— — EE CE ES MAE ES EE RR | Bellefonte, Pa., July 12, 1929. Er ————————————————————— THAT NIGHT HE DIED. That day he passed A little child And, as he passed it, Stopped and smiled, He bought his paper At the square. And left an extra Penny there, And then went on And quite forgot The paper-woman And the tot. For many duties Business brings, Yes, greater matters, Larger things. . That night he died 5 And people said, Who heard the news, “So Smith is dead.” And Smith was troubled As he lay Within his little House next day: His gold was dust, His fame was dim, He had no gifts To take with him. j “What chance,” thought he, ‘“‘Has one who stands ; Before God's gate i With empty hands?” } At last he stood 5 Before the gate, As all must stand, And all must wait, And then its mighty ‘ Hinges swung, i And ‘‘welcome’ all The angels sung. Was it not written In the Book, Where Peter, God And all might look? Two things they found Recorded there— A baby’s tear, A woman's pray'r. r———— eee —— AT THE SIGN OF THE LAST CHANGE More familiar faces than I had hoped to see were there when I came in after leaving my horse at the stable. Would I eat anything? Henry asked. Not until breakfast, I said. I had supped at Lost Soldier. Would I join the game? Not to- night; but would they mind if I sat and watched them till I felt sleepy? It was too early to go to bed. And sitting here again seemed very nat- ural. “Does it, now?” said Stirling. “You look kind of natural yourself.” “Glad I do. It must be five years since last time.” “Six,” said James Work. “But I would have known you anywhere.” “What sort of meal did he set for you?” Marshal inquired. =~ “At Lost Soldier? Fried beef, bis- cuits, coffee, and excellent onions.” | other. And here in this place, at the poker table, the ghost still clung to | the world of the sage-brush, where it had lived headlong joys. I watched the graybeards going on with this game that had outlived | many a player, had often paused dur- ing bloodshed, and resumed as often. no matter who had been carried out. | They played without zest, winning '“Last Chance,” : or | More of the fron- ‘ier life could hardly be told in four | words. They were quite as revealing of the spirit of an age and people as Goat and Compasses. That is what I thought as I sat there looking on at my old acquain- tances over their listless game. It was still too early to go to bed, and what else was there to do? What a losing little, with now and then s lot of old tunes Jed Goodland remem- friendly word to me. | They had learned to tolerate me when I had come among them first; not because I ever grew skilled in what they did, either in the saddle or | with a gun, but always had come back to lead it with them, in my tenderfoort way. Did they often think of their van- ished prosperity? Or did they try to forget that, and had they succeeded? bered! “Why, where's your clock, Henry?” I asked. Henry scratched his head. “Why,” he meditated—“why, I guess 1t was last January.” “Did she get shot up again?” Henry slowly shook his head. “This town is not what it was. I guess you saw the last shooting-up she got. She just quit on me one day. Something in them seemed quenched | Yes; January. Winding of her up —but they were all in their fifties | didn’t do nothing to her. It was Lee now; they had been in their twenties when I knew them first. My first sight of James Work was | on a night at the Cheyenne Club. He sat at the head of a dinner-table with some twenty men as his guests. They drank champagne and they sang. Work’s cattle in those days earned ; him twenty per cent. Had he not | overstayed his market in the fatal years, he could be giving dinners still. As with him, so with the others in that mild poker game. Fortune, after romping with them, had romped off somewhere else. What filled their hours, what filled their minds, in these days of empti ness? So I sat and watched them. How many times had I arrived for the night and done so!’ They drank very little. They spoke very little. They had been so used to each other for so | long! I had seen that pile of news- | papers and magazines where the man | was reading grow and spread and lit- ter the back of the room since I was twenty. It was a joke that Henry never could bring himself to throw any- thing away. ; “I suppose,” I said to him now, as I pointed to the dusty accumulation, “that would be up to the ceiling if you didn’t light your stove every win- ter with some of it.” Henry nodded and chuckled as he picked up his hand. The man reading at the back of the room lifted his magazine. “This is October, 1885,” he said, holding the shabby cover towards us. “Find any startling news, Gil- bert 2” “Why, there's a pretty good thing,” said the man. “Did you know sign- boards have been used hundreds ard hundreds of years? ’'Way back of Columbus.” “I don’t think I have ever thought about them,” said Henry. “Come to think about it,” said James Work, “sign-boards must have started whenever hotels or saloons started, ow hatever they called such places at first.” ! “It goes away back, said the read- ! er. “It’s a good piece.” “Come to think about it,” said ‘James Work, “men must have trav- | eled before they had houses; and af-: noticed she had quit. So I didn’t get a new one. Any more than I have fresh onions. Too much trouble to mend the ditch.” “Where's your Chink tonight?” I inquired. Lee was another old ac- quaintance; he had cooked many meals and made my bed often sea- son after season, when I had lodged ‘here for the night. “I let Lee go—let’'s see—I guess that must have been last April Business is not what it used to be.” “Then you do everything yourself now ?” “Why, yes; when there's anything to do.” “Boys don’t seem as lively as they used to be,” said Work. “There are no boys,” said Henry. “Just people.” This is what Henry had to say. It was said by the bullet holes in the wall landmarks patterning the shape of the clock which had hung there till it stopped going last January. It was said by the empty shelves be- neath the clock and behind the bar. It was said by the empty bottles which Henry had not yet thrown out. These occupied half one shelf. Two or three full bottles stood in the mid- dle of the lowest shelf, looking lonely. In one of them the cork had been drawn and could be pulled out by the fingers again, should anyone call for a drink, “It was Buck Seabrook shot up your clock last time, wasn’t it, Hen- ry?” asked Marshal. “You knew Buck?’ he said to me; and I nodded. “Same night as that young puncher got the letter he’d been asking for every mail day,” said Work. “Opened it in the stage office.” con- tinued Marshal, “drew his gun and blew out his brains right there. I guess you heard about him ?” ne said to me again; and I nodded. “No,” Henry corrected. “Not there.” He pointed at the ceiling. He was sleeping in num-' “Upstairs. ber four. He left no directions.” “I liked that kid,” said Stirling, | “Nice quiet . who had been silent. well-behaved kid. A good rope:r.” “Anybody know what was in the letter 7” asked Work. < “It was from a girl,” said Henry. “I thought may be there would be something in it demanding action. “Old onions of course?” said Hen- ter they had houses travel must have Lhere was nothing beyond the action “Cooked.” “No. Fresh from his garden. ! Young ones.” | “So he's got a garden still!” mused Henry. .“Who’s running Lost Soldier these days?” inquired Stirling. ~ “That oldest half-bred son of Toothpick,” said Marshal. “Any folks to supper but you?” “Why, yes. Six or seven. Bound for the new oil-field on Red Spider.” “Travel is brisk down in that val- ley,” said Work. : “I didn't know the stage had stop- ped running through here,” said I. - “Didn’t you? Why, that’s a mat- ter of years now. There's no oil up this way. In fact, there's nothing up this way any more.” They had made room for me, they had included me in their company. Only two others were not in the game. One sat in the back of the room, leaning over something that he was reading, never looking up from it. He was the only one I had not Seen before, but he was at home here quite evidently. Except when he turned a page, which might have been once every five minutes, he hardly made a movement. He was a rough fellow, wearing | the beard of another day; and if read- ing was a habit with him it was a slow process, and his lips moved in silent pronunciation of each syllable as it came. Jed Goodland sat off by | the kitchen door with his fiddle. Now and then he lightly picked or bowed | some fragment of tune, like a man! whispering memories to himself. | The others, save one or two that | were clean-shaven, also wore the mustaches or the beards of a day that was done. : I had begun to see those beards long before they were gray; when no wire fence mutilated the freedom of the range; when fourteen mess-wag- ons would be at the spring round-up; when cattle wandered and pastured, dotting the endless wilderness; when roping them brought the college graduate and the boy who had never learned to read into a lusty equality of youth and skill; when songs rose by the camp-fire; and the dim form of the night herder leaned on his sad- dle horn as under the stars he cir- cled slowly around the recumbent thousands; when two hundred miles stretched between all this and the whistle of the nearest locomotive. And all this was over. It had be- gun to end a long while ago. It had €bbed away slowly from these now playing their nightly game as they had once played it at flood-tide. The turn of the tide had come even when the beards were still brown or red or golden. The decline of their day began pos- sibly with the first wire fence; the great ranch life was hastened to its death by the winter snows of 1886; received its mortal stroke in the rus- tle war of 1892; breathed its last— no, it was still breathing, it had not wholly given up the ghost. Cattle- men and sheepmen, the newcomers, were at deeds of violence with each started, or whatever they called such start sign-boards.” “That’s so,” said Henry. A third player spoke to the read- er. ‘Travel must have started red- light houses. Does he mention them, Gilbert 2” “He wouldn't do that, Marshal, not in a magazine: he wouldn't,” said James Work. r “He oughtn't,” said Henry. “Such things should not be printed.” “Well, I guess it was cities start- ed them, not travel,” surmised Mar- shal. “I wonder whose idea red light was.” “They had sign-boards in Ancient Rome,” answered the man at the back of the room. “Think of that!’ said Henry. “Might have been one of them Em- perors started the red light,” said Marshal, “same as gladiators.” The game went on, always listless. Habit was strong, and what else was there to do? “October, 1885,” said Marshal “That was when Toothpick Kid pull- ed his gun on Doc Barker and per- suaded him to be a dentist.” “Not 1(85,” said James “That was 1886.” “October, 1885,” insisted Marshal. Work. “The railroad came to Douglas the { mine now and then. next year.” “He's got it correct, Henry. “Where is Toothpick Kid nowa- days?” I inquired. “Pulled his freignt for Alaska. Not heard from since 1905. She’s taken up with Duke Gardiner’s brother, the Kid’s woman has,” said Henry. “The Kid wanted Barker to fix his teeth same as Duke Gardiner had his,” said Work. “I don’t think I've seen Duke Gard- iner since '91,” said I. “When last heard from,” said Hen- ry, “Duke was running a joint in El Paso.” “There’s a name for you!” ex- claimed the man at the back of ths room. “ ‘Goat and Compasses’! They had that on a signboard in England. Well, and would you ever guess what it started from! ‘God encompasseth us!” “Think of that!” said Henry. “Does it say,” asked Work, “if they had any double signs like Hen- ry’s here?” . it doesn’t. If I strike Jim,” 3aid “Not so far, any, I'll tell you.” That double sign of Henry's, hang- he had taken. I put it inside his shirt with him. Nobody saw it but me.” “What would you call that for a name?” said the reader at the hack of the room. ‘ ‘Goose and Gridiron.’” “I'd call that good,” said Work. “It would sound good to a hungry traveler,” said Stirling. “Any more of them?” asked Hen- ry. “Rafts of them. I'll tell you the next good one.” ~ “Yes, tell us. And tell us when and where they all started. if it says.” In the silence of the cards. a door shut somewhere along the dark street. : : “That's Henry. “First time I ever heard of him in town,” said I. “We made him come in. Old Man Clarke is getting terrible shaky. He wouldn't accept a room. So he sleeps in the old stage office and cooks for himself. If you put him in New York he’d stay a hermit all the same.” “How old is he?” “Nobody knows. He looked about as old as he does now when I ‘ook this hotel. That was 1887. But we don't want him to live alone up that canyon any more. He rides up to his Don’t let any- body go along. Says the secret will die with him. Hello, Jed. Let’s have the whole of ‘Buffalo Girls.’ ” And Jed Goodland played the old quadriile music through. “Youu used to hear that pretty of- ten, I guess,” said Henry to me; and I nodded. Scraping steps shambled slowly by in the sand. We listened. = “He doesn’t seem to be coming in,” I said. “He may. He will if he feels like it, and he won't if he feels likenot.” “He had to let me help him onto his horse the other day,” said Mar- shal. “But he’s more limber some days than others.” Presently the scraping steps came again, passed the distant. “Yes,” said Work. “Old Man Clarke is sure getting feeble.” “Did you say it was Buck Sea- brook shot your clock the last time?” “Yes. Buck.” “If I remember correct,” afternoon down by the corral.” ler 2” Old Man Clarke,” said door, and grew pursued \Stirling, “it wasn’t Buck did it, it was that joker his horse bucked off same “That Hat Six wrang “Yes. Horse bucked him off. He went up so high the fashions had changed when he came down.” “So it was, George.” And he chuckled over the memory. “Where does Old Man Clarke walk to?” I asked; for the steps came scraping along again. “Just around and. around,” said Henry. “He always would do things his own way. You can’t change him. He has taken to talking to this year.” : The door opened and he looked in, “Hello, boys,” said he. “Hello “yourself, Uncle Jerry,” said ing outside now in the dark of the silent town, told its own tale of the old life in its brief way. From Mon- tana to Texas, I had seen them. Does anybody know when the first one was imagined and painted? A great deal of frontier life is told by the four laconic words. They were to be found at the edges or those towns which rose overnight in the midst of nowhere, sang and danced and shot for a while, and then sank into silence. As the rider from his round-up or his mine rode into town with full pockets, he read “First Chance,’ in the morning as he rode out with pockets empty, he read mself Work. “Have chair. Have a drink.” “Well, maybe Ill think it over.” He shut the door, and the steps went shambling away. “His voice sounds awful old,” said Marshal. “Does he know the way his hair and beard look?” “Buck Seabrook,” mused Stirling. I haven't seen him for quite a while. Is he in the country now?” Henry shook his head. in no country any more.” “Well, now, I hadn't heard of it. Well, well.” “Any of you remember Chet Shars- ton?” asked Marshal. “Sure,” said Stirling. “Did him and Buck have any trouble?” “No, they never had any trouble,” said Henry. “Not they.” “What was that Hat Six wrang- ler's name?” asked Work. “He said it was Johnson,” replied Henry. Again the shambling steps ap- proached. This time Old Man Clarks came in, and Henry invited hiin to join in the game. “No, boys,” he said. “Thank you just the same. T'll sit over here for a while.” He took a chair. “You boys just go on. Don’t mind me.” His pale, ancient eyes seemed to no- tice us less than they did the shift- ing pictures in his brain. “Why don’t you see the barber, Uncle Jerry?” asked Marshal. “Nearest barber is in Casper. May- be I'll think it over. “ ‘Swan and Harp,” ” said the man a “Buck is at the back of the room. “That's another.” “Not equal to Goat and Com- passes,” said Work. “It don’t make you expect a good meal like Goose and Gridiron,” said Henry. “I'll trim your hair tomor- row, Uncle Jerry, if you say so.” “Boys, none that tasted her flap- jacks ever wanted another cook,” said Old Man Clarke. “Well, what do you think of ‘Hoop and Grapes’ ?” “Nothing at all,” said Henry. “Hoop and Grapes makes no appeal to me.” “You boys never knowed my wife,” said Old Man Clarke in his corner. “Flapjacks. Biscuits. She was a buck-skinned son-of-a-gun.” His vague eyes swam, but the next mo- ment his inconsequent cheerfulness returned. “Dance night, and all the girls late,” he said. “A sign-board outside a hotel or saloon,” said Marshal, “should have Something to do with what’s done in- side.” “That’s so,” said Henry. “Take Last Chance and First Chance,” Marshal continued. “Has England anything to beat that, I'd like to know? Did you see any to beat it?” he asked me. “No, I never did. “You come for fishing ?” Man Clarke. “I've brought my rod,” I answered. “No trout in this country any more,” said he. “My creek is fished out. And the elk are gone. I've not -jumped a blacktail deer these three years. Where are the antelope?” He frowned; his eyes seemed to be ask- ing questions. “But I'll get ye some meat tomorro’, boys,” he declared in his threadbare, cheerful voice; and then it trailed off. tom of Lake Champlain,” he said. asked Old { Henry. “Not now, and thank you just the same. Maybe I'll think it over.” “Buck Sebrook was fine to travel with,” said Stirling. “A fine upstanding cow-puncher,” added Work. “Honest clean through Never knew him to go back on his word or do a crooked action.” “Him and Chet Sharston traveled together prety much,” said Henry. Stirling chuckled over a memory. “Chet he used to try and beat Buck’s flow of conversation. Wanted tc converse some himself.” i “Well, Chet could.” . “Oh, he could some. But never equal to Buck.” . “Here's a good one,” said the man at the back of the room. “ ‘Bolt-in- Tun.’ ” , “How do they spell a thing like that?” demanded Marshal. It was spelled for him. “Well, that may make sense to an Englishman,” said Henry. “Doesn’t it say where sign-boards started ?”’ asked Work. “Not yet.” And the reader contin- ued to pore over the syllables, which he followed with moving lips. “Buck was telling Chet,” said Stirling, “of a mistake he made one Antone. Buck was going to his night at the Southern Hotel in San- room fair fate at night when a man came round the corner of his floor ; and quick as he seen Buck, he put his hand back to his hip pocket. Well, | Buck never lost any time. So when j the man took a whirl and fell in a i heap Buck waited to see what he would do next. But the man didn't do anything more. “So Buck goes to him and turns {him over; and it isn't any stranger, .it is a prospector Buck had met up .| with in Nevada; and the prospector . had nothing worse than a flask in his pocket. He'd been aiming to offer a drinks. Buck sure felt sorry about making such a mistake, he said. And Chet, he waited, for he knowed very well that Buck hoped he would ask him what he did when he discovered the truth. “After a while Buck couldn't wait; and so in disappointment he says to Chet very solemn, ‘I carried out the wishes of the deceased. “‘I was looking over the transom when you drank his whisky,’ says Chet. “‘Where’'s your memory? You were the man,’ says Buck. Well, well, werei’t they a nonsensical pair!” ‘I remember,” said Henry. “They were sitting right there.” And he pointed to a table. “They were playing cooncan,” said Marshal. “I remember that night well. Buck was always Buck. Well, well! Why didn't Buck learn you cooncan ?” “Yes, he did,” said I. “It was that same night.” “Boys,” said Old Man Clarke over “All at the bot- “Have a drink, Uncle Jerry?” said | in the corner, “I'll get ye some fresh meat tomorro’.” “That’s you, Uncle Jerry!” said Henry, heartily. “You get us a nice elk, or a blacktail, and I'll grub- stake you for the winter.” “She’s coming,” said Old Man Clarke. “Winter's coming. I'll shoot any of ye a match with my new 45-90 at a hundred yards. Hit tne the ace of spades five out of five.” , “Sure you can Uncle Jerry.” “Flapjacks. Biscuits. And she could look as pretty as a pride,” said Old Man Clarke. “Wasn't it Chet,” said Work “that told Toothpick Kid Doc Bark- er had fixed up Duke Gardiner’s teeth for him?” “Not Chet. It was Buck told him that.” Henry appealed to me. “What's your remembrance of it?” “Why, I always thought it was Buck,” I answered. “Buck was always Buck," said Marshal. “Well, well !” “Who did fix Duke’s teeth?” “It was a traveling dentist. He done a good job, too, on Duke. All gold. Hit Drybone when Duke was in the hospital, but he went North in two or three days on the stage for Buffalo. That's how the play come up.” “Chet could yarn as well as Buck now and then,” said Stirling. “Not often,” said Henry. “Not very often.” “Well but he could. There was that experience Chet claimed he had down in the tornado belt.” “I remember,” said Henry. “Down in Texas.” “Chet mentioned it was in Kan- sas.” ‘“San Saba, Texas,” said Henry. “You're right. San Saba. So it was. Chet worked for a gambler there who wanted to be the owner of a house that you could go up- stairs in.” “I didn’t know Chet could deal a deck,” said Marshal. “He couldn't. Never could. He hired as a carpenter to the gam- bler.” “Chet was handy with tools.” said Henry. “A very neat worker. So the house was to be two stories. So Chet he said he’d help. Well, he did better'n help. Said he built the whole thing. Said it took him four months. Said he kep’ asking the gambler for some money. The day he could open the front door of his house and walk in and sit down, the gambler told Chet he’d pay him the total. So they walks out to it the day the job’s complete and chair’s ready for sitting in, and the gzam- bler he takes hold of the door-knob ,and whang!a cyclone hits the i house. “The gambler saved the door-knob —didn’t let gv of it. Chet claimed he had fulfilled his part of the c.n- tract, but the gambler said a door- knob was not cufficient evidence that any house had been there. Wouldn't pay Chet a cent.” “They used to be a mean bunch in Texas,” said Stirling. “I was in this country befor: any of you boys was born,” said Old Man Clarke. “Sure you were, Uncle Jerry,” said Henry. “Sure you were.” “I used to be hell and repeat.” “Sure thing, Uncle Jerry.” i For a while there was little sound in the Last Chance Saloon save the light notes which Jed Goodiani struck on his fiddle from time to | time. | “How did that play come up. . Henry ?” asked Work. i “Which play?” { “Why Doc Barker and Toothpick Kid.” “Why, wasn't you right there that | day 2” | “I was, but I don’t seem to re- member exactly how it started.” | “Well” said Henry, “the Kid had | to admit that Doc Barker put the 'kibosh on him after all. You're wrong about Buck. He didn’t come "into that.” Henry's voice seemed 19 pe waking up, his eyes were waking | “Sure he put the kibosh on him,” . Work agreed, energetically. | “Wasn't it the day after they'd corralled that fell’ up on the Dry Cheyenne ?”’ asked Stirling. | “So it was!” said Marshal. He too ; was waking up. Life was coming in- to the talk of all. “That's where the boys corralled him.” | “Well,” said Stirling, “you | couldn't leave a man as slick as he was foot-loose, to go around and play such a game on the country.’ ’ “It was at the ranch gate Tooth- pick Kid saw those new gold teeth of Duke's,” said Marshal. “It wasn't a mile from the gate,” said Stirling. “Not a mile. And Toothpick didn’t wait to ask Duke the facts, or he'd have savsd his money. Duke had happened to trail his rope over the carcasses of some stock. When he was roping a steer after that, his hand was caught be- tween a twist of the rope and his saddle horn. So his hand got burn- ed.” a “Didn't Buck tell him he'd ought to get Doc Barker to put some stuff on it?” “Buck did warn him but Duke wouldn't listen. So Buck had to bring him into the Drybone hospital with an arm that they had to cut his shirt-sleeve for.” “I remember,” said Henry. ‘Duke told me that Buck never said ‘I told you so’ to him.” “Buck wouldn't. If ever there was a gentleman, it was Buck Seabrook. Doc Barker slashed his arm open from shoulder to elbow. He didn’t want Duke either to die or to lose his arm. And in twenty-four hours the arm wasn't so big. But it was still pretty big, and looked like nothing at all, and Duke’s brother saw it. They had sent for him. He rode into town and when he saw the arm and the way it had been cut by Doc Barker he figured he'd lay for Doc and kill him. Doc happened to be out at the C-Y on a case. “The boys met him as he came , back, and warned him to keep out whole : of the way till Duke”s brother got sober, so Doc kep’ out of his way. No use having trouble with a drunken man. Doc would have had to shoot Duke's brother or take the conse- quences. Well, next day the brother sobered up, and the boys persuaded him that Doc saved Duke's life and he was satisfied and changed his mind and there was no further hard feelings. And he got interested in the traveling dentist who had come into town to pick up business from the boys. He did good work. The brother got a couple of teeth plug- ged. They kept the dentist quite busy.” “I remember,” said Marshal.“ Chet and Buck both had work done.” “Do you remember the grass cook fire Buck and Chet claimed they had to cook their supper with?” asked Work, with animation. Animation was warming each one, more and more. Their faces actually seemed to be growing younger. “Out beyond Meteetsee you mean?’ “That was it.” “What was it?” asked Marshal. “Did they never tell you that? Buck went around telling every: body.” “Grass cook-fire?” said Old Mar Clarke in his withered voice. “No- body ever cooked with grass. Gras don’t burn a half minute. Rutherforc B. Hayes was President when ! came into this country. But Samue J. Tilden was elected. Yes, sir.” ‘Sure he was, Uncle Jerry." Henry. “Well Buck and Chet had to camj ; one night where they found a wate hole, but no wood. No sage-brush , no buffalo-chips, nothing except thi grass, which was long. So Buck hs filled the coffee-pot and lighted thi grass. The little flames were hot but they burned out quick and ra: on to the next grass. So Buck he raj after them holding his coffee-po over the flames as they traveled. Si he said Chet lighted some mor grass and held his frying-pan ove those flames and kep’ a-followiny trail like he was doing with th coffee-pot. He said that his coffee pot boiled after a while and Chet’ meat was fried after a while, but b: that time they were ten miles aparl Walked around hunting for eac; other till sunrise, and ate their sup per breakfast.” “What's that toon you're pla fea inquired Stirling, Playin “That’s ‘Sandy Land,” repli ata ly eplied th “Play it some more, Jed. plumb natural. Like old times.” “Yes, it does so,” said Henn “Like when the boys used to dane here.” ‘Dance !” said Old Man Clark “None of you never seen me dance. “Better have a drink, Uncle Je: sai¢ Sound “Thank you kindly. I'll have or some water in. None of jou nev: did, I guess.” “I'll bet you shook a fancy Uncle.” y SNOY | Lee “I always started with the earlies and kept going with the latest. used to call for 'em too. Salute yor. partners! Opposite the same ! Swin your honey ! That's the style I use to be. All at the bottom of Lak Champlain. None of you ever knov ed her.” | “Have another, Uncle Jerry. Ti nights are getting cold.” . “Thank you kindly. I'll have ox more. Winter's coming.” “Any of you see that Wolf Ian , where Toothpick wore the bucksk' pants?” asked Work. “Wasn't ar of you to that?” i ‘Somebody played it on Toouthpic didn't they?“ said Stirling. i “Buck wasn’t dancing. He w:' just looking on. Toothpick alwa; said Buck was mad because ti Indians adopted him into the tril and wouldn't take Buck. They ga: him a squaw. y’know. He lived wi: her on the reservation till he left f Alaska. He got her allotment land with her, y'know. I saw hi and her and their kids when I w. there. I guess there were twel kids. Probably twenty by the tin he went to Alaska. She’d most ¢ ways have twins. : ! “Here's a name for you,” said & man at the back of the room. “Wh have you got to sav to “Whistli Oyster?” , “Whistling Oyster?” said Hem “Well if I had ever had the misfc tune to think of such a name 1d n have mentioned it to anybody, a I'd have tried to forget it.” “Just like them English,” sé Marshal. “Did Toothpick have any novelt: in the way of teeth?” asked Stirlix ‘If he did, he concealed them,” s: Work. { “But him and Doc Barker h no hard feelings,” said Henry. “Th both put the mistake on Duke G: diner and Duke said, well, they cot leave it there if that made them f happier.” “Doc was happy as he could already.” “Well, a man would be after wi , came so near happening to him, a , What actually did happen.” | “Did you say Buck was dead asked Marshal. “Dead these fifteen years,” s Henry. ‘Didn't you hear about : Some skunk in Texas caught Bt with his wife. Buck had no time jump for his gun.” “Well there are worse ways die. Poor Buck! D'you remem! how he laid right down flat on j back when they told him about I and the Kid's teeth? The more , Kid said any man in his place wo \ have acted the same, the flat Buck laid in the sage-brush.” “I remember,” said Stirling. . was cutting calves by the corral. | “Duke was able to sit up in . hospital and have the dentist w on his cavities. And the den edged the spaces with gold and | cleaned all the teeth till you co | notice them whenever Duke laugt So he got well and rode out to ca and praised Doc Barker for a s good doctor. He meant his arm course that Doc had slashed o (Continued on page 7, Col. 1.)