THE OMAITA DAILY J5EE: TUT USD AY, NOVKMHEl? 1, 1000 A Day of Retribution. fCopyrlght, by Martha McCulloch-Wn-Hams-; At Jut the wagoa was loaded. The trunk came Id front for a teat. Th two feather 1 b?ds were Just behind It with the safe flt j on top of thetn and the drop-leaf table snug against the tailboard Bedstead chain, a 1 new cradle, a candlestand and many bags miscellaneous superstructure, crazy-iookine:. i Jlrsmr Dawioa could tauiter. ih. in w K,n.. ,L w-K. ,.. knee, and the broody 'hen with her elates I of ergs In the basket at her feet. The ben had died the summer before. ' She had stolen , her nest, but Mn. Damn could not bear to leave her. any more than to tend her, robbed of her eggs, along with the other fowls which went the day before Jimmy gulped hard as he turned the key la the lock The house was old and ram hackle, but he had been bora la it, aad had thought to lire and die there. A tortoise shell eat came to rub against bis legs, mewing plaintively aad look In? up In hit face He stooped and stroked the rreature until It purred loudly and made as i.Anh i a.M in-t.i, lain hi. mr-m M : Hr.r s..v v..iiiv .vin. -vn nn tii. tens' You cant go' It does look mean to! human. Whea he heard what had hap-!1" eav ou but it's the worst sort o' luck tolpened he would at least agree to let the move 'cats aad walnuts: The good Lord Dawsons stay the year through, working knows my luck is bad enough already." "Superstitious k Jimmy1 I'm rather ! be a good teaaat. Maybe by aex: Christ glad of It. 1 shall take Mittens straight up mas Ellen would be strong again. It might to the house we need another mouser." be, also, Abshtre would releat so far as Mr Absnlre satd. romlng around tae corner . to keep thea on uattl they themselves of the house, then with a laugh, slightly rhese to go. He must have somebody to forced. "Maybe you win't sell Mltteas j work the laad it was worthless without. that rna be bad luck, too but you'll give this to Mrs Dawson, with my compliments for the baby." He held out a sliver dollar. Dawson made no motion to take 1'. He looked down at Abshlre ntth smouldering eye until the man quailed. Abshlre was short, stocky, ruddy, with rlo clipped reddish hair and beard. Dawson, lean. dark, muscular. towered a head above hUa. and bad lank, sun-Dteacnen locks uiowiog an er iar . collar or nis rusty coat. "Keep your money-now you've tot it. Mr. Abshlre." he ald sloly at last. "It , won t ever be named bet een-t us again. , now i re cot my quittance ta tun. tiut remember this I owe ye a day In harvest. i li pay u som- lime a ioa; aay i Abshlre laughed Indolently. "You dis appoint me, Dawson. ' he said. "I had thought you too much a man to sulk or whine over paying an honest debt." "You thoucbt right I ain't whlala"," Jimmy said, clambering up beside his wife. "You know I didn't know It was your money I borrowed aad you want In' my place " "Certainly! The house obstructs our view," Abshlre said. Dawson's eyes blazed. "The first o' us Daw5on. got the laad from the Injun." he said. "I wanted .to pa. It oa to chlldrea o' mine Jest as It come to me" Mrs. Dawson laid a slleaclne band on his arm. He shook It off. but Just then the baby began to cry. ai thcugh pinched with cold, for all the mother's cuddling "Poor little mtte!" he mutttred, touching the clumsy hooded head. "To think I must take you five miles In the teeth o' this wind and then Into a cold house!" He started up the mules and soon had ... ... ..... " - . "".ion "Z.f.L If" I?,, t"m cried fitfully, though his wife did her bst to hush H, It bad been ailing all week. He almost wished he had pocketed his pride aad begged Abshlre to let him wait his moving until the weather was milder, i nut mild days are not plenty la midwinter- 1 least of alt whea the cold has strengthened to b freeilng new year. He had stayed oer the day Itself If he moved thea he would be moving until the next Christmas and moving once was, to his mind, sufficient for a lifetime. "I wish you'd got us a place tn the fall." bis wife said at last, not reproachfully, but with a soft platntlveness Infinitely harder to bear. Jimmy sighed deeply. He could not tell the truth that he had humbled himself before Abshlre. hoping against hope to stay on in his home and in the end redeem It. Ellen would never have done that. She was fier proud, for all her soft ways. "Hadn't we better turn In here at the doctor's?" he asked as the wagoa caae op posite a big gate, standing generously wide. Mrs. Dawson shook her hear. "Do you think there's time?" she asked. "It's past II now and everything to do when we get there. Baby's asleep still, I wish the doctor " The words ended In a scream. She had uncovered the tiny face cautiously, to find It pinched and blue, the little lips gasping. Dawson understood her Inarticulate cry. A tura ot the wrist sent the mules through the gate, a cut of the whip set thea Into a dead run up the ragged drive. But It was a limp and lifeless little body that Mrs. Dawson laid ta Dr. Wharton's arms. "The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away." the kind doctor said reverently, cradling the dead baby on one arm, and with the other pushing its distracted mother into a seat at the fireside. Mrs. Wharton bent over her and put her arms about her,, sobbing la silent sympathy. She bad lost a baby Just the year before and knew better than to mock this grief v th spoken comfort. Dawson cowered miserably at the c'Ler side ot the fire, through a leaden halt-hour Thea he got up and took his dead child la his arms, saying as he pressed his rough cheek to its waxen face: "And I have Kot to bury you. little one, all by -our.elf. Abshlre owns the graveyard he says he don't want any more Dawson oa his lt-ad. alive or dead." "Abshtre Is a fiend or a fool or both" Dr. Wharton began, but stopped short, staring at Mrs. Dawson. She bad risen, her eyes dry and burning. "We must go. Jim." she said la a high, harsh voice. "Give me the baby' It it so sound asleep It mm! K trtftt Cmjihlnf. mlf, . t , V, the hen. It was little Jim's you knoa." this apologetically to the Whartoas. "It's It's the most we have got left of blm. Always, when he fell asleep oa the floor, his pullet would go aad perch on his shoul der and stay quiet till he waked " Jim took his wife tn his arms, heedless ef other eyes. "Ellen!" he said; EUeal Wife! You you better stay here with Mrs. Wharton. I'll go on and see about things." "You must stay!" Dr. Wharton .aid. He saw that the poor creature was mil'e out ot her mlad. T.est aad quiet might br'cg back her reasoa. With Infinite sympathetic patas she was coaxed to swallow a sleep tag draught and sit easily in the chlmsey corner, bugging the ded child close to ter breast. To humor and soothe her the hen was brought In and set where she could touch the basket with her foot. Jimmy stood bock ot her. his big hands fetdliiw? her hair with clumsy teaderaess. fT-senily her head fell back, her arms relaxed, the little white ta-e dropped so the firing daylight touched it Ellen did not stir as Mrs. Wharton took It away. You'll let us bury It beside our little one." she said to Jimmy, In a hushed whisper. He nodded apathetically. His one thought now was Ellen. He was of a slow, fond, devoted nature. He loved his wife much as he hirl lnrei hti hnme ! - ..... .... . had never loved anybody else He had ct ne rati n mse:: a s'ut fe'.tow rears old. H could aot conceive ,h;s Mf Be lIwt JBe B?Bt aeTtr awake Lord. Lord; Ta)u, B niktf . t0 4 hr 4... e supplied. -I hain't got a hom l0 k ntr ,a. j.d Ure t0 b(r wS8e 0,ks m Bt Bf mean. C il4i 1 h ah... W.... i. I $ k. I take her back among the old. familiar herself. surroundings, ibe would awake yard gate, the mules roopla their heads patiently aad edg.nj away from (he wind. He was alone with vt0 ,the b"wf th? b?U8!' w'th Us,'f r''t through the door, out to i the waroa and threw of! the upper load TLea he got a blaaket or two, went back, auaed Ellen la them, bore her out dead asleep aad laid her geatly oa the billowy feather teds. In a minute the wagon ws out on the road, headed for the old home, the mules golag at the swift, cheery trot of beasts chilled aad eager for the com fort of woated stalls. Jimmy's mind was made up. He would break la the door, make a fire and leave Kllen tesid it. while he west In a&eak with AlMbire. After all Abshtre must be ! the place oa shares. Jimmy knew he ccu.d And I'll work for hla better'n ever I did for myself," Jimmy thought, "If only he 11 gimme leate to show" The house stood around the shoulder of tho hill, at the head of the valley through hlch the mill stream ran. It aj the fall la the stream that had tempted Jimmy to his loss. It was in plain sight from his house dcor. aad he had thought ever slsee ae was a mil toy goiag tea miies wttn ats grllt wjat a pity 1 waj the water power," waj B0. taraesscl and made to serve it. aelgabors. Abshlre's big new house stoc-J WBle hundred yards higher up the valley, Th, Dawjoa homestead, broad, low, ram- I biiag. did shut it a ay from at least halt the j prospect dowa stream. The alley opeaed oa, broaJ .-iliac Tilt,, fceiow lhe nttie rocky rise oa which It was built. By the road Jimmy was traveling you came almost upon the house before you saw It. The sua had left the valley, but It waj still full of drear winter daylight. Jimmy . i shut his eyes a moment, recalling how I must look. He knew every aspect by heart, He had never re- h.. nitfh m. it.. . it Mn-rt in hmrf .-ifk pn.n v i away from had roomed over every foot of It. bench aad 1 level aad bill slope, or sat in his rough porch, watching it grow greea la sprtag sun shine, or Uugh Into summer leafage, or rustle with fat harvests In the red aad russet time. He had watched through the rala aad the fine weather, la the saow, at dawn, at dark. There as no need to open his eyes until he came to the gate. The mules would keep the road of their own motion besides he could drive there if it were black dark and himself stone blind. They must bo coming ! to the blc rock caw. The road m. . , turn there-he drew a little on lhe I tciu, uu ciuwcj iv ,cei ice wagon swing without the least Jar. Suddenly the mules snorted, stopping la their tracks. Jimmy was almost pitched i upon their backs V , , ce ecras3Dlea Pngni he ,b' a ""Wing. S ncrtse-a hot He stared a minute, uacompreheadlag, then fell back, moaning and covcriag his eyes. Flames leaped, licking, darting, from ever7 window of his house. The roof was smok:ng furiously. In another minute the fire would break through. Men were kindling ether fires in the outhouses. Abshlre wa;ched them, his bands in his pockets, a taint grati fied smile about his lips. The mules backed and trembled and even reared a little, but Jimmy drove them re Uatlessly forward. The road was so narrow he must drive Into the lot before he could tura. Abshlre stood at the gate of It. Ha started at tlrht of Jljnmr. "Toff nv thins? " he asked. "I hope it was nothing of consequence. You see, I'm about aaktcg ! a clean sweep " Pillars of fire shot up from the house, painting all the dull valley with their own scarlet glow. They were so fierce the wind scarce could bend thea even at the tip. and make of thea Caatcg banners In the sky. The house was tlnder-dry and burned with a roar 11V th.sf ft fi,'-fl.in Tf mtnul Ellen's numbed senses. She struggled up to , her knees, looking wildly about her. then with a scream leaped to the ground aad I darted toward the door? shrleklag: "My I baby! My baby! Have you left It there to bura?" Jimmy held her. struggling and panting. "The baby died and she went out of her head." he said to Abshlre dully. "I fetched her back I thought it might help her and that maybe you" "It was foolish, and perfectly useless," Abshlre said, irritably. "See here, Dawson, caa't you understand! You this bouse was In my way. I determined to buy and burn it as soon as I began building. You caa easily find & better one, you have still some money." "Excuse my comln. Mr. Abshlre!" Jimmy said, lifting his wife Into the wagon as he spoke: "It was foolish. I ought to a-knowa you could not b made to see there's things In this world money can't either buy or do." The roof tell la cs he spoke, sending showers of sparks and Caalng brands far around. One of the brands fell upon Daw- for subtlety. He was all for making deals son's bare hand, burning it slightly. Aa- w"n. the Allison men. Allison divided about other struek Abshlre oa the cheek, but ' equally with Abshire the vote of the moua glanced off harmless. Ellen bad grown ' tains and the midland. Abshlre knew that quiet, looking about her with frightened i his hope and his fear lay ia the Cummin eyes. She gazed at Abshtre vacantly, then following the rough, hardy fellows from said, as though speaking to something un- the river counties. They were almost a unit 1 een "You say, he shall be burned yet m.d witn ore o: c.s own mamng It was onlv a mad woman's ravine. But long after the wagoa had rumbled out 'of sight, when all the fires had suak to glia - mering banks of coals. Abshlre, walking home at the head ot his hired men. shivered as though stricken with deadly cold. Abshire was Just Jlaay Dawson's age 27 but he had made the greater part of his big fortune. H waj cot a native. He had been drawn to the county by the mineral riches of a district lying something deeper in the bills. He had bought the lands for a song, then set up mlnt-s and furnaces upoa them. Mysterious transactions, vaguely spukeu ot as deals, had taken them oft his hands, leading hla a clear million., magnifi cently Invested. Then he had decided to go la tor the lite of a country gentleman. He owned already all the land at the bead ot th valley. There he built a big gray stone bouse, sheltered, yet airy made green lawns about lt, and set orchards and gardens and .vineyards. A ring fence ran round It all, but he was gracious anybody was welcome to go through his gates and along his well kept private roads. Indeed, he was gracious to everybody. j when once he was rid of the Dawsons. j They did not prove troublesome evea sj a ' memory. He heard vaguely that they had rnnn mr Same said Hllen hi I . come back to herself, others that she was still nigaty. aii agieea mat jimay wouia 'ake rri: j-- l f h--J .i e she was to'. 4ic.cn- .'. 4 wr'u h bat her ; i care for. Ahh.re listened wl h fit tly the proper degree oi sympathy The sneakers decide he could net hr anything on hu conscience bt never made the least effort to changs the conversion. The truth was ho was bent on proving to himself that he had nL In that, as in most other things. h bad groat success. Still, wha he began playing at polities, he kept rather out of tight. Me sa4 the party sl&te, naming judges, confreasmon and such like, ed pulled the wires whereby his puppets thouid pat them through. Plate honors for himself to put aside. The lead ers decided la their Inner minds that he was either very disinterested or very ambi tious. It might be he played for the game, not the stakes. It might be, alto, he aimed at the higheet things, so did aot Ma to make himself cheap aad hackneyed it a holder of thoee lees exalted. He waa a bachelor. His mother and a bevy of orphan aleces kept house for him. It aa opa house the year round and came easily to be the center of things to cial aad things political la that part of the ; country. He had 9ne parties Indoors for his specially c boa en friends and barbecues, lawa daaces aad so oa tor his frleads aai the county beside. Something momentous happened at one of the laa daaces. Abshtre proposed to Margaret Wyeth. She looked up at him, colortag falatiy. aad said with the least hard breath: "I will marry you hea you are goernor ef the state." Then she raa away. She was proud aad ambitious m're ambitious for him thaa even for he sh wanted hia to show the world t "iaat a man he truly was. Thea. too. she 1 1""4 toT Jttlntlon. She had been merely rich all her life All that was la August, a year before convention time. Electloa came two months later, but the voting was a mere formality. Two weeks after the lawn party the county raper farthest away from the gray house speat a columa la proving Mr. Abshlre's fitness to be governor. The cut week, two other remote county week lies, lookln Abshlre the various and of Major Abshlre as among near political poteattali ties. Followed an impressive silence. Ab shire knew seed must have time to germi nate. He knew every move ta the game. " u" cue lo a'aT- lo oeprecaie. even u-iiiii-i, uaui a very mile wsiie before the delegates were chosea. He played it almost too fine. His previ ous coasisteat aloofaets misled a good Diany of the soveretgas Into believing he meant what he said. Two other possible governors did not believe, but chose gladly to profit by the faith of the rank and ale. The convention opeaed with the prettiest possible three-coraered fight before It. No candidate had evea a majority, though the ocly-origlaal-dle-ia-the-last-dltch Abehlre men had a shade the best of It, To make matters worse, the two-thirds ru" was sca.ceiy less sacred ana blnJiag uPoa aost oi ta delegates than the con - u ' , i ru I twas pity, and pity 'twas, 'twas true. Ah cu u i.euicaauis aaa louna ai out, almost as toon as tney awoice to a cnaA . . V. a .1... r-. ....... - , i. v. . ..-i.... .v in. the word majority. The man who named it would be hooted, and the man whose partisan he was understood to be assur edly would suffer tn votes. After the ntaty-first ballot the ballots had aot varied by ten either way the cos- vectl03 adjourned to meet again at 12 next uay. it was arter midnight. Two days haJ developed no advantage for any man of the ' three. The assembly had beea reasonably temperate and equable until the last three , ballots. Edged words and wrangling thea ! had showed tha; tempers began to fray , under the long strain. The leaders felt tho I situation critical. Their majority la the , state was so swollen and riotous It would! cot take much to rend the party in twain. "Argument is a waste of breath! We have proved that fiat." Llsket, Abihlre's cam paign manager, burst out to the conclave In Abshlre's room, after adjournment. "It remains to try well, h re a, influence. We must somehow clinch things before this time tomorrow morning or have the very deuce aad all to pay." "Tell us news, Llsk If you can t keep silence." Martin said, yawalag as he spoke. Martla presumed oa the fact ot heading the Abshlre delegation first Instructed. Llsket swore at hla and added: "News! If it comes to news of a split, I Judge you'll stay ome from congress this time." "Llkely-and I should hate Ilk e poison to miss $5,000 a year, tar-earned in the sweat of my ears." Martin said traaqullly "But somehow I can't be afraid, when Abehlre sits there sailing like a graven image, never opealag his mouth." "Sllenco is golden," Abshlre said. Llsket whistled. Martin laughed explosively: "Abshlre! Abshire!" he said. "What aa 011 ls Io" ,to ob: ere I"ou h,ave fceca P'Plng aad we swearing ourselves ulM"e "lU6 ia ua' reasonable beads!' Abshlre laughed, a low, chuckling laugh, but satd with a deprecating wave of the bacd: "Really, I have said nothing. You all know that trite old proverb. Of course I aa In this fight to stay and win. I looked oer the ground as soon as I came. A dead lock or a dlsagreeaent would. It appeared to ae, be equally detrimental to the party. Naturally I hnvi dsce what I could to pre vent either" "How? How? How? Thai's what I want to know," Martin broke In. Llsket frowned. Abshlre yawned slightly, as he said: "Go to bed! Tell all the toys to do like wise and to be very tde aw ike toward 12 o'clock today." After he had dismissed thea he sat by the p?fa wlcdow. smokinz and thiskicz deeplv. It was well be had held to his re- serves tb.-ou:hout the campaign. Subtle i '"" ' net-led aad Llsket had no genius -more, they had an open, child-ttke entau- s.jjm xor taetr man. .viore strictly speak- ing It was enthusiasm for their leader-that slouching fello-v Dow. who had prutiexlly 1 forced Cumata's candidacy, J Abshire hat en Doss only eace. and then i half a block away. For many reasens he I did not wish a nearer view, it would be ruinous to meet the maa and talk with him face to face. He bad fouad out. though, that i Doss was desperately poor tha: he had a ! sickly wife to whom he was imndly devoted. It was said he would gle his soul for the chance of curing her. Hers was an obscure rervous malady, for which complete chan' of air. scene aad environment might work wonders. Recalling Margaret Wyeth. Ab shire felt w.thin himself a thrill of irtuous sympathy, as he reCeeted that he bad raado it possible for this unkaowa woman to re gain health aad happiness. He took Margaret s picture from his breut pocket and looked at It, his eye suddenly soft. She bad made hla ic.- lever twice over by setting herelf thus to spur his nat ural ambition. Intuitively he felt that lova was the root ef her aspiration. He put out tne lights, nung himself, full dressed UDOa tne wi ana ten asleep, his last conscious tnougnt. Margaret win be there to see my triumph." Margaret was sacng the very first who climbed lno the gallery she had ben . . . . . - . . . - e - J " u.'i u-tu here before The place had Indeel a fas- ( cmsnoa ror aer, wni:a tie; betrayed to her g jaio tae zuture, saw captain i ' . . ' -'-" Hi Bkrrj eaRraTiDR. maklnc th m.f ci,,- . . . . lura.ei inuiim no- mm imiu uv . in, nn, ntflo r ...... a . . . . i . . i comiagaaa. A forta.ght later ?' c" . r1' .-""1 03e . Worth3f ao& la r. for the 1 ao re en era r'r. ,h: wv sundry sheets made mtntloa OTlir'. va"..u'.."K1 1 ! utlftil. but one which will ef , ,h. " , " Z7' Abshlre. Colonel Absh.re, Judge i ""'," e, .... ,1 ' . fJiloa once showered oa hug. j moWD TshTbV w. ,7 rTl fa'her Major A veran cf Y (ho ef hfr hear" 3' . ...... f jf. . ferred to nl at hi la-ith'.tr s eitow ra;h-r than mingl la V turmoil of the Soor He knew many ine delestates. aad en tertained Uaraarei with Hquaut scraps of inside political history, thowth he f tpetted her Ittnoreat ecthulasm far too much to even Intinut that there va ever crocked worV H m m' He s new the tank fellow la the gray snit." he had said upon the nrat day. as the river county men riled In. After a little he had added: "New but a man to be reckoned with. If you notice, (here has not b-n a minute since he took hU seat that he has uct had a knot of men around him.'' , Marparet had tooled, and sbsddered faintly. She had caught the man's eye. svd dealy lifted. His face was mild and mel ancholy, but the eye hd a gleam like the lambent SicVers she had seeti upon molten steel, when Abshlre played guide to her through the big turaace. "I can't make the fellow out." her father went on "His face Is old ja at the least T a the walk aad the muscle of. say J li. He's the worst dressed man la the Cum- , mm crowu. yet tneir leaner. :cr an taat. aac; ragged "poor" such works of art as This rough fellow came in oa the minute these adorned the walls of ninety-alne out as the third day's session opeaed. By time cf every hundred houses. It was depress the chair tad dene rapping for order he , Ing from an artistic point of view, but was on nis feet speaking, cot cuentiy, out , with a subtle feeling in his words that caught the assembly Instantly aad made It hushed and breathless. "Honorable Mister Chairman." he began. "I uk it tsar ain't no man on this floor who felt that be com here free. His people na,i seat aim to say wno tney wanieu tor i governor and he was bound to say what come to be eae of the lost arts la a few they told him. as long as there was aa? f years all its followers will have passed ehasee o' getting it for 'em. Now It has, away and the good eagravlacs now extant done been showed that all the people cala'tiwtu evea more dlstiactly become merelv have their way-seeing that some wants one interesting subject for the tollector rather ccan aan some aawsner. ctmeooir bm ei can only do what he caa do' 1 "Rizht as a trivet! " "Go It. Carter ; county!" "A Daniel come to Judgment came aoerolngly from all about. The was the first time he tad ever spoicea to aar coasiderable body of men. He did not ' look at the chalrms him. She sat almost the lambent ltghtnlag ta his eyes "Such being the case," he weat on, "Judge Cummin has asked me to withdraw his name" Cheers from the Abshlre men shook the root. Allison s supporters sat ten secoads in stunned silence, thea added their cheers j to the babel of hurrahs. The river Ben were hurrahing, too not over heartily, but eaough to show they were not sore. Those aearest the speaker smiled almost grimly. He was holding up his hand imploring si- lence. When it came he went on, every wcrd vibrant with tense emotion "Our , ,.,, .. . hnr ,. ivh.rr,! t th. ri,.n rl,.. ?.r.! back of him. "have satd they'd vote as I might choose fcr 'em. I choose that they i sha vote each maa lcc0rdln' to his con science. I am going to vote for Mr. Ab- cgaln the cheers were deafening tai.e and prolonged 'becaEie I'll get Jl.MO for my vote, and I haveBOt a mighty pressln' need o' money." " I Stunned silence; th'e'a pandemonium. A few Abshlre hotheads charged upon the river section, but were flung back whence' they came. The chafraaa spltatered his ' gavel In vala poundings. In the midst of It two Allison men alaot forced Abshlre's ! accuser upon the rostrum. "This is a thing that cannot be allowed to stand upon anybody s bare word." one of tCea said. "Show ycur proof If proof you nave!" 7h9 accuser opened a worn aad faded DOcketbook and took out a crlso and rust n,,,. half sheet of rinr. It was a note to ling half sheet of paper. the president of Abshlre's city bank, dated j the day before, and running: "Dear Thwalte Pay to the bearer, for my use, 11,000, this shall be receipt for the same. Oblige, yo.rs burriMlv. "WILLIAM SPENCER ABSHIRE. ' As It was read aloud, aald a storm of hisses, another vaper came out ot the old pocketbook a somewhat bulky paper.' worn with 'many handlings, and beginning to yellow. Its owner unfolded It, saying as he thrust It under the other man s eye, "It's ten years since I saw Mr. Abshire, but. I couldn't doubt his name when I saw It. I've had that by ae all these years, to ', aake ae remember It." Sklaalng the mazes of legal verbiage the Allison aan saw that he held a receipt In full froa William Spencer Abshlre for the amount of a mortgage loan made to James Dawson. As be read Jlaay mur-. mured, a little apologetically, "You see, I sir. Daws is Just part of my name but no body down our way ever calls me by the , whole of It." j "I see many things," the other man said under cover of the cries and curses and confused angry voices. "Mr. Chairman. I ' move an adjournment until 3 o'clock." , "No, no! Allison, Allison! Allison by ac clamation!" was shouted all about. Whea the chairman put the motion there was a tempest of aes. Jlaay Dawson alone, with folded arms, and eyes full of fierce satisfaction, satd: "No' I vote for Abshlre. I aa bound to pay hla hla vhat I owe." nniDuus tvniLi: xov iv.iit. New Structure l'ut lu Place In Twenty .Minute.. Between S and 9 o'clock yesterday mom lug, relates the Syracuse (N. Y.) Press, there was cutte a novel experiment In brtdzs building at the East Creek station on the t New York Central railroad, about eight J I cait of LltlIe Fal1'- rhe bridge 1 No- 5 anl lt ls tui!t to carrr off 2004 I water wnea tne tast t-anaua cree is irozea or the channel ls choked. The old bridge was seventy-five feet long and sixty feet wide, containing four tracks. Ia order cot to delay trafSc more than was absolutely necessary the new bridge, which Is a through plate girder bridge ot steel, was constructed by the side of the old one. 8010 bridges were at an elevatloa of ten ; "-s i ;ni 0010 oriages were piaceu oa car trucks under which rails were laid. A powerful locomotive was placed on the regu lar track and attached to heavy chains fas tened to both bridges. These chains were passed areuad pulleys to give the bridge a sidewtse motion. 'When everything was in rcadiae3 the locomotive was stared. As the old bridge was moved to the south the new bridge, which weighs ZiC tons, took its place. Th old bridge was left by the sld ot the tracks, where lt will be taken apart and removed at leisure. The new bridge having been put in place west Into use at once So quickly was the change made that th passenger tracks of the road were blocked but twenty minutes. The work was done ualer the directtoa ot Clifford Lewis, Jr . who Is pocttfex maxlmus on this divisloa of the Central. This Is the first time a bridge has tn-cn removed aad replacM in this way on this road and the operation was decid ed I v satisfactory and successful. nixnmrrU't Iron .lerve. Was the result of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are -oi to be found where stomach, liver. , kidseys and bowels are out of order If t rou want these Qualities and the sL-ei j u . 4MV mt , iuc U 1 1 - 'hey bring " Pr King's New Life PHIi. , ( Only Zi. at Khn fc Co s drug iters. , creaaea me raoTfuuou aae as smc u rr.n h nr rot nt....... -r. . . 4 . . . a. but straight ahead of . t0 note-lhe dcllcacr of th. ,h- -..l , - . f." " "B0 opposite, so could see of ,at COBDOiitl:a. " ola: STEEL EXGRAYlSr, A LOST ART to take Its pla e the sadness Is there. A The war he worked it was qu"-- a Batter of fact, steel engraving has pa.s4 genious. At about the middle of hi pr A Rar ae To ? T- -Tn- A-- W ", something a satisfactory gram he wti'.ild 'undertake to shift a a -' 10n?)" laa wW'Pt A7riJ "7 and far more cheap has been discovered, nonball from one tllk bat to another T e PcOtograpfiT. , Photography is a cood eoough substitute hats re placed at opposite ends .f a , for the inferior work which was so fa- long table, aad while the trick was .1 I miliar .,-., n , ... Tk. urnrrMi it,. uhm . h ... ...t FEW ODD mi FOR OLD ENGRAVERS .Notable Mirrlmcin of the Arl thnt Arr II Isch l i'rlinl llr ululluti U rotinht lir the Drtrlnp. nirnt of I'hutDKrnpli . Twcno ave ears ago, or even less fr back iato the days when Art was not spelled wh a capital letter, says the New Ycrfc Tribune, so telf-respecttag citltea would hare ventured to lanto his friends Into a ' parlor" aot adorned with spec! tteas of the alleged art of more or less incompetent steel engravers. "The Pil grim's Progress." "The Guardian Angel.' dlmlautlre aad Irritating chlldrea oSertng Kaves of bread to preposterously grateful iris reeble imitation testified to (he su premacy of the noble art of steel eneravlnr. of which the masters were aa inspired few. The ecgraved atrocities have vaauhed from the walls aad along with thea the truly beautiful specimens of the art have rrowa io d less aai less highly prized, except t,y ice connoisseur. Steel engravlnz has lean tor the admiratloa of the many oor un.it inn i tv. ., j OBe ,nr J.".' "I" . ao '"- tus'"u pictures oi ambitious sue t aad rnA ha t i ....u . . . . . I leftArer tn. j.(i. . , . r - - - " suvu u. laem s are es. It IS rutllc the figure rather t-an the dMin t . banknat- i. Vf " -! ,!'?. "i wnose pride in his art remalas although tae glory of it has gone forever. ItlRlirat Ilevrlopinrn t In .tinei-ira. This braach of earravicg has reached a higher developaeat in America than aay -ere else. The delicacy of the work H sometimes extreme and gites an idea of the standing of the artist in the days when his skill was put to higher uses. The old a a?e growing fewer every year. For the special professloa of baaknote ecgrav- youag mea are being trained to take their places, but for the broader work, as it used to b carried on thr will v, nn successors The old encravers are the lt of their ancient guild and with them the ( art o: steel engraving as it relates to rge pictures will die. But. narrow as is their field, it Is In terestlng to find that these otd artists rec ognlie one another's work by the minute details of the banknote or stock certificate. Much of It ts done by geometric lathe la the hands ot apprentices, but the touch of the true artist Is perceptible to his brother, Just as It Is possible to detect la a moment the style cf a palater. There is always Infinite pathos about the Idea of the world's losing anything beau- troncer thaa ever 1 inr.i- -ri.h . ' arniia oniy cae is iiviar today an I iiReiy, w.,a loving care py some old man he has aUalaed a creat a?e. This (a the King Solomon Had A Great Reputation for Wisdom One of his wipe remarks was "Of making many books there is no end." He had never seen the making of a great dictionary. It is like the making of many books and seems to have no end. In niakinir the Standard Dictionary an army of the brainiest and smartest men of the world was employed and a million dollars spent. Take the BEST PRODUCT OF THE BEST BRAINS and the result must be satis factory. But with all this expenditure of man and mind and money The Standard Dictionary is Offered for Only $7.00 There are so many points of superiority in The Standard Dictionary, aside from its mar velously low price, that one can scarcely enumerate them. Some one has said there are in THE STANDARD 4i dictionaries in one. Each topic is the work of a specialist. Satisfactory to students and scholars because so complete, containing 300,000 words, nearly three times as mauy as the old stand-by, Webster's Dictionary. The book stands in high favor among the wise men on both sides of the Atlantic, and that fact alone establishes its success. Here are some opinions from the press of Europe: The Freeman's Journal . Dublin. Ireland: "For scholarly accuracy and exceptional fulness ... it stands un rivalled. ... Of other existing dl: tloaarles with which we are acquaint ed, we know of none that can be com pared with the Standard." The Belfast Age, Belfast, Ireland. " . . it were difficult to praise this splendid dictionary too highly. It ts a work for which all who speak the English language aay be Justly grateful." THE STANDARD DICTIONARY has a great many attractive features. It is not feas ible to enumerate all at this time. For instance, so many words are in constant dispute. Such words have been referred to f0 leading philologists and their opinions atkeu as final. The matter of spelling is also diflicult to adjust. In the Standard that ha Ix-en settled conservatively, yet accurately. The quotations are gems, illustrating to a nicety the use of the words. The illustrations are numerous, in fact it is a work that will be attractive to children on this account and consequently all the more valuable as an educator. No home library where there are school children should be without the Stan dard Dictionary. College men generally agree as to the excellence of the work. Here are some expressions con center the work by college professors: For $7.00. Examine the Book. Megeath Stationery Co. 1309 Fartiam Street. VZTtXt U does net mat!r re ha come something! rage tor etching also helped to overthrow la th- audience tn the rote of a spetu -. steel engraving from Its position of se-1 would suddenly raise a shout of 'I. if t eurlty. but the downfall was brought about cleth!' Hilts would stop in apparent , chiefly by the Invention of photography, fusion, and after a wordy altercation u The (date engraved by really good work- J ing which the other would insist ca : 3 ers cost a large tuns of money and an point, he would snatch up the cover ar.gr amount of time disproportionate even to and disclose a bey in th act of pass'-.g a the high price. Muller speat six years Inj canaoaball through a trap In the Uble t perfecting his "5lstiae Madonna." aad the 'New are you satisled' he would exciai price paid for It rewarded his time at s letting the cloth drop again You ouch" less rate than that ot an ordinary dry' nave sense enough to know that etc y goods clerk of today. trick has Its mechanism.' Such werVs were. Indeed, a labor ot lore ' "t'P to that point it seemed to be a and to them thre attached a sentimental j victory for the Interrupter, and the a Interest that can never cling around the I dlenee weld generally howl In derisic i photograph which has driven the engraving 'At that Illltx would pretend to get tunot. from the field. An ordinary photographer 1 "1'H do that trick, anyhow. Just to p o that l.. a man with no special artistic In- 'you!' he would exclaim, and. on taking a j splratloa caa produce the beautiful work hhm ib me piace oi taose once hoaored copies of great pictures. Of course steel engravings are still bought aad sold and still hang la the houses of artistic people, but those who buy are la the mala collectors. The general public ao longer looks at the old-time favorites. To take up some volume of a good art Journal of tweaty-flve ears ago and compare It with recent Issues Is to meet a forcible re- minder of the way la which taste has cnnce quarter of a century ago tne pages o: suca volumes were filled 'Hth steel engravincs aad nothlag else, while now dashing color effects, daring "studies" la character, fill pace after page. l'oxlttuii In the Art WnrlU. The rosttlon In the art world of the : ' " " " h ! ,Br u "'r Interest la their aanaer i t .. -.i. I ine engravers tor wntcn art lovers seek i mull K Ihnu wA f ,k, , H. . I ,k. 1 .Tv , . of JCM. rw sreat works the artist Oermaa. fid ward Maadel "Whea I die." he has said, "there will be no mor " Mandela "Charles I." "Madoaaa of the Skies.' Van Dyck" aad the rest are la the true maaner of the old engravers. But. although the old line easravlag has passed, a few artists are devotisg them seUes to a klad of engraving on steel which follows after the old masters, while It does cot Imitate exactly. Sherbora, la I t-aSiM- on or tae known workers. io pJtes l0T , 'inv nr";n5. I" p.iu. iuvii3iic steel eaKravcr, wi;a nis ""R r!te. the modem world has no lace ItlJtin-JI.VDi: INTUIlllll'TIO.NS. An ltrfrctle Trick Employed ot Alonr in rolltlca! Sprnklnsr. "That dodge of ready-made Interruptions Isn't confined to politics." said a theatrical manager to a New Orleans Times reporter. "It has been used on the stage with great success. Old man Blitz, the conjurer I mean the Blitz whose right name was Schwartzaann used to carry around a fellow whose sole duty was to expose his tricks. The scheme proved a hit and was Th Irish Times, Dublin, Ireland " . . It win be recognized. w have every reason to say, aot aloes throughout ths aerlcan continent, but In all Kcgltsh-speaktng parts ot the Old World, also as an authority from its fulness, discrimination, va riety and ample erudition. It Is a monument of Aaerlcan learning and industry . From ' publication f the Standard Dtetio.. .-y Aacrtca may date a new period of the country's his tory " Prof. R. A. Todd, Coluabla- "I aa exceedingly pleased with Its fulness, conden sation, accuracy and completeness. Its mechanical execution is a delight to th artis tic sense " President Bashford of Ohio Weslyan- "After a comparison of aany words I aa quit convinced that the Standard surpasses the Century Dictionary In careful and accurate defialtloa of words and in Us illutratlons, as well as the number of words defined." Later I say more emphatically thin ever before that lt Is the best dictionary la th English language, and 1 want It ter constant reference." Prof. DuSeld of Princeton- "It will be conspicuous among the enduring monu ments of Intellectual life at tf.e close of the ISth century. . For eompreheaslveneia of vocabulary, accuracy in definition. Judicious arrangement of material. Instructive 11 luitratioa and admirable typogrsphy, it Is superior to any other work of It class, and ere long will supersede thea and be recognised as The Standard Dictionary." resily one of the foun latinns of I fatr.e and fortune couple of glass vases, he would place f e 'op m raiting mem ciear oi iro table. Then he would lift the cloth, act, behold' the boy had vanished Into th a WHh. the cover still elevated sr. l he .1 1 1" Plce by pins the feat of shifting the ta t . "ould triumphantly performed, ant. ' neediest to say. the spectators would she themselves black in the face The tri nothing but a piece of clever palmlrff aa the disappearance of the bogus uj ierat was effected by a simple arrange raent of Inclined mirrors but. all the sace. It was a very effective piece of wck aLd never failed to make a profound Imprv3 slon on the audlece. Bllti had a doi:o variations of the Interruption s-hcn.i some much bttter than the on- I hae i -scribed. al. while they would be a f "o too obvious for the up-to-date theaters -of the present, they aever missed fire la t'.o unsophisticated early days. Fake Interruptions in a slelght-of ha i or conjuring performance have the daut advantag- of giving eclat to the tri(k ail Intimidating any real sceptics la tbeh , e who might otherwise prove troubles!? After a man hears some other fellcw g badly worsted la an encounter wttb t -magician he will hesitate to put In an cr himself, no matter bow certain he raiy that he sees through the Illusion la bs younger dys Herrmann used rsdy-n,a e Interruption to some slight extcn'. L ' afterward discarded them as being t03 daagerous. As far as he ever went was get aa usher to call out: 'He's iot f p his sleeve!' or 'Look uadr that box' course, the article la question woulda' - there, aad Herrmann would get a rour j applause, while the usher retired, aj-a ently crestfallen." The prologue to "The Burgomaster with sixty-five people la the cast, at Press c.'ub benefit Friday afternoon. Guv Luders. composer of the music, wt! d re the combined orchestras. rifr rrnn l.ikr Hntc. ChU-ago Post "Marry In haate know." sh remarked significantly, dee--ing It unnecessar-, tu complete the -tloti. "Why, it was a rhunh wedding. w..- It?' he asked "Of course, but'' "Thn I don't .ee wher the haste crrti'i In When I stood up before a whole -gregtlon and felt urojnd for the ring 't seemed to me the ceremony took a gnod x hour? " A I'nnuiy .Medicine lir.t. Ninety-nine cases of a hundred Caseare s Candy Cathartic will cure the ailments ct the family The hundredth time call the docfr Druggists. ICc. 25c. The Liverpool Daily Post. Liverpool "It ls an Implement that will b- of vast service to thoee who cultivate the literary arts on either side of the Atlantic. It ts a monument to Amer ican iadustry. no Ices thaa the grat White City by Lake Mkhigan itha lata Chicago World s Fair