THEIR MOST JOYOUS MOMENT m R I re re 'i J J" P ft K 1 I ft-, f l or aturav Kzmaz N.Hdsketh PricmardxP.G.S. T copyfofr by jfmmy cojwwy IHSTof all, contemplate fur (i moment tho HCcno upon which tho events I am nliout to 'innate took place: Tho pnni pits of I'n'tnKonln, limitless leagues of linrsh Rmss, of llisri of g-anlto pebble and of blnrk basaltic lock. Upon tho Atlantic rltu of theso mighty plains a few hheup and cattlo fnrrim exist, a fow settlements surh nH Santa Cruz and Gal- logon; In tho far Interior a itow Telnielchc tnrtlnriH lend their nomadic life. Othorwlfeo tho pampas throughout all their 'enormous extent aro given over to bird nnd beast, innd upon tuein Is carried out n perpetual warfare. iIIiiko condors, measuring nB much as eleven foot ncross their wings, htiwk-llko chlmungos and coranchoH. pumas, hoary dog.s, Magellun wolves, carrion-eaters and creatures of prey exist In almost Inconceivable numbers. Traveling through this country, one Is forced to realize the struggle for llfo. Let tho camper leave his bildle upon the ground for tho night nnd all tho leathern parts of It will have been devoured by morning. This Is tho work of tho hoary dogs or tho Magellan wolves. It Is easy for a murderer to get rid of all trace of Ills victim upon the pampas. A shot at twilight. body lying stripped of Its clothes, and two hours aftor dawn thoro will bo nothing save a few bones to tell that the deed hns been dono. Ascenslo Brunei, tho wild mnn of Santa Cruz, was by birth u Swiss, but In very early years his parents omlgrnted to Argentina, and while still a young man he bj-oko away from them, and with his brothor, whom I know but whose namo I forgot, worked hlb way south until ho came at last to tho Hanta Cruz provlnre of I'ntimnnln. Hr.- t. years ho and his biother, whom wo will call llonrl worked as nuuntw, cattle herding and bhcep-tendlng! but. growing in time weary of tho wmm unexciting nature of their calling, ai length set up as tamers of horhcs ow a liorso-tamer In Patagonia carries on his business by traveling from estancla to ostancla. When he arrives nt a place where the owner, has some horses which ho wants ' broken, tho tnmcr camps ami re mains until he has finished his con tract. Tho business Ascenslo nnd Henri pursued for a long period. Ascenslo was a marvelous rider, nnd his services and those of his brother were In considerable request all over the south. So somo months and oven years went by during which many hundreds of animals passed thiough the hands of tho Brunels. and tney became the owners' of a comparatively largo troop of horses. Ascenslo. though a savage and merciless rider, never during nil this time gave glimpse of the ferocity which underlay his character. At length the two brothers happened, In tho natural courso of their nomadic profession, to come to the estancla this lino word may mean anything from a largo residence to a mud hovel with a roof of tin of a farmer who had recently nettled in the country and who was tho husband of a very pretty wife, a dark beauty of, It waB rumored, a rather uncertain temper. The farmer gave tho brothers a horse-breaking contract and for some weeks all went well. Ono evening when tho farmer, tired from a long day In tho Baddle, had Just come home, Ascenslo Brunei entorod, and having. It Is said, put hlin off his guard by making some simple llttlo request, murdered him In cold blood. The actual details of this. Ascenslo's first, mur der are hard to come by. Henri, whom I met near Ultima Cass, never told the same story twice running, and the only other witness, tho wife of the murdered man, passed through some terrible experiences and I never heard her authentic Btory. The main fact remains: 1 Ascenslo murdered the farmer In order that he might carry ofT bis wife, which ho did, besides driving the whole stock, the cattlo, sheep and horses of the dead man, Into the hoart of the wilderness. Here for a time, tho two brothers dwelt with the unhappy woman, until at last Ascenslo quar reled with Henri. It waB not for the first time, and Henri wont to sleep, thinking It would have all passed over in the morning. He was wakened at dawn by a voice shouting to him, and saw at once that during the night Ascenslo had driven away all the horses and had also removed the woman. ABcenslo then said he had decided to part com pany with his brother for good and all; that at first it had been In his mind to kill him In his Bleep, but for their mother's sake ho hud re lented. He added that be had shifted tho horses and stock to a safe distance and that If Henri fol lowed he would unhesitatingly shoot him down. Ho then rode away without more words. Ab Henri had neither horse nor weapons he did not follow. Indeed all his efforts were directed toward getting out of the wlldornoss allvo. Living chiefly upon berries, ho wandered for many daj-B. finally to arrive, an emaciated wreck, at the eBtanda of an Argentine herdsman. Tho latter tended him and, when ho wns recovered, gave him sufficient provision to take him to the nearest settlement, whero ho duly arrived. Proved Innocent of tho murder his brother had committed, he went back to the llfo of a peon and shepherd, and so ho passes out or this history for good. The next act In tho drama opens with tho ar rival in the coast settlement at Punta Arenas of tho woman whom Ascenslo had forced to accompany him Into tho wilderness. Sho bad a frightful tale of cruelty to relate, culminating In a fortunate escape. It appears that Ascenslo had become subject to fits of passion so frightful that thoy wore akin to madness, and indeed madness of a kind had al ready declared Itself In him. The Tehuolcbes of Patagonia hold tho well-known belief, common to many branches of tho Indian race, that when thoy die they pass to the Happy Hunting Grounds. On tho grave of u warrior they slay bis dogs and horses; within It they placo saddlo, knlfo aud food, and for nine nights they kindle great fires, by the light of which tho V ?- - mtkWHmMtx v lsifOeWiLHHsM V. ffgjiBftPaHBfij LbljSv MMrMBMBMM' flflflflflflHaflfls' m MJJJJJMJJJjt,r? I flv.MflflEvJflPsi .-'-oJMMlasisssssssssssssssssssMs t-yA-ry y- r-2SHMLIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILI?rta ""immmBBmmmur-y: tttttttttttttwmt i tmittm - . . . - - - - l - t .--' . . - kt -.--. i t m.m . mt WW. ghost may rind his way upon his long dark Jour ney. After that they light no moro flreB, as they consider that the dead man has had time to finish his Journey. Whether .Vscensto grew deranged suddenly or whether It was a Blow and gradual process, no one cun ever know, yet the fact remains that 'be came to believe In the religion of the Indians with somo variations and startling effects of his own. Believing, as he did, that death was only a road by which man passed Into a longer and more enduring, though not necessarily an eternal life, he conceived the idea of building up a fortune for himself in that future life. In Ascenslo's diseased brain there arose the Idea that whatever he slew lu this world would bo his property In tho next. On that point he was a maniac; on all others, perfectly sane. Now began the serloB of thefts which made Brunei's namo known from the Rio Negro to the Magellan straits. One after another he raided tho horse farms noar the coast, drove away aa much of tho stock as ho could,, and, shaking off his pursuers In every instance, escaped Into the wildest parts of the pampas. So for a long time, for years Indeed, Ascenslo Brunei, the Wild Man of Santa Cruz, lived hla life beyond tho reach of the short arm of the Ar gentine law. Comasarlos hunted him, various Juoces de Paz declaimed about htm, and tho garri son of cavalry In Chubut "bolted their beef, and started again on the track of the thief." And then suddenly, one morning, the nows flew across the couutrystdo that the Wild Man had been cap tured. It was true. The way of It was aa fol lows: In the very heart of Patagonia, upou the banks of a river called the Mayo, lived, and Indeed still live, a tribe of Tehuelche Indians, tho tallest and perhaps the strongest people on earth. They are hunters and horso-breoders, wonderful riders and good mon. Thoy worship horsemanship and have a number of strange rites which they practice at the birth of a man child In order to Insure that he shall turn out a good rider. Into the nature of those rites we need not go. They ore very cruel. I merely mention them that you may understand what a task tho Wild Man sot himself when he decided to steal a hun dred marcs from men such aa these peerless rid ers, trained In every phase of horsemaushlp, much of whose lives Is spent In searching for strayed horses and who can ride a hundred miles a day without fatigue. It appears that the herd of mares that Ascenslo stole were feeding In a vega or marsh that stretches on tho southern banks of the Mayo. No ono wns watching them, and, as they were well used to their pasturage, It seemed unlikely that thoy would stray. Theroforo, when shortly after dawn an Indian lad carno galloping to tho toldos with tho news that tho mures bad disappeared, tho men of tho tribe were soon on horseback and rid ing upon tbolr trail. Hnrd on tho trail the Indiana rodo all day, and before sunset thoy wore aware of a man clad In skins driving the mares boforo him. Swiftly somo of tho pursuers closed In on him, whllo others rode to cut him off by a canadou or rift In the pampas which lay across his path. Had it not been for this canadon the Wild Man would never, In all probability, hnvo been tnkon. As It was, ho galloped down tho sheer wall of It,, but only to find himself cut off by tho Indians who had been detached from tho main body by the cnclquo for tho purpose Biding In upon hlra the Indians Hung their hoavy boloandores the Tehuelche weapon of threo rawhldo thongs, each weighted at tho end with a bnll of stone which entangled tho legs of the Wild Man's horse and brought It crushing to the ground. On the ground tho Indians captured the Wild Man, snarling and biting. They did not slay tho Wild Man, but bound him upon a horse aud conveyed him over three hun dred miles of pampas to Oallegos, where they handed him over to the authorities In due form. He was thrown Into prison and the Indiana de parted for their wilderness home once more. In the Argentine Republic there 1b no capital punishment, bo that after his trial, the sentence that would be passed upon the Wild Man was cer tainpenal servitude for life. But it never camo to a trial, for it was not long before the warders of the prison awoke one morn ing to find their prisoner gone. He had cut his way out through the walls of wood, stolon a horse that had been tied by some late visitor before tho door of a house In the main street, ridden through the night until, at dawn, ho round him seir far out upon the pampas. All along this belt or country from Oallegos to Santa Cruz are scattered farms set along the coast at frequent Intervals. The Wild Man turned north and, on the second day of his escape, caught and stole a horse from one of these farms and so rode on up the coast. While the ordinary traveler dismisses the horse which has borne him gallantly and well with a pat and a kind word, the Wild Man, each time be procured a fresh mount, re turned to his tired and weary beast and killed It. And then one night, before the Indians had even heard of his escape from jail, once more he raided their mares and drove away a great troop of 'them. His Intention doubtless was to get tbem to some suitable spot and there kill them, thereby gratifying his own peculiar and bloody-minded beliefs and at the same time re venging himself upon the Indians. The Instant they discovered their loss the Indians rode on the. trail of the mares, but this time Ascenslo drove them like a madman, as Indeed he was. Tho Bun was already falling toward the west when they spied him at last. He was nearly naked, for he had flung away the clothes which had been supplied to him In the Jail, and was mounted upon a gigantic horse. As he rode, he uttered a cry of a Hon, and the frenzied and terrified mares galloped wildly In front of him. The sun sank and the chase continued. One by ono the Tehuelches dropped away until at last the Wild Man and a single Indian alone remained. Now the moon was in the sky and by Its light the Indian saw the Wild Man slacken his pace and. with features convulsed with rage and hate, turn at bay. The Indian grew afraid and paused. They looked at each other for a moment and then the Wild Man laughed aloud and, turning his great yellow horee, rode slowly to the west, while the Indian returned to his companions, whom he rejoined on the following day. Near the cordillera of the Andes on adven turous German settler had squatted with bis fam ily, and had built himself a small house or hut. One night the Qermnn was nwukened by a knock ing at the door and opened It to find a man clad In skins facing him. The man appeared to be emaciated and wns certainly of tho most extraordinary appearance, his whole face being blackened by an almost continuous growth of hair. The man demanded food, whereupon the Ger man Invited him to enter and, taking n frying pan, commenced to cook some meat As ho bent over the Are tho Wild Man, with senseless and brutal cruelty, shot him through the back and, holping himself to various provisions, left the house and the dead man lying In It. Tho news of this crlmo and of others, which followed closo upon it, aroused the whole dis trict. Nelthor man nor woman could feel safe whllo the Wild Man lived, and at last a body of armed settlers ran tho criminal to earth in a houso which he had entered for purposes of plunder. Ho never left that house alive, but fell on tho threiliold riddled with bullots, yet not be fore he had left his mark upon more than one of his assailants. , 01 the Trio, Probably Representative Redfleld Had the Best Occa sion to Smile. The talk In one of the cloak rooms of congress turned to tho thought of the happiest moments In one's life. Senator Bnllcy said his came the day ho wore his first pair ot trousers. And Paul Howland of Ohio declared his big moment of Joy waB when he was permitted once to drive a chariot In a pony nnd dog show parndo. Representative Redfleld, who Is a wlso chap, even if ho docs hall from Brooklyn, said It was when ho was going to school and trying to master long division. Three or four aisles over from where ho sat a boy ynwned It wns not an ordlnnry -yawn, but ono of such genuine expression of feeling toward things In goncrnl that It at tracted Redlleld's attention. Ho wns fortunate in hnvlng a pnpor wad right at hand, ready for any emergency, nnd ho nlmed this at tho boy's caver nous mouth. Tho wad went right squaro Into the goal nnd well, Fourth of July llroworks nto tamo to the stunts that boy did In tho next few minutes. He says he almost smiled once on ship board when the vessel gave a lurch and threw a platter full of beefsteak, gravy and all. over the opon-faced shirt front of a pompous pnssenger across tho table. No Frosts There. Foote Mghte It Is said that tho southern tip of Florida Is the only portion of tho United States which never has experienced frost. Miss Sue Brette Too bad It Is so far away from our traveling theatrical companies. Instead of liquid antiseptics, tablets and peroxide, for toilet and medicinal uses, many people prefer Paxtlno, which Is cheaper and better. At drug gists, 2Cc a box or sent postpaid on re ceipt of prlco by Tho Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. The Proper Course. "Is there a powder trust?" "I don't know, but If there Is. somebody should go gunning for It." The Remedy. "I see beef Is still going up." "Then the best wny to stop that Is to keep It from going down." Henpecked Lion. Benliam They made a lion of me. Mrs. Benliam Well, I'm a pretty fnir sort of lion tamer. (Inrllrld Tea promote nnd ernuren health. Try It to U- cotnluced. l)iuu'-Ui keep It. It's tough when love's young dream dies of old age. Fo You Need "I not suffer from tho effects of a weak stomach, lazy liver or clogged bowels when there's an easy way to get rid of such troubles quickly by taking I I I i I HOSTETTER'S a STOMACH BITTERS Try it and just no- tice its toning and strengthening effect on the entire digestive I system. Your food will be properly di- gested and assimilated and you'll feel better all over. Commence J Right Away That's the kind Lib by's There isn't an other sliced dried beef like it. Good? It's the inside cut of the finest beef sliced to wafer thinness. Oil f Sri m Mtknkv -ium Sliced Dried Beef stands supreme. The tasty dishes one can make with it are almost' numberless. Let's see I There's creamed dried beef, and- but just try it. Then you'll know I Always Insist on Libby's Don't accept "Justsagood." From relish to roast, from condiment to conserve, the quality of Libby's Ready-to-Serve Foods is always superior. And they don't cost one whit more than the ordinary kinds. Ait? up In aUrillxnd gta$ or tin container, At Every Grocers Libby, McNeill & Libby Chicago 'SINGLE nam? jS"S" BINDER SIlalGliI5CIGAR always reuablb. CEMENT BLOCK iinrprlrei i on Kollpio Block Machines n4 Mlxrrm. uu; iuu ucbi. i.n.ioiiBtr Bwi, am., mtftiu. fcu.. linrsBs.nATtxs, HllAW,et.nroth up i, wmoror Nebraska Directory TJpL Yfr. nBBBBBBsl ''-XiBBBBBBBBBBl AUCTIONEER Auctioneers are not all allkn. Somn aro ranch bi-l-ti-r than others. The better tho auctioneer tbs larger TVUrcbetk. Thnbcstielllns irtlid cost yon no mors than the poorest. There's r iru fit, security and gailtfao Ion In dulnif business with Z. W. II It A N HON. Ut DtMk sad R.tl (fetal. iarlU.wr, tl snlisrisMS, LUCOU, llf. GREEN GABLES Tha Dr. Baa. F. Bailey Sasatoriaat Liacola, Nebraska Its brick and atone htiiMlnor en . rally furnished and thoroughly equipped, in mo Dcauuiut par 01 39 acres, WltD Staff of exDerienea and a nnrsrinv mmi of unusual merit, offers you most per fect hospital results, yet always pre serves the atmosphere of a delightful country HOME. Write for particulars. COME TO OMAHA We have something that every home needs. At less than the cost to manufacture. We have purchased 12 Carloads of Pianos from Chicago's largest dealer. We will save you in this sale fully 50 per cent, of the regular retailer's price amounting to anywhere from $125.00 to 5300.00 on an instrument, it will pay you to travel 600 miles to attend this sale. SALE NOW GOING ON HAYDEN BROS OMAHA, NEB. K2EKH MmiiiH ..&. flri'' T,-1--ffrJ lMvrt-JU,.i,J. ,J, ... 1 lj?Mi . V . . . , ' , iu '-i. ' " r: ajt, j , rKOsesft.jygwfaaiaynBy W 1 111 1 1 mi - r m liinmm 1 1 1 1 . i Mm I . : ' ' ... . r. ' 1 - r - . n -- i,-. . -:.". -iMiwe . ) niyuij7i,ifi,;j.-ii wvristj.ti aV'Ai . in; '. j' VQ SMC?.''-.-!' BjTw.ifc.nr.rfryf y! yvv. -i7