r JOE BAKERS GAL HAT was the way she was re T ferred to in a general way Joe Bakers gal and there were plenty of soldiers teamsters and oth ers who did not know that her name was Mary Joe Baker was a hunter Indian fighter scout prospector and miner and he had a cabin and a home up in the Three Buttes of Idaho to the west of Fort HaiT Father and daughter were all alone he a man of 50 and she a girl under 20 We at the fort knew him well and we saw the girl quite often but no one knew Joe Baker well enough to question him about the past For reasons of his own be had taken up his abode beyond civ ilization and though the life was wild and lonely and full of danger the daughter seemed to prefer it A girl of about IS when I knew her slight blue eyes short curly hair a strong face dressed for climbing rid ing and walking and one who com manded both admiration and respect the moment you laid eyes on her she 3iad a handshake for officer and pri vate alike and to us and all others ttIio came that way she was a border queen We said to each other that it was a strange thing for Joe Baker to make his home among the dangers of the mountains miles and miles from r and to expose his daughter to the hardships privations and perils of a frontier life but no one questioned him or her or did either volunteer any explanations The cabin was in a bit of valley way up the East Butte and was built inost ly of stone and contained three rooms There were days at a time when Ba ker was prospecting or scouting in which the girl must have been left entirely-alone but she rode hunted and fished and now and then was the guest of the colonels wife at the fort for two or three days at a time The wom an may have found out more about the girlthanil have told you but if so the information did not cross the pa rade ground to rhe barracks For weeks the Indians of Idaho had been suiky and sullen and threatening The forces at Fort Hall had been in creased by fifty men all wagon trains were doubly guarded and every sol dier or citizen who understood Indian character felt that an outbreak was at hand One day when Joe Baker was at the fptlCCJ2SUltmauwaliU tkecolarieL tliG iauer aavisea mm to aoanaon nis nome and take refuge among us The old man realized the situation but said he would wait and see He hated contact with the world even that infinitesim al portion represented by a hundred people at a frontier post and the daughter knew no fear We saw him two- or three times a week as he was then scouting among the Indians and bringingiin reports but we had not seen the girl for a month when a ser geants guard was dispatched to East Butte Jo cut and haul telegraph poles for the line which was to connect the fort with the outsde world There was danger that we might be cut off if an outbreak occurred but there was also need of haste in completing the line That was first glimpse of the cabin as Ave went to bur work on the mountain side and Mary stood at the door to shake hands all around and in quire after those who were absent 5he anticipated an outbreak on the part of the Indians but expressed no fear Only the day before she had re ceived a visjt from three sullen war iiors who demanded food and seemed on the point of committing violence iut she ordered them away at the muzzle of her rifle and bad no thought -of leaving the place until her father re turned and advised the step Two miles east of the cabin we made our camp and began work but the In dians were ready sooner than we had planned for On the second night of our stay we were fired into at midnight and routed out of camp with the -loss J of two men killed We were falling back in the direction of Bakers cabin when we were joined by Mary In a rocky pass crouched down behind Taowlders and being fired upon every thirty Indians in our front the girl told her story and assumed the command in place of the poor sergeant Jying dead Indians to the number of a dozen had made a sudden rush upon the cabin just at sundown but fortunately she caught sight of them in time to close the door Then began a fight which lasted for an hour during which she had killed two and wounded another of their -number The redskins had at length drawn off and the brave girls first thought was of the soldiers on the mountain side She hoped we had leard the firing and would come down to investigate but as midnight came without us she left her shelter and headed for our camp knowing at any step sbe might run into a prowling In dian but yet determined to warn and save us We were soldiers and by no means -novices in Indian warfare and yet none of us grumbled when she ed the leadership and passed the word to slowly fall back on the cabin The Indians pressed us every foot of the way and but for the darkness of the -night and the girls familiarity with he lay of the ground not one of us fe2Sfc2isMfap fafarOr 2g2si would have escaped We were no sooner sheltered by the cabin than it was clear that we must stand a siege before the door could be opened again Bakers cabin as I have told you was a pretty substantial affair its walls being of rock and its roof of dirt Here and there were loopholes and the door was heavy enough to stop a bullet In leaving the fort we had been provided with 100 pounds of am munition per man In our retreat from camp the four of us had brought off our carbines and cartridges The girl was armed with a rifle for which she had a bountiful supply of ammu nition and when we came to take stock we knew that we could hold out for a week so far as having the means of defense It was the question of food and water which made everyone look serious There wasnt food enough to give the five of us a square meal and not a drop of water inside the walls The spring from which it was obtained1 as wanted was 200 feet away and it would be running the gantlet of death to attempt to reach it Well said Joe Bakers gal when we had canvassed our situation and its chances we must put up with things as they are and do our best The In dians have encircled the cabin and will be on the watch the rest of the night but they will make no move un til daylight comes Let us sleep if we can She went to her room and the four of us lay down on the floor and napped until daylight came The Indians counted on us as a sure prize and only needed to be vigilant while night last ed to see that we did not escape There was but little firing during the last of the night and none at all during the first hour of daylight From the loop holes we saw the Indians moving about however and it was clear that they were all around us and in strong force In the larder there were about five pounds of flour and two or three pounds of bacon nothing else The outbreak might or might not be known at the fort Even if it was the colonel would hesitate before weakening his slender garrison to send a column to our re lief He would rather expect us to fight our way through or dodge about and come in singly as fugitives There was no telling -how long we should be cooped up to live on those scant tions and by common consent we went without breakfast The Indians cooked their morning meal in a leisurely manner and it was some time after sunrise before they made their first move It was a band with Chief Charlie in cdminand and he knew Baker and the girl even better than we did Baker had hunted with him and on one occasion had saved his life and he called at the cabin on various occasions and had been hos pitably received He was therefore probably in earnest when he advanced alone and unarmed to within a few feet of the cabin and said to Mary We are on the warpath against the whites and we mean to kill kill kill until all are dead or driven away Your father saved my life and an In dian never forgets I do not want harm to come to you and you shall take your horse and ride away to the fort in safety But what about the soldiers she asked from one of the loopholes They cannot go he replied The soldiers are here to make war on us to shoot us down to make us obey or ders we do hot like We have only hatred for them I know how many there are- in there f our They have their guns and will fight but we shall kill every one Come out and we will send you safely away I shall remain here and help the soldiers to fight you answered the girl t Then you will be killed with them The chief turned away and went back to his warriors and ten minutes later there was a circle of fire all about the cabin The loopholes were the ob jects aimed at and as every redskin was sheltered from our return fire we plugged the loopholes up and did not fire a shot in answer It was noon be fore their fusillade ceased and it was almost the last bullet which pene trated a loophole and struck one of the soldiers in the groin In half an hour he was dead From the minute he was hit until the death rattle came the girl sat beside him holding his hand but helpless to do anything When his life went out she rose up quietly and said Carry the body into my room and lay it on the floor Thank God he did not cry out for water when we had none to give We had scarcely removed the body when the Indians made a rush There were now 100 of them Some of them carried a log to batter in the door some climbed upon the roof some fought with us for possession of the loopholes We fired up through the brush and dirt and through the loop holes and at the end of ten minutes had beaten them off but we had lost another man A bullet had struck him in the heart and he had fallen without a groan In return we could count five dead Indians outside and see three or four wounded crawling away As we bent over the man and knew that he was dead the girl motioned for us to lay him beside the other and when we had returned to the front room it was to beg of her to accept Chief Charlies offer if he still held it good and secure her own safety With only three of us left to guard the cabin another such general attack must overcome us She replied that she would not go and we at once set about reloading the carbines and mak ing ready to defend the cabin to the last It was hours before we heard from the Indians again and we were almost certain that they had drawn off when an hour after sunset and with out the slightest warning they rushed for us as before r We blazed away as fast as we could through the loopholes but I am sure the cabin would have been carried but for a lucky shot which killed the chief His fall created a panic and just wheri the situation was most critical the at tack was ceased I did not knew when they drew off The demons were on the roof and battering at the door and firing in upon us from some of the loopholes when things suddenly turned dark about me and when I recovered conscious ness I felt a horrible pain in my side A bullet had broken a rib and passed out behind the shoulder Stretched dead on the floor was my comrade and sitting upon the floor weeping was Joe Bakers gal She had fought the last of the fight alone and with three dead and a wounded man in the cabin it was no wonder her nerves had given way There was no more firing that night Consumed by thirst and racked with pain I remembered nothing except that Mary spoke hopeful and sympa thetic words now and then and that she had the guns distributed around so as to cover as many loopholes as pos sible in case of an attack When morning came the Indians ask ed for a parley and offered to send her to the fort I did not know it be ing out of my head with fever She scorned the offer and for three hours the cabin was under fire A rush would have followed the fusillade but as they were gathering for it a half troop of cavalry from the fort headed by Joe Baker came galloping to the rescue and the Indians were routed It was ten days before I knew all about it A great Indian war was upon the land the girl had been sent hun dreds of miles away for safetj and when peace came again she did not re turn It is like a dream to me three dead men one grievously wounded a white faced girl moving about and making ready to fire a last shot the crack of rifles and the fierce war whoops but I know that it was all real and a humble private soldier whispers God bless Joe Bakers gal wher ever she may be Pittsburg Post Coultl Afford Sew Ones I want to look at some of your best paintings said Mrs Crewe Doyle to the art dealer according to the New York World Yes madam replied he You pre fer landscapes do you or marines or shall I show jou both Id rather have a picture of country life I think with cows and trees and things like that you know Yes madam This way please Now here is a very fine work by Rem brandt The customer surveyed the work crit ically and then said This picture looks like a second hand painting Isnt it Well said the dealer in a some what surprised tone I suppose it might be termed second hand but -I dont think I ever heard a Rembrandt called that before Who is Rembrandt Where can I find his studio she asked Hes one of the old masters mad am Hm Well I dont want you to try to sell second hand pictures to me for I can afford to buy new ones You may just tell Mr Rembrandt to paint a pif ture especially for me and have it made twice the size of this please This order so astonished the dealer that he allowed Mrs Crewe to stalk out without putting down her name and address and now he doesnt know where to send the painting when Mr Rembrandt gets it done An Honest Judge One of the most honest men who ever lived was Judge Arthur Shields said C R Markhani of Cheyenne He was on the bench in the early days of Kansas and I was one of the lawyers who practiced in his court Upon one occasion I was conducting a case in which I had perfect confidence when the trial began but before it had prog ressed far the evidence against my cli ents side of the controversy was so strong and so unexepected that I saw the case was hopeless I- fully believed the witnesses lied but could not shake them by cross examination and it look ed as though my client would lose his property Judge Shields had decided every question with perfect fairness and it could not be seen that he was in any way interested until suddenly he called to an attorney Mr Black take the bench for the rest of this case then turnhig to me he said Have me sworn as a witness I will not see a man rob bed in this court in matters of which I am personally cognizant He took the stand and his testimony saved the case for me The other side appealed but the judge was sustained the only case of the kind in the books Washington Star Under Water A contrivance for producing a naked flame under water has been patented in Germany It consists simply of a chamber into which there is led a stream of gas and a stream of oxygen both at such pressures as to overcome the pressure of the liquid These streams are made to spread out by be ing driven against a flat surface 5ZZZPZjZZ 3Z x NOTES ON EDUCATION MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PU PIL AND TEACHER The School Savings Bank a Simple Method of Inculcating Economy and Instilling Thrift Ho w Maps May Be Used A Schoolroom Scrapbook School Savings Banks One of the simplest methods of incul cating economy and instilling the thrift which discourages drunkenness pau perism and crime is through the school savings bank This sjstem the administration of which occupies but fifteen minutes of school time per week provides for the collection of the childrens deposits by means of a special roll call every Mon day morning The child always has on a memorandum card containing a date for each Monday in the school year re ceipt for his pennies and record of his possessions He becomes a regular baiik accountant drawing interest on his amount when he has deposited 3 and when he is ready to leave the pub lic school has often from 50 to 200 to his credit This distribution of money sponsibility business knowledge and disposition to thrift and industry is of incalculable benefit to those having the advantage of it and explanation of the system assures almost universally its broader use Germany Italy Hungary Austria England Belgium and most European countries teach practical thrift in this way The system is in use throughout France and under direct patronage of the Government If our Government would thus insure safety for and en courage small savings by the people our individual tendency to extravagance would be less and the United States have little need to borrow from foreign countries The postal savings arranged for by most of the older nations are inutually helpful in the same manner to both Government and people and I can but trust that later this thoughtful home economy will be nationally fostered here The school savings bank system is knocking at the door of every school house the influence of the directors and the co operation of a reliable bank be ing only necessary to set them in mo tion Back of this comes the initiative interest of the philanthropic individuals who knock at the schoolhouse doors These carriers of good news and prac tical help budgets are many and they are the connecting links of social and economics value between the student and the practitioner between the dreamer and the laborer To those not yet familiar with this every day thrift teaching some facts in regard to its introduction into and pres ent status in the United States may be opportune J H Thiry inaugurated the school savings system in Long Isl and City N Y public schools in March 1885 In these publicschools the system has been in approved operation for eleven years The system has been taken up in the interval by several oth er schools mostly in New York Penn sylvania and New Jersey until now we have it in four hundred public schools throughout this country and the aggre gate deposits of the children March 1S96 amount to 402020 Much of this money has been withdrawn during the time either for use or by the pupil leaving school When a pupil outgrows school he conducts his business directly with the bank and the money is no longer counted with the school deposits 244S5674 have been thus withdrawn leaving to the credit of our attending school boys and girls to day 15710410 The practical knowledge of moneys ac cumulative force economy industry self reliance and business insight given pupils through this method is of far more worth to them than the money though no boy or girl underrates the satisfaction of having to his or her per sonal credit 50 or 200 on leaving the public school The possession of money broadens the capabilities of daily use fulness especially when it has been ac cumulated by the saving of a few cents daily or weekly and he who is thus trained usually knows how to distrib ute wisely The inculcation of thrift by this meth od as testified by educators in the com munities where it is used tends to in dustry to a lessening of needless expen diture to the uplifting of the poor the equalization of opportunity and the growth of responsible self supporting citizenship The school savings bank system is simple of administration Teachers using it often speak of its reflex benefit on themselves for like tkft parents of some of the pupils who had not earlier bank accounts they have themselves become owners of bank books and bank credit This pleasant and popular reform measure is gaining adherents wherever known and in a few years I think will be as much at home here as in the old world Life and Health How to Use Maps The following exercise will help chil dren to make rough plans of the streets in the neighborhood The teacher draws a large slate on the board In the center she draws a small outline of the schoolhouse She then has the pu pils decide in which direction the differ ent streets or objects lie She now tells the class that she will take a walk and that they are to follow her and she moves the chalk along to represent a street The pupils tell the name of the street represented and where streets cross they are indicated by lines cross ing the one the teacher is on The chil dren are now asked where the teacher is and they name the church store or other well known building on the cor ner Several of these walks are taken in i l MJ IHJl II HO this way the teacher leading When the pupils are sure of their ground on of the number may be called upon to lead the class first to his own home or any given place and afterward wher ever he will The teacher may now dictate the direction and the pupil may draw at her direction These exercises may be dictated by using the terms right and left to direct the pupils or by using the points of the compass It is well also to direct by description only and have the pupils follow and tell where the teacher has stopped the pu pil can also be benefited by the giving of clear and explicit directions so clear that the class can follow easily Con necticut School Journal A Schoolroom Scrap Book Few are the schools in rural districts that are supplied with any kind of ref erence books A very useful book can be compiled by teachers and pupils A scrap hook can be bought for a small amount or one made of cambric with board covers and leaves filled with his torical and geographical sketches anec dotes and biographies of eminent men notes on travel and descriptions of nafr ural curiosities In my school was a large class of well advanced pupils who became much in terested in gleaning from all classes of papers SUCU O3ctvnotn3 As the articles wore brought they were placed in envelopes properly labeled and were pasted in the book when quito a collection was on hand An index neatly written on the first page aids in finding the subject to be referred to All articles should be plac ed in their proper department and blank pages should be left for future use so that sketches and extracts brought in later can be put under their correct head Interesting facts about plants and animals pictures and scenery and per sons of note all should find a place in this Encyclopedia Pupils will take more interest in this book of their own manufacture and refer to it more than they would to a whole set of encyclopedias Ex A Schoolroom Revelation Among the revelations which the school makes to the child there is one whose force is far reaching It is the revelation of a man or a woman pre sented by this teacher He has had a presentation of manhood in his father and of womanhood in his mother but the revelation of manhood or woman hood coming from his teacher has a different appeal and attacks his sensi bility at a different point The writer overheard two mothers engage in con versation opposite him in a street car a few days ago discussing their chil drens school relations and one of them the mother of a third grade boy said I have had to abdicate the teacher is queen The teachers statements are gospel mine are commonplace It is true the teacher is queen for her pu pils and happy for them if she is really a royal woman and he a kingly man Ex Kindergarten Magazine At Indianapolis Ind an innovation in the way of raising funds for the sup port of the free kindergarten and ci drens aid society is a kindergarten magazine to be issued monthly for nine months in the year Mrs Tucker will undertake the general management of the paper the editors of which are yet to be chosen Miss Rhoda Selliek will make the design for the cover and Mrs Lois G Hufford will conduct the child study page of the magazine A few pages will be given to advertisements- How It Happened Well inquired the commander-in-chief of the Spanish forces as one of the field officers entered the room what news Sire exclaimed the officer I have to report that yesterday a body of near ly a thousand of our troops met a band of about two hundred insurgents fifteen miles from the city Within ten min utes of the time when they caught sight of us they were on the run and Stop until I can cable Spain The Home Government must be apprised at once of the victory I wish to say sire that Silence There will be time for that later and turning to his stenographer he dictated the following dispatch from the seat of war Havana July Steenth Yesterday a small detachment of the Spanish army came suddenly upon several thousand of the insurgents strongly intrenched upon the hillside at a point about fif teen miles from this city Though out numbered ten to one and at a disadvan tage as regards position the Spanish force quickly drove the enemy from their position and pursued them until nightfall The Spanish loss was one man killed and two slightly wounded The insurgent loss must have been tre mendous amounting probably to sev eral hundred but in the darkness they succeeded in making their escape and taking their dead with them Now what was it you wanted to add you tan faced freak from the fron tier gently inquired the commander-in-chief I was on the point of saying sire that they were on the run toward us and that it was only by throwing away our arms that we managed to escape with our lives By that time the dispatch was ready to be sent and inasmuch as it was cor rect in the main point that the two forces had met Weyler thought it hardly worth while to make the other minor -changes A Cannibals Misfortune Missionary in the Cannibal Islands What is the matter with that man Native Doctor He hafa vata you calla delirium tremens i My My The poor fellow must i have eaten a Kentuckianj t0 eZSrtf sy -3 - Marriott Watsons next story is to bw entitled The Career of Delia Hast ings The Rev Washington Gladden is writing a book on The Working Church and Its Pastor The visitors at Shakspeares birth place during the year ended with last March numbered 27038 Harold Frederics new book Mrs Albert Grundy Is declared by the Lon don Sketch to be rather flat and too easily written Maurice Maeterlinck is at work on a new tragedy to be called AglavaineeF Selysette The title sounds quite Spen serian with a touch of the Far East Though 74 years of age Edmond de Goncourt has attracted world wide at tention with his new volume on Ho kousal the greatest of Japanese de signers Gladstonco new volume of Studies Subsidiary to the Works of Bishop But ler will be published early in July It will appear simultaneously on both sides of the Atlantic Gen Sir T E Gordon has nearly ready a volume entitled Persia Revis ited 1S05 in which he comments on the present Shah and on the political situation After a long stay at his country house at Saint Tropez Emile Ollivier is again back in Paris Improved health allows him to push forward his history of the Second Empire and a novel called Ma rie Madeleine Charles E L Wingate is preparing a yolume on Shakspeares Heroes on the Stage as a companion to his Shaks peares Heroines on the Stage He also has ready a handsome holiday vol ume to be called Famous American Actors of To day The Bookman is authority for it that John Morley has in preparation a new volume of Studies in Literature and adds It is pleasant to note that Mr Morleys writings have happily contin ued to increase in spite of the jealous demands of the political shrew Mrs Lynn Lintons My Literary Life which is to be published in vol ume form in the autumn is said to con tain some startling revelations and much personal gossip about literary characters who lived amid the Sturm und Drang of the midcentury period Andrew Lang says O difference in taste in books when it is decided and vigorous breaks many a possible friendship He indicates the passport to his favor by telling as that he or she who condemns Scott and cannot read Dickens is a person with whom I would fain have no further converse In 1865 four lads occupied the same room on the ground floor of the first S Since then they have made their names more or less well known in current American literature They are Capt Charles King Arthur Sherburne Har dy John Brisben Walker and Richard Henry Savage After Mr Barries mother and elder sister were buried together last Sep tember it was authoritatively announc ed that these two were the original of Jess and Leeby in A Window in Thrums It is said that the sad beau ty of those characters is found in still fuller measure in Mr Barries forth coming book about his mother entitled Marget Ogilvy Tron Foundations for Tall Buildings A new way of constructing a solid foundation for a tall building has been tried with success in Berlin It was necessary to find a solid base sufficient ly strong to carry a building weighing more than 10000 tons The plot of ground upon which the building was to stand was adjoined on both sides by high buildings which rendered unsafe the digging to any deptli for a founda tion The only way out of the difficulty was the sinking of a caisson in the cen ter of the plot upon the cemented top of which a hollow form of cement was built Into this form molten iron was poured filling up the space and upon this cast iron foundation plate the un derstructure of the building now rests while the side walls are supported by a cantilever structure The full weight -of the load upon the cast iron founda tion is estimated at more than 20000 tons lioolrs Out for Himself In hunters lore there is an idea tnat the jackal is the lions provider that he finds the game and takes the lion to it This superstition has no more foundation than is found in the fact that after a lion has slain his quarry the jackals always attend and await the conclusion of the repast in order to pick up the leavings A Gem by Jtichter Look upon fame as the talk of the neighbors at the street door a library as a learned conversation joy as a sec ond sorrow as a minute life as a day and three things as all in all God creation virtue I VYant You My Honey For those with weakened digestive powers honey is said to be a very de sirable food If a person is very tired too exhausted to eat a few tastes of honey will act like magic The cheaper some men are the more prominent the position they try to se cure In an audience addressed by a great man A man who has a boil ought to hare sense enough to keep away from a cifj cus - T Si 4f4 n X i v V X A SH