o TUB OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: FEBRUARY 10. 1907. WE MAKE THE M05EI FLI Aaericant ?() Up a i Extraordinary laoe f f jwndstn, SIGHT-SEiraG JAUNTS TAKt MllKM wple riMtira Beat at Hewae mm 4 AkrM4 Keeeee Tbele Bell Qeieklr at tka Wy It Oaa. i The Americana are the moat extraordinary race of pandora that ever lived. Hiving mora money than tha people ef aay other nation, wa proceed to squander It In a way that maae foreigners dlxsy. There la Tientlon but that wa m-nil more money In tha mnlnf for fun than tha rest of tha world live on during the day. Our unheard-of extravmgaacee take innumerable forma. miring tha racing season wa bt E.ono.ono every dy-nd loea moit of It. Our women spend about Rrwn.eoe a year for faathere to wear an their hats, and our small boya cat an aariy etart aa spend. thrift by squandering n.000,009 a month tor peanuta and popcorn. Tha people of Chicago spend two. svery week la going to their theaters, and they pent more than that aura laat fan on tha erlea of championship ball games. A New Tork firm reporta the sale of I'JM.COO worth of rugs for oaa ouui'i bouse; a Philadel phia jeweler sold a riOO.OOO ruby to com plete one woman's collection of . Jewels, and now comes a New Torker who spends CtflO.aoe for a site for a private residence. The annual expenditure In this country for little things Uke golf sticks and balls la HaoO.OOO, and golf la a new game with us. When It aomes to speculation wa are tha easiest lot of "marks" that ever drew the breath of life. ' Curing tha laat twelve months the get-rlch-quick element to the Vnlted States oaa Invested enough money In wildcat mining schemes to py off tha frovernment debt. Eatravaaraat la Travel. - The Atlantis Uaers have suites af rooms which coat C'JOO per voyage in summer. and these sumptuous apartments never .lack for occupants. Americana are excep tionally extravagant in their, travela. Worn X was la Cairo, Egypt, tha man fee of the largest hotel there told me that 70 per cent of his guests were Americana, frilly Sd.Ao af our people ga to I'erl every year. The keepers of the great shops and resorts of tha French metropolis would think dull times had struck them If .tha easy money of tha Yankee spenders should stop falling ;on their counters. Vncle Sam's tourists are so generous In their expenditures that In most parte of tha world tha natives ask them Just as auich again as they do tray elera from other countries. Bead sellers and curio venders nt tha Wast Indies know that a Yankee will readily pay for aa article that a Britisher will hesitate U pur chase for a shilling. And Americana squander untold millions n travel tn thxir own country. Los An geles has over 80,090 rooms for rent, and they fill up every season. It Is estimated that the tourists spend t2S.0u0.Dua In south ern California every winter. Tha number at people who visit Niagara Fella during an ordinary year la between TOO. 000 and 00,000, and during years when many ex cursions are run from distance tha num ber of visitors to tha scene of this great cat oral wonder run over a million. The amouat of money spent here by tha tour lata la Incalculable. They spend all the way from 13 to ROM apiece. Tha laat esti mate may seem high, but when people coma with a retinue of servants, and take whole suites, or several suites of rooms In tha big hotels, and make large purchases af bric-a-brac, furs and curloe at, tha basars, a thousand dollars" doesn't laat -ions. ' ' Sightseer' Haaata. Tha Teltowetoee National park, with tta natural wondera and beauties ef nature, attracts upwards of 20,000 visitors a year, tha majority of whom coma from east ef tha ' Aneghaniea. Railroad fare to and from tha park to such sightseers means almost aa much expense as a trip to Europe. Tha Toseralte valley. Inaccessible as It la, la visited by 1,000 sightseers yearly, nearly all of whom coma from great distances. The volume of travel to Colorado has In creased so rapidly durtng the last few years tSat although carpenters have been busy through the entire winter building new hotels, each summer tha capacity of the state la taxed to its atmoat. During last year soma sixty conventions were held in Denver, Thousands of travelers go dowa tha St. Lawrence every summer, and thousands mora Sock to Florida la tha winter. Although AahevUle. N. C. te not looked upon as one of tha great national show place. It la now attracting visitors every year, i Our people are great enthusiasts for posttlons. calibrations and eoaventloaa. At tha St. Louis exposition one morning a f - . e ' W THE WHISKEY WITH A REPUTATION" Bare 1a Absolute rroeg af Uat 1U para Moat Won Three Straight Medals UaBUT 41UI AT ST. LOUIS, 1904 PARIS, . 1905 PORTLAND, 1905 Oanld there be mere eeaivlaetag evWianae seas QCTAXXC MXIO KTZ U the bi Vhuaay te be had t , - - - Aaktoc tt as any Sret alasa bar, ante or drag tare S. HIRSCII & CO. LWSiS C1TT. R0. 1 smT Jr Sale AgV. fcwaa. If group of newspaper men and etndel were talking about the mtmmy that had bean squandered In this country an exposition Aa maul ring young scribe asked an ex position afflcnO If tt would be aoestble to estimate the sunt and compere It with something. This was the reply: "Just say that if all the money that has been thrown away on eapostttoae In the Called States J was gathered to ether and put In a heap, tt would make a pile so hlgH that you wouldn't By a balloon aver tt. There were IS), paid admissions at -St. Louis, and It la eetlmsted that the visitors to the fair spent over SV.om,OQO In the city while the big show was In progrvaa. A good Illustration of the American fond ness for "going cmewhere" was afforded when the annual reunion of tha ' United Conferadea veterans was held at Dallaa, Tex. At this time the census credited Pallas with a population of a.W0 p-fla to the reunion. Therefore the hoepitality of Tillaa waa taxed with the remarkable responsibility of entertaining nearly three times as many people as It had population. But sou there hospitality was equal to the emergency, and before tha week was over very visitor waa. ready to throw vp ha aat for Dalian "Hesse) reastwga." The "Horne-Comlng Weak" la a new de parture In eelebratlors. and there la a good etory tn connection with It origin. Mia Louise Lee Bordlrt, a former Ken tucky g!rt living ht Denver, listened to a band play "My Old-Kentucky Home" one night and got the blfce. She wrote a letter aoxt morning suggesting that Kentucky's wandering sons and daughter be Invited to return for a home-coming week. The suggeatton waa adopted, and It coot M,ng ex-Ksntucktsns not less - than IEOO.S0O be cause a bluegTassr girl ln far-off Colorado got norneslek; ' but every' Kentuckiaa thought It wa weH worth the money. - One of the beat established and moat popular annual festivals hi the country la the Marui Oras . at New Orleans. The southern city does Itself proud In provid ing entertainment for Its -Visitors on- these occaalona. Four ' precessions. stomus. Proteus. Bex and Comua. cost 3.000 each, i or 1100,000 for the four. A gorgeous ball Is given "in connection with" each, of these rocesMons, the expense of -which amounts to S3.!0lh Other entertainments. Ilium elation. . decorations, rich and rare cos tume, etc., run the expense up to $2So.00t for the week's teetijrtUe. The New Orleans people figure that- every v lie tor who come to town -spend tn, and that the big show Is a paying proposition for all parties con cerned. - Other 'celebrations almost equally as- famous aa tha Mardl Ora are the Vetled Prophet at 8t Loola. the Priest ef Pallas at Kansas City, Ak-3ar-Ben at Omaha, the Fall Musical. Festival at Cincinnati, ato ate Louisville Courier-Jc-omaL LINCOLN'S, ONE GREAT LOVE la NiImn fee Ansa ftnUeds, Wit ' Died, tn SapvosM Paasloa C HI Ufa.. : It wa whU Ann Rutledge wa quilt ing that Lincoln asked her to become his wife. She met his love with one as great, yet, m a Strange agltAUoa, she repulsed him. There waa a half secret la her life that held bar back end mad her feel that aha waa not free t be happy. Some timo before, when she was very young, aha had engaged herself to a man who called himself McNeil, but whose real name wa McNamar. Urn had made money a4 wa ready to provide a home foe Jier. .But first, he said, he must visit hi parents In the east. On hi return . he would claim her aa his wife. And so1-fee had atoparted for his old home tn New York, which, tn those days waa more distant from tha little western hamlet than 1 Chicago from Tlmbuotoo today. At first he wrote her often, then lass often and more coldly, and then at last be wrote no more. Anne's friends. declared that he.bad .wUJfuUy de serted her; yet shs still felt bound. She bavd" pledged ner word, and even though no letters came, and ah had learned to love another, she could not marry until she had been formally released, Lincoln pleaded earnestly, and her own heart spoka for him. yet still she could not lay the ghost of he first love. - Lincoln begged her te write to McNamar and aak for s release. 8he wrote, but still no answer came. -Then she felt that she waa really free, and when Lincoln, now ardent and thrilling with hope, asked bar once more the great question, she turned to him and let him rea4 tile answer la her ardent face. It wa the supremely Joyous moment of hi life. Just aa th days which followed were to be the very blackest. For toe young girl bad been worn out by the long suspense, the hourly conflict between love and what aha thought her duty; and now she was stricken by a fever, of which she 6!d In her Illness shs kept caning plte- ouaiy for Lincoln, until at last her brother brought him to her tedside and left the two alon together. . What pssssd between them no one ever, knew; but soon she be came unconscious, and ha went out Into tha world, te be forever after. In hi heart, a broken, melancholy man. For Urn hie reason tottered. Hi friends, fearing laat he might take bis llfs watched him with, the ' greatest vigilance. He said little, but once he burst forth In an agony ef grief over the poignant thought that "the snows and rains might fall upon hsr grave. For many week this grief, almost unbearable, beset him. and when he once more took up his dally tssoclatee had known. Although his aseJ"1 roilfloa of ths pyramid. still lacked four years of XX men be gan to call hie old. Ha stooped as he walked; and those Unas, which tn later year appeared to je marked upon his face by vitriol, bow seamed his haggard cheeks. Hs shut his sorrow In. hi heart and played the man. but he never really loved again. Lyndon Orr tn Munaey's. CHOPPED OUT OF THE ICE Trent Cat Oat ef TA late for lanrtere Merrily sot la tie Caeac That trout remain alive for a consider able time after being froaea la the ice la declared by soma choppers at Caribou, Ma. who say that they have proved the tact te their own satisfaction. The Ken were encamped eight tnOre couth of hare en the shore of a small poad bounding la trout when they ran oat ef provision. It being Illegal te take trout at this time of th year, they hesi tated before fishing tor them through the Ice, bat hunger overcame their aaruplea. The fish bit wail and as they did not wlak to keep aa oversupnly en hand where game warden ' might discover them the avea put ail tney euuid eat eat alive In a nearby spring. They would then scoop them out as they were reeded. One night the temperature dropped sud denly and la the mernlng - the spring as well as the tsuut wa troaan solid. Pro vision bad arrived to night before and n attention wa paid te the epriag until tha following day. whan ene af the man wtnt there with an a and chopped out enough, flab, for diaaer. The treus, srisT ad hard, were placed tn a r. of eoM weta- ta thaw eat and a U'.tie later the cook was startled ts see them open their mouth, wriggle their tall and niove about. The smallest ene shewed sign af activity Asst. but within an hour all were acting as naturally as tt they were swimming tn the bottom of the pond. Three out af ten died before aeon, but the rest lived -until the cook needed tnam tor supper,---Chicago CnrenV DIU1DS CIRCLES EXPLAINED Timepieces Igvtntec by FriegU af tio lia sad i lity fail. St RCBMAN lOCKYEfTS DISCOYIRiES Bwn svs I tare Tae ta Kara; (be Caleeaae Rellalen' that ggreaS TTsaaaaada af Yea re Age traen Egypt te Britain. A fasctnating mystery gurroanda ' the Drulda. Glimpses are given In the works ef Latin authors of strange Hyperboreans living "beyond the sources of the north wind." ruled by priests who worked to- eantatlona by means of mistletoe cut with golden knives and offered human sacrifices on lonely atone altars nnder the stars. Beyond this the researches of antiquarians and students of folk lore show that tha tradition ef these same Druida- still sur vives In remoter parts of Orsat Britain. as local superstitions and festivals, sacred wells and. .more than all. in peculiar rows and circles of roughly shaped stones. Such blocks are often of gigantic si, while It la not uncommon for a pair of stones, each three times tha height of a man, te be capped with another as large, neatly mor tised In place.' The great ' circle at Stoaehenge kt 100 feet across, i One of the avenues at Dart moor la more than 1.0OO feet In length. BUch monument of a vanished faith occur all over the British Isles from Cornwall to tha Orkneys. Oddly enough, rt turns out that the most Important of recent contributions to the knowledge of these mysterious priests and their templea has been made, not by aa archaeologist, but by an astronomer Sir Norman Lockyer. For twenty years and more Lockyer has been studying ancient Umples and ethsr buildings. In Egypt and Greece as well as nearer home, endeavor ing to make out their precise use a astro nomical ebaervatoriea. It ha long been known that ancient priests have generally been astronomers aa well. It has been known also In a gen eral way that most ancient templea have been placed to look toward ths rising or setting point ef soms particular heavenly body. In fact, early peoples are prone to "worship tha host of heaven," and! many early religious cults are baaed on the adora tion of soma particular star. It is, however, a new thing for a modern astronomer, aided by the resources of mod ern science, to put himself in the place of one of these old astronomer-priests and by refined methods of measurement make cut exactly what the ancient worthy wa looking at and Just when he waa doing It. Lockyer reasoned that the old astronomer priests would be sure to mix up their re ligion with their science, and having built a temple for th worship of soma heavenly body, would tn addition make the deity useful a an almanac Star god can bs utilised to tell toe time by night. From the morning adoration of tha sun "god It 1 but a step to fixing th calendar by the successive points on the horizon where the divinity appears. Lockyer s studies go back to that obscure source of religion and sclenca.Vha land of Egypt. -. As a matter of religion the Egyp tians worshipped the sun.' As a matter of science , they were especially Interested.' tn determining the summer solstice, because at' that time began the annual rlee of the Nile. In fact, the Egyptian were the only early people who had any particular tn tareat In determining the longest day tn the year. But tha early astronomers had no tele scopes with, spider web sight lines and ml-, cromster eyepieces. XU they could do wa to fix some sort ef atone monument in line with the point of the horizon where the sun shone en a particular day. Many Egyptian temple built between SK and 1500 B. C. have their long axis so placed that on the longest day of the year the light of th rising sun come through a long Una of narrow doorways and Illumines a dark chamber at tha further end. Thus the Egyptian knsw when It wa midsummer. Wherever, there fore, one discovers temples or othed monu ment oriented with, regard to the rising sun en June a there one may suspect th Influence ef the Egyptian sun worship. Now tt baa only been known that the horseshoe line of block at Steaehange look toward this point of tha horizon, and that other parts of the structure and ens especially prominent eight line have also this direction. Lockyer made a careful determination ef the position of this sun rise point at various past epochs, a tt has changed slightly in tha course of years. Correcting hi ebeervaUona tor tha height ef the ho risen where the ancient sight line polntsd, allowing fur the refraction ef the air and the apparent distortion of the sun's die near the horizon, he computed that Stonehenge waa built te face the precise spot wbsre the sun rose on June II about MM B. C The Druids, then, from about the year IT00 B. C appear to have been pries' ef a religion which originated tn Egypt soma thousand or more years be fore, and spread along tha coast a the early seaman mad their way from cape to cape until it reached Greece on the one side and England on the other. Stonehenge 1 therefore a monument to This same religion of the pyramids, moreover, aa given a our legal year, who cardinal points are the solstices and ths equinoxes, and whose festival were the originals of Christmas. Easter and midsummer day ail now more .or leas misplaced by ehangea of reckoning ana reformations af th calen dar. The old Egyptian June year, the year that begins near the end of June or De cember, has, then, fixed th positions of half th ancient temple ana monument ef Europe and given ua muck of our mod ern calendar. Nevertheless, th December Juas year, based en the solstices, waa not the original year, even tn Egypt. The earliest monuments of ail, guing back la tuue at. C, axe the record of another religion and another astronomy whose year began with May I A temple observatory aligned for sunrise en that date will catch the sun aguin en it way back on August t and determine two quarter point of a year divided Into four equal seasons. Ail aver the ancient world, therefore, the euser monument are oriented with respect to a year- other than our legal calendar year, for a year nanvely which, allowing Sir changes ef date, began on May day and still marks it half-way point by Hal lowe'en and All Saint' day, and on of It quartsr points by Candlemas, though th ether eld quarter point holiday ha lapsed. This May year la still recognised tn Irish and Scotch common law, where It fixe the quarterly rent day. and la our own prac tice ef moving on May L The greet sands ton block of Stone henge are set to face the sunrise ef June U. less B. C Nevertheless, this structure ta not the ert final Druldical temple. Lock yer recognizing also the remain ef aa older, lees iinpoelag tempi tn a circle of smaller, ruder blue atone set with sight tine ta single outlying block a, to face the sunrise ef May ft, some fowr hundred year earlier. Bo there were two aorta of Druids; two sorts which folklore marks as Druid ef th mistletoe and holly, which bear thetr bemee at Chlrstaias, and Druid of the hawthorn and aeh, which Sower ht May. Stonehenge turn out. Uwsl to be a tem J a gbaerv alary eg th Inter Druldical euit. HT) T Baurlcy Rice from characteristics. M hi jmssz Hops carefully selected tor luauj oy I in Bohemia. The superior quality of lupulin in i . as an aia to digestion r ' . And adds to that delicious, satisfying flavor that is more than any other beer possesses. Yeast there is where the " Life", " Snap" and " Individuality" of "LUXUS comes from." No other brewery in the country can boast of yeast with its own distinctive character, as that we have developed by years of constant care and watchfulness. - .. - ( Water Pure, sparkling, clear as crystal, artesian water, from our own spring. It comes gurgling up from a. depth of hundreds of feet, cool and pure, but even this is filtered to guard against the possibility of impurity. . ' . . Order a you are built ever an earlier 'monument te the May-November yeor- Most British monu ments, on the other hand, have their princi pal sight lines set for the more primitive year beginning' early In May. The are. then observatories of the ash. tree. Drnlda to which" have been added sight lines for the Observation of the solstices and equi noxes. Not only In the British Isles, but also aero the Chanel In Brittany, the sun rise for May determined the location ef the chief stone blocks or earth mounds. The Egyptians told time at ntcht by the stars, runolns; sight lines on the more prominent ones which happened to be near enough tha pole to be visible nearly all night. So, too, did tha druids. And be cause a star ta a far better mark to sight at than the sun. and because the positions of the star are more conveniently computed for past dates than positions of the sun, Lckyer has been able to determine tha date of British stone monument to within ten years. . Eleven different sight lines ta Cornwall alone are set to use Arcturus a a clock star. Th earliest date thus fixed at Tregaseal is 2330 B. C. Five more come between this date and S000. Then follow vm, una. mo, 1730, and so on down to lan sad 1120 B. C. CnpaJia, though It has only four known sight lines, was ase) as late as 133) B. C. while the pieladea served aa dock stars tn 1170 and 1030 of the older era. Moat of these clock stars were choeen because they rose an hour or two before the sun on one or other of the festal days and gave warning of th approach of day. Thus tha star also, as weU, aa the sun. dif ferentiates the cults. At an especially well preserved circle near Penxance tha Merry Maidens, " sight ing points sometimes a quarter mile or more away, mark the points oa the horizon where Areturua rose In August of VSS9 B. C. and Capella' In February ef two. Two more lines mark the setting af the Fleladee la May of ISffi and An tares ts May of ma Four more Une are now too vague to be nsed for computation, though at least three of these also are related ta the May year. This, then, waa a temple of the hawthorn -ah tree cult. Stonehenge also hs a Una on the rising Pleiades. In UM, aa Inheritance evidently from the elder structure. It la possible, therefore, by mean of astronomical method not only to deter mine with much accuracy the time at which some prehistoric stone monument wa set up; but also tn a general way -how long the temple of which It ta a part remained in use. For as the clock stars shifted thetr apparent position and no longer roe or set at convenient points or times, ths early astronomers adopted other stars tn their peaces. They also built new observatories or. if the change wa small, ran a asw eight Una from aa old one. Thus at the Hurler In Cornwall three circles, evidently from their conditions of different ages, are placed nearly, but nut quit, tn a straight Una. The southernmost Is the oldeeC rrom It sight Una en distant porat mark on th hoiiaon the sunrise and sunset for November, while the same line, taken In the reverse direction, give approximately sunset and sunrise for May. To the north runs a sight Una to the point where Areturua, riamg. cut the h oris on ta K1X But m about 10 years Areturua had ceased to keep accurate time en the eld basia. Th Lfuld. herefor. built a sow circle, with It center on the eld sight Une, and ran a new Une three degree farther te the east to hit the rising ef the star In Ma. One mare they repeated th prooes. building th third circle oa the sight Une of the second, and locating their Une by a barrow some 4.0UO yards away. Tbi was tn 1W. Of the shift after th next hundred years there la bow no sign. In YTXK however, they located th risin; of Beteigeuee by a Us running-nearly east; and twenty year later another Una. a little eowt af west, marked the setting point of Aatarea, while a still later line marked th rising ef gtrtua In Ms These tour eight fins, then, start Appefcikcj IiayigoitiinLcj j'RLcuimT.crr the Public Wants Secret Malt made from the finest barley grown ia the Northwest produces none better - f That meant crood healthy nutrition. ' the far land of India because to "season it best And that means the most nourishment with the Besides, it insures a light, appetizing drink, a- And We Brew "LUXUS" to Suit Your Taste. For half a century, we have been studying the likes and dislikes of the average beer. " LUXUS n is the result of this close study and long observation. Try - LUXUS " and see if it doesn t fulfill that " Iong-felt-want of yours. LUXUS" is not only the beer you want but it's the beer your family case sent home to-day. If you i t ii suppuea promptly. , Fred Krug Brewing Company Omaha, Nebraska Exponent of the Fine Art of Brewing from th center of the most recent of th three circle. From tha sam circle, and from none other, run a line to determine the solstice. Apparently, therefore, the observatory was tn us for at least five hundred yeaee. and th Druids who ministered there began with the old May year cult and finished with the June year religion of the pyramid buildera.- At Btennea tn the Orkneys there la a solstitial tins of a data as late as TOO B. C. Apparently the new religion traveled slowly overland. I What the Druids were about during the next thousand years or so, up to the time of the conversion ef Britain to Christianity, doe not appear from the monuments; ap parently they ceased to attend to the iters, perhaps because they had some better way of telling time. They seem, too, to have given over building stone circles. Although as practices and superstitions, both the ancient religions have lingered to the present day., Their monuments In ths British tale show orientations neither so early aa those of Egypt where the sfght 11 nee ef the templee correspond closely with the very ancient dates given by the his torical record nor so late as those of Greece, which, beginning with SO JO B, C, come down 'to 770 and KX. A3 these peoples. It see ma came tn time to abandon the Idea that th sun and the stars are gods to be worshipped In great templea with Imposing ceremonials. After that event, temples and other religious monument were no longer oriented, ex cept In a general way, Uke a modern church, so that Sir Norman Lockyer' method can no longer be applied. He haa, however, aa yet made but a small beginning with the study of Druldical monuments in fact be has Investigated with any sort of thoroughneaa ntonaheng alone. Lockyer" future work In this field la Ukely to be worth watching. 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I didn't sleep any didn't want to sleep. - I had plenty of things to think about, and lees than four hours to do it in because S o'clock wa the hour appointed for the tragedy, and I should have to use up one hour beginning at e in practicing with the revolver and finding out which end of It to level at the adversary. - At 4 we went down into a UtUe gorge, about a mile from town, and bor rowed a barn door for a mark borrowed it of a man who wa over In California on a visit and we set the barn door up and stood a fence rail op against the middle of It to represent Mr. Laird. But th rail wa no proper representative of him, for he waa longer than a rail and thinner. Nothing would ever fetch him but a line hot, and then as Uks . as not he would split the bullet the worst material for duel ing purposes that eould be Imagined. I began on the rail. I couldn't kit the rail; thea I tried the barn door; but I couldn't hit the barn door. There waa nobody In danger except atragglera around on the Hanks of that mark. I was thoroughly dis couraged, and I didn't cheer up any when we presently heard pistol shots over tn the next little ravine. I knew what that was that waa Laird's rang out practicing him. They would hear my shots and of course they would come up over the ridge to see what kind of a record I was making eee what their chances were againat me. Well, I hadn't any record, and I knew that If Laird came over that ridge and saw my barn door without a scratch on It he would A luncheon is more complete, an evening -ii-m 1 AV "'I K - the world and know how J - , a. . . drinker of good wants. at will see that be as anxiuu to fight as I wa-or a X had been at midnight, before that dlsa iruua acceptance waa "Now Just at this moment a Uttle bird, no bigger than n sparrow, flew along by and Ut on n sage bosh about thirty yard away. Steve whipped out his revolver and shot tta head off. Oh, ha wa a marksman much better than I waa. We ran down there to pick up the bird, and just then, sure enough. Mr. Laird and his people came over the ridge, and they Joined us. And when Laird's second saw that bird with Its head shot off he lost color, he faded, and you could sse that he was Interested. He said: " "Who did thatr "Before I could answer Steve spoks up and said quite calmly and In a matter-of-fact way: 'Clemene dl3 It "The second said. Why, that Is wonder ful. How far off waa that blrdT "Steve said. "Oh, not far about thirty yards. i The second said, Wel, that la astonish, tag shooting. How often can he do thatr "Steve said languidly, 'Oh, about four times out of five. "I knew th Uttle rascal waa tying, but I didn't say anything. The second said. "Why, that la amaslng shooting; T. aup nosed he couldn't hit a church. . "Ha was supposing very sagaciously, but I didn't say anything. Well, they said good morning. The seeond took Mr. Laird noma, a Uttle tottery on his legs, and Laird sent back a note fat his own hand declining ta fight a duel with me on any terms what, ever. "Well, my Ufa was saved saved by that accident. I don't know what the bird thought about that Interposition of provi dence, but I felt very, very comfortable over It satisfied and content. Now, we found out later that Laird had bit hi mark four time out of ix, rlht along. If tha duel had come elf he would have e filled my skin with bullet hole that la wouldn't have held my prtncipiaa," It la well to be sure you are right, but don't be too sure everybody else la wrong. call water, 1 1 15:4 ! II ' "V-,x l a V -J ' BJ . m s 4