THE FRONTIERSMAN. The sung of summer searel his skin; The cold his blood congealed; The forest giants blocked his way: The stubborn aores’ yield #e wrenched from them by arm, And grim old Solitude Broke bread with him and shared his cot Within the cabin The gray rocks hands; The north The wolf of The world rot his name; But mid the lurch and crash of trees, Within the clearing's span Where the bursting wheat-heads dint of rude. gnarled his massive wind shook hunger for his bit him oft; now dip Fates hard The aR i out-—-a man! in Hampton's turned Wightman By Franklin Welles Calkins week at Burnt Wood efore the Fourth of the govern employes at Wolf cabin Indians in a “Great 1¢ high flat between Wolf Burnt Wood A solitary B rule guarded the agency It agency. of July ment s the ag Creek ( were also had pitched Circle” on ti Creek and blue-coated buildings. The agent, were a bore, McLaughlin, was holiday On the day teachers the for a Teepee deserted, their tents hool and of we picnie and the ency nt ‘anon for all pienies in his office. spite of the warm weather, was busy with annual re ports to his commissioner. The drone of buzzing flies and the dis tant boom-boom of the tom-tom came to his ear in a sonorous hum as he worked. He was deep in the toils of recom- mendation—he was allowed to recom- mend—regarding land rentals, when there came a knock at, the wire screen of his front door. He knew the hesitating rap was that of an Indian, and a woman, “Oome!" he said, and his pen sped on, leaving his visitor to wait the convenient time of a paragraph “Please, sir—father!™ He recognized the voice, ed, with surprise to Sal- He Iron would ver have com such a time without The door. Her The long Graids, whom alone to sat in and turn- face ne some Crow. Sallie e to him at need standing ingide his her school uniform. Ber breath quick off tangle some WAS dressed In {ace was pale, string had and a shoulder jently ureent girl come one of her of hair fell over her at riding fast “Why, thought nic! 1s Sallie head quirt dangled her wrist, Evi ghe had Sallie,” sald Mel Aaunghiin, Lt , you warp something wrong?” was the daughter man {f his Indians, pupil at school, and a with both the agent and his Father,” she sald, “all with the Indians since my Iron Crow, left us on a visit young men of Turtle Face have en horses of the cattlemen They say they did this because of the young horses those men drove off two years ago. Those young horses be. longed to my uncle; and Turtle Face's men have given those they bave taken to my uncle because they say it is right “That {s not a bright. favorite 0 the wife bad father, The tak- is done he. now so—they have it to get us all Into a quarrel! cause they hate my father—and the ecattlemen are coming to us all! Father, you must stop them! 1 have said enough now. 1 must go quickly.” Unbeeding his remonstrance, his questions, the girl hurried outside, ran to her pony, mounted, and was off. Much disturbed, the agent sought old Crooked Road, the only police man who could be induced to stay at the agency during the dancing. The old Brule listened gravely. “Turtle Face's men—they took horses—one sun biffor las’ night,” he admitted, reluctantly. “Mebbe so calllemans come.” he added, entl “It he do, 1 t'ink we fight, mebbe.” And no further would he talk, although his eye roved the wide range of the valley westward to the watershed. Mclanghlin’s gaze followed his po- Neeman's. shoot mering gray terraces was there any sign of life. government stables. Every horse had been taken by the plenickers, his wife having driven the team allotted to his use Then he returned to his office, con- m The Indians had run off some stock from the outlying ranches. Very well, the horses must be returned, although there was complaint, well founded, that ranchmen had been none too care ful about branding young horses on the agency borders. At any rate, the cattlemen, were coming, wonld come to the ageney first, he concluded. An old feud among his Indians, between the tbands of Turtle Face and Iron Crow, if they Wood, Turtle | | Face had been head chief, but was! | of such unruly and untrustworthy { temper that the government had rec. | ognized Iron Crow's authority, and { this had caused bad blood between the. factions, Still, Mclaughlin did not belleve that either band wished to embroil its tribe in a war with the whites, So he sat down again to his work. It was a couple of hours later that interrupted by the entrance Road. Cattlemans he bluecoat's laconic pointed te the McLaughlin stepped to the window, Even its screen 10 could geveral AWAY, A moving diagonally ACTro8s Burnt Wood slopes He his field-glass and ran outside. There the blurred objects were quick ly resolved into horsemen wearing hats. They were coming toward the agency, but were riding leisure- ly toward the Indian encampment, two miles below. The agent sped away, he shouted back to his Although the day was warm, covered the distance Wolf Creek dog-trot. He beat the squad of horsemen by mile or so; but he had climbed a binff, he discovers Great role had Was vac four years at Burnt he of was Crooked the He was nt come,” Announcems west, through wire discern, miles string of the objects rot not here!" policeman. “Stay he to iat a ! white a laboriously d that the been abandoned ant; no living creat: was on the ground save Ihmgering Urs ye ihe no doubt They of cowl agent had Indians had valcade the first bush ed and at but gone walked head when he the pths no trace sould be 8 hig (18 He Indians before be wi hoped the wanted to the th them that Brules to and that the cow-men the government Before he could determine which way to go, —the grass was trodden down with tracks in all directions, — he saw the cow-men coming over a rise to the southward. They crossed the ring of the wide circle at a gal lop, and he walked a little way meet them Ha {0 Eel to ‘He upon gtolen in- rest \ cattlemen, or, at least the encounter. 4 I revall restore the he might to leave at he ight then the stook, duce 10 to wou'id, if possibl the time for Brules, inclined to As he was the only the squad dress now straight on, u at short range One of the dently, rode to farther get of showed halting said at returned you have? and arent As much as anythin ywiling excitement, Wg the dest gre That's a mu he said, “but | don know goods can delivered At agency is without i wa as can : reds a tip did you? You spoke as pleasantly McLaughlin's eve the lines rifle and revolver words “1 had a tip |0me Men, were which s« that the nresent rds, so be the far give your bushes, ed.” He git them look some heat ag before glanced horsemen, armed He measurcd hia aiong of with that you coming of the young shly he said “1 bell your stock is near at hand. It shall eturned to or double its appraised value shall be paid. 1 will be personally responsible.” “That's good as far as said the leader, “but we reds that took them ponies et or ponies Indi: men, after ye ins fooli gtole” ove be you, it goes” want the It's part our business to deal with horse thieves. Government wont do a thing for us in that line, and we've got to enforce law in our own way Your reds have got to give them thieves up or Well, here they come, fellows! We'll see what they're got! fo say!” A grim look had overshot the pleasant face, and the cowboys had hitched their guns forward with a clank as he spoke, MelLaughlin turned in the direction | in which they were looking, and saw, where he had not suspected the ex. istence of a ravine, feathered scalps, painted bodies and bestrid. den ponies rising out of the earth. Up out of the level surface, here and there over a considerable space, | the horsemen were projected in a silence that could be felt. They | | came Jogging on, halting by twos and | | threes, until more than a hundred | confronted the grimly silent cow. men, Mclaughlin looked them over carefully. These barelegged war. | riors were picked men. They were | ‘all armed, and they had ridden out | of the ravine that their women and | children might not suffer should the white men seck a fight. In spite of his waning hope for a peacefal settlement, the agent was | distinetly proud of that body of fear | lesa wild riders, Togged and be- | feathered as they were, they had the bearing of free men, banded to re. | sist the force of lawless might. Me. that nat the Four still Taupilin was aware, too, ters had gone beyond reac of his aothority. mos: trusted policemen, nizaole in paist and feathers, the front ranke. Although he his ground, between the forces, agent wisely allowed the colloquy open without interference, It was not Turtle Face, Antelope, a subchief and of Iron Crow, who rode front of his fellows, Antelope had English, He the cow-men, hand, “What what asked “Three was well been recor sat in the but Yellow an adherent a little speak. command found the leader and forth a to low some foerss of put bring Indians’ you come want gun land?’ you on be " and ponse, ponies grim res two Injuns “You know wouldn't ha’ into them Yellow "CALS G- the enough, else gneakin' off “Huh exclaimed lope. “Women hide wavs kill women and got men here now-—all men here,” he added, significantly, Then the tall Indian his horse. “Listen,” he sald. vear now you run off indians’ -your men-—ponies went lands not know-—vou take young horse—no brand-—six., We three ponies k-—-we keep.” “He's a liar!” “That's a lie ran along the menacing line of cow-men The agent lifted a hand high and } and in an you Ante you al children, right towered on “Two ponies off our wo * 11 ee got $4 for sllence ng with hat a cowboy on BAW, Iron and fog-trot ville Crow leading three had come a She the ravine he had ascended ing the height “Good for od, instant spurred ward th gun har Huey out in reach he the Sallie!” shout. and in ing Indian on his pony several girl, halted and He whooped flercely own tongue Then, as several forward, the rash young Sioux deliberate alm fired A dozen Brules spurred at him with angry + reckless fellow was You, encouragingly; same his right leaps a young to leveled his at her in e cow-men pressed 100K & and ies, and he and disarmed in a trice halted. She othor arms nd tha 21¢ the ETOA concern at the Lord, fel ‘this to his Good lows,” he said re gal's He turned troop Hats off men'™ While Mel was over Ballie, every cowboy a je the dead!” aughlin bending hat came they sal indians, abash- for the rash act of no move re. off, and ro. for in ed and their fellow, made gain the ponies “And now, men” id boy leader, “we can't here Them stolen "1 leave ks can he moment, gilence, whi concerned to said the cow. 5y good horses was ‘em here, and that have ‘em. You under asked, turning to Yellow do a bt fy mne, gal's stand ?™ Antelope “We hear” iy "It Is a enough” I am giad to be able to add that Sallle Tron Crow, although severely wounded, did not die. A skillful post ian and tender nursing at the school hospital restored her to health She Is today the wife of a prosperous Oklahoma farmer of mix ed blood —Youth's Companion. gaid the peace Brule, solemn token—it is phvaic London Cabmen, london has over four-wheelod and horse cabs. these cabs and horses from different companies. They pay the owners In winter season $1.94, nine thousand tourists and their business active, $2.92 rent a day for cab and horse. Thelr compensation for driv. ing is the difference between the rental they pay and the fares they collect. The men interviewed stat ed that only in the busy season can they make from $10 to $12 a week, and in winter months they cannot realize more than $7 weekly —Con gular Report Notes for the Girls. Statistics show that baldness and higher education go together. In oth er words, the woman with a hay stack of halr on her head doesn't ooiffure of doorknob size.-—Atchison Globe, Simple Globe. Don't you know that it's usually the woman with the doorknob coiffure who wears the haystack of halr?—Cloveland Plain i | | ELOPING UP DATE, man TO coatless puts arm "Round girl, over roads a horseless wagon a leadless bullet from less gun, smokeless fhe a the walst of the the dustless, In they whirl. hammer driven, speechless by powder to taste the lv endless The only luncheon his « Affords them Is a tas meal With a dish of He smokes his old And laughs a *‘Vhen pape tries By wireless union given. oinless to the means, boneless cod heans. teless of stringloss tobaccoless laugh bac’ pipe mirthless x her to» COR telegraph. Motor Record. TO BE C CONTINU ED. OF COURSE. wonder why that rich Mrs. Tup tion furs? isn't Dealer. wears imita because it land Plain ) real Clove THE SPENDERS, “How are fou getting slong, Jones, i? Saving any married since you got money? “Yes, tell my heaven's sake don’t Judge's Library but for IGNORANCE with his whip): field BLIBSFUL He (pointing Rr Cive me the There's tobacco and for dear cigar lines ou can find Harper's a rpe Bazar, HEASONABLE. the Cause “Did iharr repa‘rer you charge?” gented take Cleveland pssment by his He kindly co to EVIDENCE Me LACKING. gaid the po guilty or THE “Stand magistrate aw guilty Nulty” ‘Are up, lice you not “Faith, an’ it's mednif thot till Of hear th’ iv MeNulty as can't tell idence,” replied Chicago News, LONDONESE ‘Ere, abaht Hawker—Wot abaht wot? Coster—Wot abaht yer abaht me? Hawker-—-Well, go on)-Punch. A USEFUL BCIENCE “What is geography?” asked the father who was testing his son's pro gress in study. “Geography,” Jiggs, “is what trousers when you ing to get a whipping.” Star. Coster wot it? wot said wot abaht it? (And little Jimmy inside your replied you put think you are go Washington HATPINS on her friend)-—J were one of those MERELY Ethel (calling didn't know you athletic girls. Madge What Ethel—Look your bureau. Madge Foils! hat pins.-—Boston Transcript. do at mean? folls over you those WONDERFUL. “Physical culture, father, fectly lovely. 1 grasp this rod by one end and move is slowly from right to left.” | | “what won't science discover? If that rod had straw at the other end SADLY DISAPPOINTED. “What's the matter, Miss Prink? “Jim Barnum says the campaign is over.” “Yes. What of 1t?” “Nothing, only it does seem very strange that none of them candidates this way."--Cleveland Plain Dealer. COURTING A BELLE. : “Would it be any harm to deceivd her about my age?” inquired the eb derly millionaire. “Probably not” “I'm 60. fess to HO?” “1 think your chances would ba better with her if you claimed 75." Kansas City Journal { i | 1 i The National Hotel MILLHEIM, PA. B A. BHAWYER, Prop. Pst slam seoommodstions for the travels eommodations for horses is the best 9 by Lewisburg and Tyrons Ralirosd, st Cobasy LR N—— dedpdrdeddetrdd Jno. F. Gray & Son Succdssors ly .h GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies lo the World, . . . . THB BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . No Mutuals No Amessmaents Before insuring r life see the contract of HE HOME which in case of desth between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums is ad. dition to the face of the policy. to Loan on Wiret Mortgage Office tn Crider’s dder’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT Ir TTI Terr rirrrrriidd mS Money PROMINENT PEOPLE. Taft p Tr I ‘estern t sid ent repared addresses in of Turkey sul. k of measles New } ng his of famp~- geat, returned ; ferme d ates resigni Rainsford the leader h President A in the world peace movement Senator Aldrich in a letter te Gov- ernor Pothier of Rhode Island told of his reasons for declining a re-election, Edward Morris, Premier of Newfoundland, in New York City said arbitration of fisheries dispute would bave successful result Richard Croker told old friends when last in America that he would eturn to New York City to live, but would not re-enter politics Senator Depew seventy-six years old, upheld the capacity of the aged at a dinner given by the Montauk Club, of Brooklyn Justice Green, of New York etting aside se witness SC0UD- ov oir for work the Ci a decls a { n the cas Ar a0 unmi £ ty ("omart ¥ ion verdict d NEWSY M Millerand Was who fai be elected in Fran The Trini Chu annual report showed $400,000 The Vatican proposed visit of Monac GLEANINGS. the only minister led 1 ce n's increase of rch Corporatic an ested to Rome of against the the Prince nrot pros biils of Yancey & Seizures f cotton under lading issued by Knight, Co. were made at Mobile Senator Root has been supplanted as New York State leader by U. 8. Attorney-General Wickersham The Government announced its ine tention to use the cotion inquiry as a basis to stop trading in futures in all gltaples Senator oO lodge withdrew his reso- lution asking for the expenditure of $65,000 to continue the cost of living inguiry The Lo British Cabinet's attitude on railway question, Liverpool dealers claim that 500,000 had been lost through forged bills of lading for cotton sent from the United States. mdon Globe criticises the Foreign Secretary for the Chinese o - a newspaper postage as well as an in- crease in the magazine rate were made by a New England member of Congress, Tren ‘s ministers from pulpits the alleged revelry that Fort to investigate. Arthur Nevins American opera “Pola” was heartily applauded by Crown Princess, Prince and Princess Augus. tus William en its second perform- Actress, Formerly Society Woman, Inherits $40,000 From Aunt. Chicago, 111.—Mrs. Cora U. Potter, the American actress, now a resident of Staines Bridge, England, receives $40,000 under the will of Ida A. Richardeon, her aunt, which was filed in the Probate Court here. The will disposes of an estate valued at $350, 000, $61,000 of which Sou to eight public institutions at New Orleans, La. Mrs. Potter is the divorced wife of James Brown Potter, the New York City socibty man, who has since married a famous Virginia beauty, Ee LITERAL LANNIGAN, man to plant shade trees) --"Mening out the holes, I seo, Mr. Lannigan.” Laanizan--*"No, mum. Oi'm dig gin’ ont the dirt an vin’ the boleg™ =~ Doston Transerip!. ATTORNEYS, D. F. FORTURY ATTORNEY-ATLAW YW. HARRIAON WALKER ATTORNEY-ATLAW BELLEFVONTR PA Ko. 19 W. High Stress. Al i yeutsiuional vastus promptly attended t9 &. D. Garris (=3-ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYB- AT LAW EsoLx Boon BELLEFONTE, Ph Buccessors wo Onvis, Bowes & Oxvis Consultation in » Fagan and German. CurMEsT DALE ATTOREEY-AT-LAW EELLEFONTR PA. Office NW. corner Diamond, two doon from First Nations] Bank, rw Ww G. BRUSKLE ATTORNEY-AT LAW BELLEFONTE, Pa All kinds of legal business sltended to prom ply fpecial stlention given to colisctions. Ofoe, Soor Crider's Bxchangs. ne H B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BEELLEFORKTREPA Prastioss in sll the courts. Consulistion ia Eoglish and German. Office, Orider's Excheugs $+ ptf the uid fo Hote! EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location ; One mile South of Centre Mall Assommedstions finstclam Good bar PM wishing to enjoy an evening given attention. Meals for such oooasions pared am short notices am for the transient trade, BATES : $1.00 PER DAY. LIVERY .2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com ercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penna RR B80 YEARS' EXPERIENCE UTI Traoe NManxs Dosions Co PYRIGHTS &C. BE her an vo Amey {roe w bat moti ‘Scenic 7 American, A har A 1gerem Cr. MINN § Co : 15rent, New York Pens's Valley Brin — CENTRE MALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashi Receives Deposits . . 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