | ride in. At his shrill whistle the set- was interrupted by Helen’s question. “You don’t mind very much, do you, ! 5 | ter came back, and at the side of the “Helen,” he spoke quietly and ten- | gate farthest from him darted Dad?” she asked; and then, before he | derly, but his voice sounded strange to | through. Judge Wiltshire closed the could reply, “You like him, don’t you?” The judge looked at her a bit help- lessly. His familiar books seemed to fade away suddenly into the back- ground of his life. She was seated on a low stool near the corner of the man- tel, fingers laced about her knees, the firelight falling ruddily over her. At her feet lay old Ben and Jack, Eng- lish setters, gravely studying the fire, unmindful of the human drama going on above them. Helen always let them in. Her slender beauty struck the judge afresh tonight, like a reve- lation. “You do—don’t you?” she repeated tensely. “I don’t know Jack,” he managed to say at last (he had called her Jack ever since she could remember); “I don’t know whether I do or not.” “Oh! she gasped. “That means you don’t! I am sorry, Dad,” she added with dignity, “for I am going to mar- ry him, anyway.” Judge Wiltshire did not sleep much that night. Helen must live her own life, make her own choice according to her instincts and desires, he tried to reason with himself. But more than once he rose and smoked a cigar be- fore the window, and he saw day dawn pale through the trees. At sunrise he rose and dressed in his hunting clothes. In time of trouble he always sought, if he could, the fields and woods. His hopes ran high that Helen would go with him. He would make the opportunity of dropping a diplomatic word or two concerning the advisability of delay in such matters. Maybe they would talk it over, out in the open * * * But immediately after breakfast Clark came for her. They were going riding she had an- nounced at the table, without looking at her father. Her aloofness hurt him, not for his sake but for hers. Likely it hurt her, too. Her face this morn- ing was set with resolution. Hereto- fore she had been more girl than woman. Now she was more woman than girl. The judge himself met Clark on the columned portico. Clark was a tall, powerfully built young man, aggres- sive, and handsome in his riding clothes, that were all they ought to be, and then some more. The judge greet- ed him cordially enough. There had never been any lack of hospitality here on the hill. If he looked with rather a close, shrewd scrutiny into the eyes, surely that’s the privilege of a father in his position. Perhaps, after all, he was wrong; perhaps you ought not to judge a man by his dog; perhaps the dog was naturally a cow- ard and a cringer. But in the eyes, in the set of the mo Judge Wiltshire was afraid he saw the'reason for that cringing dog— something rash, cruel, selfish—a hard, unnatural boyishness, an immaturity of soul. But of this scrutiny Clark seemed unaware, just as he had been unaware of the cringing of his dog in the lit- tered yard. “I see you are shooting today, Judge,” he said, leaning against the banisters; “why don’t you go over and get my dog Duke? Tell the man at the hotel I say let you have him. You’ll hunt with a real dog there.” A moment the older man hesitated, still looking the other in the eyes. Then he accepted the offer. It wasn’t his fault if Clark did not catch the un- derlying warning in tone and words: “I am going to take you at your word, sir.” And thus a dog came to play his part in the life of a girl and a man and a father. The remainder of that day Judge Wiltshire hunted alene with another man’s dog in the painted mountain valley that echoed with the staccato of his whistle and gun. One of the chapters of his book was on “The Testimony of Animals.” But he was not thinking of his book. It was dusk when, the dog trotting at his horse’s heels, he rode once mere into the back yard of the hotel, and, dismounting, tied him to the kennel. “Old boy,” he said compassionately as he did so. Helen had supper ready and was waiting for him when he reached home. “Why, you didn’t get many birds, did you?” she said as she took his coat. “I wasn’t hunting birds, Jack,” he replied. “Not birds? Then what?” “The truth,” he said quietly. She looked at him a moment with disturbed, uncomprehending eyes. Then she hurried into the kitchen to turn the birds over to the cook, and slowly the judge climbed the stairs to his room. The blow came after supper in the library. Seated on a stool near the corner of the mantel she announced first, with the pride of a woman who knows at last all about the coming and goings of one certain man, that Clark would be gone tomorrow on business; that he was leaving tonight on the ten o’clock train. Then—in order that her father might see him in his best and what seemed to her his truest light— “Dad, he says you are welcome to use Duke again tomorrow. You know, he trained him from a puppy and that you are the only man except himselr who ever shot over him. A compli- ment, Dad.” The rest had the finality of youth that has decided. “He is going away in a few days for good. His business here is almost ended. He wants me to marry him right away, and go with him.” “But you are not going to, Jack!” the protest burst from him. “Dad—1 think I will. love him.” Judge Wiltshire rose and fumbled on the mantel for his cigars. The room with its tiers of legal books, its old furniture, its thousands of associations, seemed to swim round and round. All that day one thought had consoled him: There would be time; she would come to see the man You see—I—-. {gun a time or two, and it just sound- i ed lonely. It'll be like old times, won't himself, “has Mr. Clark ever taken : gate, and remounted. Even as he did you to see his dog, child?” | so the drama he had witnessed yes- “No, Dad. I suppose we have never ' terday had begun again—just as he happened to ride by when Duke was had planned. : there. He has told me about Duke,| Three large, fierce dogs, the canine though. One of his ears is the color roughnecks of the community, were of my hair, isn’t it?” | rushing from the Allen house toward Sudden anger flushed the judge's |this invader of their domains. And face. “Yes—and his eyes are the col- the young setter, already an eighth of or of your eyes—and once they looked | a mile in advance of the horses, stood at 2 man, Helen, as your eyes lock at | in the middle of the road awaiting the me new!” | onslaught, tail erect as a plumed “What do you mean?” she demand- | lance. ed. ! They had to turn their horses out of He did not reply. The plan was | the road to pass him as he stood there born in an instant. What he had seen | menaced by snarling foes. They saw she would see—see before another sun | the fierce, proud eyes that looked each set. According to the evidence she, | enemy in the face as the three march- too, would decide. There was no other | ed round and round in a stiff-legged way now. ! parade. But they saw no tremor in “Will you go shooting with me to- those fine-strung nerves and no morrow, Jack?” ! shrinking in those rangy muscles. She rose impulsively and came and | sat on the arm of his chair. ed. “You were lonely today, weren't | them about his business. The judge you, all by yourself? We heard your | stole a glance at the girl. She was | looking straight ahead and her face was pale. it? Tomorrow I We mean. won't | Not until they had ridden a consid- ' would be, the romance over, only a | | erable distance did the young setter, : “Of course I will, Dad,” she sooth- | having overawed his foes, gallop past In the extensive broomstraw fields looked “birdy,” asking him if he re- going to cry—not now. I have thought | membered the time when they found it all out. I knew this morning—as a covey by that old oak tree, trying : soon as we started. I just wanted to bravely to make today like old times. be sure * * * Dad, he must not go But gradually her talk languished. ' back—Duke, I mean. You must get The shadow of that dog’s absent mas- | Duke away from him. Some way— ter fell across them, too. The sun any way. I don’t care. I don’t care rose high and shone down on them | for anything. Once today I hated riding, more and more silent, their | you. You will, won’t you, Dad? Get eyes on the swiftly circling and be- | him, I mean—not let him go back?” wildered dog; then dismounting and The judge’s hands closed over hers. advancing on him, who still cringed at | ‘“He’s not going back,” he said ten- their near approach, and who still ; derly. “He’s going home with us. I looked back as if for another figure | bought him, Jack—bought him last than their own. | night.” And all the time the judge saw, and | Then she was in his arms sobbing, knew the girl saw, that absent figure, | for one of her dreams was over. But a man impatient, rash, brutal-temper- | the judge, stroking the head buried in ed, striding alone—he would hunt his shoulder, knew there would come with no other—across the fields to- other and happier ones. And the ward that high-spirited but sensitive | young setter must have known that young setter; a man who at some | for him a new life had begun. For he time had kicked him while he was on | did not shrink from her when she the stand; who had beaten him for | stooped suddenly and caught his head some chance mishap in retrieving; | between her hands. And as he trot- who had missed, and, in anger at his | ted close to her horse’s heels there was own poor marksmanship, turned upon ' in his eyes the quiet look of a dog his dog; a man without a single | who has found at last all he had ever sportsman’s ideal, with no imagina- hoped to find in this world.—By Sam- tion and no tenderness, to whom a dog ' uel A. Derieux, in The American Mag- | was only a dog, and to whom a woman azine. woman. ! That all this was true, Judge Wilt- ‘ shire knew—knew as well as he knew that the sun was now shining bland and warm straight down upon them, and that Helen had not spoken for a long time. A terrible fear began to PREHISTORIC RUIN IS FOUND. Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, chief of the bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, who has re- cently returned from a season of archeological field work on the Mesa quarrel, will we?” “I won't even mention the cause of the quarrel, Jack.” “Neither will 1,” she promised; and then, after a while, “I may think of it, though.” She left him soon after that. He heard her light steps as she ran up the old stairway. He waited until her footfalls in the room above had ceas- ed. Then he glanced at his watch. There was plenty of time. lot, without calling old Billy, he sad- dled his horse, and on the side of the house opposite her window rode away. It was about an hour later when he returned, put up the horse, and re-en- tered the silent, deserted library. He was a methodical man in business matters. He sat down before the desk, took out a check book, and made on the stub an entry in four figures. He smiled wryly. “I'm glad he stung me,” he said to himself. He lit another cigar, leaned back in the chair and looked at the picture of the girl’s mother above the mantel, with sleepless eyes. ’ In all that follows it must be re- membered that Helen knew as much about the bird dog as did her father. She was his only child. Every Christ- mas vacation, since she was old enough to ride a horse, they had spent out here hunting. She had helped him train pups; she had gone with him to field trials; professional bird dog men respected her judgment. Right in the beginning of the day { Judge Wiltshire’s resolution wavered. That was when, on rising, he heard Helen in the kitchen. She was super- intending the preparation of their lunch, that he knew. She was going to make today like old times. For a while he sat irresolutely on the edge of the bed. Would it not be better to tell her? But what girl in love ever listened to her father? A voice grown far more persuasive than his would explain away anything that he might say. Face grave, he got into his hunting clothes. She had breakfast ready and was waiting when he came down. She even joked him on his lateness on such a morning. The sunlight of the robust day out of doors was in her eyes, and some of the color of a frost-crimson- ed maple that, growing near the din- ing-room window, turned it into the likeness of a stained glass memorial to autumn was in her cheeks. But for all that she must have sensed some- thing strange in this hunt. “Dad,” she asked suddenly at the ta- ble, “Old Billy says you told him just now to keep old Ben and Jack up this morning. Aren’t we going to take them ?” He tried to reply casually. “No—just Duke.” Elbows on the table she looked at him suddenly with clear-eyed scrutiny, as if she were holding her breath. In her eyes he saw the touch of reproach, the meaning of which he knew. He was accepting for the second time the favor of a man he did not like * * * Then her manner changed. She had forgiven him. Reaching across the ta- ble she placed her hands over his. “We are going to have a great day, aren’t we, Dad?” she asked. She ran up stairs to get her gun, and he could hear her singing up there. In the library, with fingers that trembled a bit, he filled his pock- ets with shells for them both, and stuffed in the back of his weathered hunting coat the lunch which Jane, the cook, brought him. From the foot of the stairs he called her. She walked very close to his side down the hedge- bordered front walk toward the old mounting blocks where her ample- skirted grandmothers used to ascend into their commodious saddles. To any one watching the two of them that day, the hunt, or at least part of it, would have seemed like any other, except, perhaps, that the judge's face was a little grim, and except for the fact that, instead of hunting their Sun dogs, they came after another 0g. They found him chained to his box in a damp corner of the rotting fence, in the littered back yard of the village hotel. At sight of them he rose quick- ly with a rattle of his chain—a slim young setter, his wavy, silken coat the color of old ivory, one ear and half the head a satiny auburn. His eyes, lus- trous and intelligent, stared with momentary eagerness at the tall fig- ure of the judge. Then some one slammed the back door of the hotel. At the sound he turned abruptly and started, tail tucked, for this box. It was more a surprised gasp than a statement that escaped the girl, “Why—he’s yellow!” The judge flushed as at an insult to a friend. But he did not speak. It was only after he and Helen, Duke galloping ahead, had ridden half a mile into the country that he replied to the charge of cowardice. Even that lay beyond the Allen farm they | form in his mind that some of the came in sight of that which caused them hurriedly to dismount. Guns ready, they advanced dcross a field— . two brown-clad figures, one tall, flor- : hardness of the man had entered her own soul, as he noted the firm mouth, the uptilted chin, the eyes averted more and more from him and the dog. Out in the | id, spectacled, the other slim, and like | Just once, as they remounted after {a boy. Yonder in the sunlight the set- 2 covey, he thought he saw in her face ter stood, head high, tail straight out, something weary, disillusioned. | like a statue in ivory set up out there | “Are you tired, Jack?” he asked Lin the strawfield. “Birds!” this statue A With sudden hope. | d proclaimed. | Pee And gow it was hai this Dui 225 tired 7” i gan to be different from any they had | oy akon Ito As they drew near | They aie the lunch she had prepar- | the motionless dog, his muscles, that | ed so joyously, on a fallen log in a ‘ had been so steady in the presence of | shallow birch wood, the lunch, which | enemies, began to quiver, and the body | she quietly opened, spread out be- to sink S came quite close to him he glanced | at a distance (he would come no near- i wildly around at them, as if half ex- er) the dog sat on his haunches, like | pecting a blow. ; an unspoken reproach. {| “Are you ready, Jack?” judge’s voice was a bit tense. j asleed, “Ready, Dad.” € The eds rose with a whir. The “Come, Duke,” he said, and extended guns barked. Yonder two quail tum- his hand. : bled. “Fetch, Duke!” ordered the! The setter rose, hesitated, then | judge. , came slowly toward ‘them, head low, {© The setter ran swiftly into the straw tail tucked and slapping between hind ahead. When he reappeared he held | legs. 4 a bird carefully in his mouth. His | “Come, old man,” ears were thrown back as if he were ' judge. : : swimming through the straw. His| He pricked his ears eagerly, as if brown eyes were aglow with a sports- | he had heard in the human voice a man’s joy. | tone he had not heard before. But suddenly, before he reached he drew nearer, silken body low to the | them, he stopped. He laid the bird ground and trembling, eyes aglow : carefully down. He backed from it, a : With gratitude. watchful, alarmed eye on the judge, = “That’s the boy,” encouraged the who was coming toward him. The judge, smiling. “Come now.” ‘ voice of the girl was clear, cool: It happened in an instant. { “He must have bruised it, Dad.” hand reached out to caress, to reas- | The judge’s mouth tightened, and sure. The setter leaped back from it, | without looking at the bird he tossed ears ‘lattened, eyes gleaming with it to her. Her face, he thought, flush- | wild alarm. : 'ed as she examined it. The judge; The exclamation that escaped the ‘knew the result of that examination. | judge was almost an oath. This most { He had inspected a half-dozen him- damning indictment of all he had not | self yesterday. Hardly a feather of even remotely planned. That dog had | that bird had been ruffled, except by been enticed with fair words, then the shot that had brought it down. | struck with brutal fist. He stared at The birds had scattered in a grove the girl as she sat motionless, chin in | of oaks, toward which they hurried | hand, eyes fastened on some now. Here, once, the judge missed-— spot. Could she, who loved and un- missed on purpose, for he was a dead ' derstood a dog, keep silent in the face shot. And now they saw another | of this? When she spoke, he gave up strange thing: All eagerness in the the fight. Her voice sounded strange, result, the dog had been watching the detached, full of aloof dignity. flying bird. When it did not fall, he; “Are we going to hunt the rest of turned as if bewildered. A moment . the day?” : = he looked wildly about, then, tail tuck- | “No!” he said bitterly and ed, he came crouching back to the | “We are going home, Helen.” judge and lay down at the man’s feet, { Just a glimpse of her face he caught as if he thought himself responsible underneath the hat brim as she rose in some way for the poor marksman- | too. ship—as if he half expected the man! “Aren't you going to feed him?” to turn on him. | she asked casually. Nor was it different when Helen | The setter gulped down a portion of missed—missed not on purpose. He the food the judge mechanically set came contritely back to her, also, and aside for him. Without finishing it, lay down, panting, at her feet. But he wheeled and galloped to the edge both times, when no punishment fol- | of the wood, where he waited, ears lowed, he rose after a moment and |alert, for the order. More than meat looked past them, a strained expres- | to him was the work he was born to sion on his face, as if he expected to do. But the judge hardly noticed him see another figure than theirs striding now. He only knew that the dog had “Why should I be reassured the rose, | But she looked him full in the face. | into the straw; and as they tween them on a napkin. Off yonder The “Why don’t you call him?” she i The judge’s heart leaped with hope. ! Then | The | distant. toward him through the woods. | The third time this happened, the | judge glanced at the girl. Her face gave no sign. “Let’s get back to our ! horses, Jack,” he said. | From the Allen farm they rode into | a region of bold hills, covered with ! straw. Here, swift ranging, the dog drew far away come back and was follow.ng at their heels as they made their way to the horses. Judge Wiltshire had failed in the hardest fight he had ever made. Years seemed to have passed since morning. He did not look at the girl at his side. in the course of his | He was thinking of her as if in some past existence; a child running from them until he was a mere speck | through the yard, a school-girl getting of moving white against a distant hill. | her books in order, a college girl writ- But when the judge, reining up, blew command after command on his shriil, | far-carrying whistle, he gave no sign! of hearing. Even from the distance, ing him at least some of her secrets. He thought of the time when she was a little mite and he had set her astride a horse, of the arms that had they could see that he was now hunt- | hung frantically about his neck as he ing happily, merrily, as if his mind were free at last from some burden; as if he were far away from that dis- turbing and powerful presence that he thought always on the point of join- ing the hunters. “He must be deaf,” said the girl quietly. Judge Wiltshire did not reply. He had thought so yesterday himself. He bided his time, meanwhile by contin- ued whistles bringing the dog in. Soon afterward, when he galloped past them, the judge unbreeched then breeched his gun quickly. The sound was hardly greater than the click of a camera. To the experienced bird dog it means that a man is getting ready for the shot. At the slight sound the dog checked himself, wheel- ed about, and looked at the judge with erect, expectant ears. “Hie on, old man,” said the judge. The setter stared at him, then at the girl, then across the fields behind them. Then he began to circle swift- ly, nose to the ground, as if searching lifted her. A thousand intimate mo- ments recurred to him; grave ques- tions she had asked, little rebellions she had staged, growing tenderness she had shown for all living things. Be had been a blessing to him all his ife. Maybe she knew best now. Maybe ! some law stronger than his own tem- porary judgments was directing her. Maybe the law operated in a way he could not see with his short vision, and perhaps today he had only given her useless pain in trying to avert the inevitable. Perhaps all this was true. Yet he felt suddenly like an old man. His big shoulders drooped as with the weight of years, and as he made his way through the straw, he stumbled. “Dad mm lapels of his hunting coat with both hands, and her face was raised to his. About them the fields still glistened in the sun, and yonder their tethered for other tracks than their own; then | horses watched them with erect, friv- galloped away. And so the strange hunt, like any other'in its outward seeming, went on, over the hills of straw, then along brown creek bottoms, and through patches of autumn woodland. But at last even its outward aspect began to change. At first, between coveys, the olous ears. “You haven’t had such a'great day, after all, have you Dad?” she asked with a little smile. Then her face grew tragic in its intensity. “Did you think I was very stupid, Dad? Do you think I could—could—marry him after what you have shown me—when girl had talked to her father, freely, spirvitedly, pointing out spots that I hate him, when I loathe him? Do you think I could? No—I am not When he turned she caught the tall Verde National Park, Colorado, re- ports the unexpected unearthing of a most interesting and instructive pre- historic ruin to which he has given the name of “Pipe Shrine House,” because of the large number of tobacco pipes which were found scattered in a cir- cular shrine just as they had been thrown there during ceremonial rites, untold centuries ago. Mesa Verde park was reserved from settlement some years ago by Con- - gress on account of the numerous cliff dwellings in its canyon, but later it was discovered that there were as many pueblos on the open top of the mesa as in the cliffs. These have far- ed badly from the elements, on ac- count of exposurre, and are now re- | duced to mounds without walls above : ground. { Last May Dr. Fewkes undertook the excavation of a mound in the neigh- i borhood of what is known to many , motor tourists as Mummy lake. | Out of the mound emerged a rec- i tangular building about seventy feet i square and one story high, accurate- |ly oriented to the cardinal points of | the compass, with a circular tower [formerly fifteen to twenty feet high, like a church steeple, midway in the western wall. This tower is supposed to have been for observation, and as {it is very important for an agricul- tural people to determine the seasons , of the years, it was probably by i watching the sun as it rises or sets | that they determined the time for planting and for other events. i In the middle of this building was i found a circular room twenty feet ' deep and about the same in diameter "in which were found more than a doz- .en clay pipes, numerous stone knives, | pottery, idols and other objects. Pipes ‘of this kind have never before been | found on the Mesa Verde. A few feet south of the building, i which was not a habitation but spe- | cialized for ceremonies, there is a Square room or shrine dedicated to the mountain lion, a stone image of which was found surrounded by wa- ter-worn stones and other strangely | formed stones. A similar shrine is | found on the northeast corner of Pine i Shrine House in which, among other { objects, was a small iron meteorite and a slab of stone on which is de- ! picted a symbol of the sun. | The cemeteries of the pueblos of : the Mesa Verde are situated near their ' southeast corner, and while the bur- (als in them have as a rule been re- i moved by vandals, several interments | Were found in the cemetery near Pipe ; Shrine House. One of these was left without moving a single bone, and an inclosure with a weather-proof roof was erected over it, so that a visitor can view a skeleton more than 500 years old, with food bowls and other pieces of pottery just as they were when left by relatives at that time. This is said to be the first time care has been taken to preserve for inspec- tion a pre-Columbian skeleton of an Indian in his own cemetery. Punishing a Profiteer. The report in the middle west of the United States of a “driverless auto- mobile” station along the lines of the old livery stable, where one might hire a “rig” and drive it oneself, affords occasion for recalling a story about the earlier institution which may serve as a warning to any who would resort to sharp practice. According to the tale referred to, a traveling man once said to the proprietor of a livery | stable: - “What is the price of a rig to go over to Blankville ?” “Ten dollars,” replied the smart sta- : blekeeper. After the journey had been taken, the owner of the horse and buggy said: “Twenty dollars.” ‘Asked to explain, he added, “Ten dollars over and ten dollars back.” The next time the traveling man came he again inquired, “What is the price for a rig to go over to Blank- ville 2” “Ten dollars,” again answered the liveryman. Several days later the traveling man reappeared without the rig and hand- ed the stableman $10. “But where is my rig?” demanded its owner. “Oh, it is over at Blankville,” said : his patron. “All I wanted to do was to go over.”—Christian Science Moni- tor. 26,000 New Oil Wells Yearly. An average of about 26,000 new oil wells have been drilled during each of the last six years in order to obtain a | sufficient supply of crude to satisfy the constantly growing demand for oil according to the American Petroleum Institute. Of these 26,000 wells, 7,500 | were “gassers” or dry holes. ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.”