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' THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNPAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1991 ; = — e e THE NYSTIC EI)\HRD](EME\'S) B £ TR st MeeL.. U8 WA SwARb gas. | o8 1t 1 Ioie T muat sesk wev ln the mowss | REMBDT FOR SOCIAL DISEASE | denly as if T had heard a yoice saying: ‘You | tain fastnesses of the west. 1 wanted to go P | haven't done your worl. You've missed It." ' 10 the very heart of the wilderness and then AT 4 all ot P | Sometimes 1t said: “What are you doing | come to the mountains. [ went all through it aid Talk with Awerica's Ploneer here? At 1 U there volces, or iheughts, | them. 1 met the mountain animals, I killed | Rey, Dr, Wagland Tuzigest foal 4 o { came in the day time, and then 1'd be ylunged | {hem, grizziies, sheep, wolves, The Indiuns v, Dr Way o kg ‘R' o Eenlptor, 1 in gleom for days. I remcinber once I tock | brought me specimens also. Their interest Measures for €upy ression of Vice, 4 . sonie horses to town to he ehod, ard whils | and criticism would make many a white man 3 walting 1 went out end lay down against | m:d of himself. They made no mistakes 1 SURROUNDINGS AND PERSONAL TRAITS | an cld wheel near the shiop and fell asleep [ about men or animals. 1 went to the heart's » itk ! (1 suw the very place the other day), and ihe | core of our American wilderness. It yielded QUICK APPLICATION OF 'STATE SURGERY s | Vuice woke me up. ‘What are you doing | 4D ts most carefully guarded secrets —— here? You have not done your work 1;¢ A e Mory of 11s Artistio Carser, e Teinls | Horer Kooy miat i G T "hack 10 | A these scen-a came crowding back upon | Prompt Messures for PrivFition as Well as ol s ) b and fardships of ¥arly Days and the work i1ke a man sentenced to hang. Couldn’t | him he became tremendously dramatic. Ha | Cure—Recommendation tor-the Extirpa- / i Subsequent Rewards, Told by | See auy other way cut of It, but suddenly 1| dropped into tha eign language, he drama- tion of Tenement HWone Evils with 3 [ ] i Yat i ! found myself_on my way to New York tizod the Indians and spoke their dialect. e i Sl Chn amlin Garland, Heaching New York, le was as far ap- | He told stories of their hospitality, of their DEGEVRLSON. D bbbl Lk 4 3 o parently from his work as ever, He had to | o iife, of their treatment of him, almost B M i d ¢ live, and so (by great good fortune) secured | Invariably Xind. I drew out that he had eginning nday and contin- (Copyrighta by B8 McClure, Timited) § a place as axerman on the engineer corps of | lived with the Crows, the Omahas, the (Copyrighted.) g g N y Biward Kenvys is a mystic. His mystis | Contral, park. His life for a year and a | Brule Sioux, the Shoshones, the Arapahoes ! Tpere 1s a prejudice against surgery. It i 9 t E ©isn I8 not of books, It arises rather from a | halt was very glociny. He suftered from ter- [ and roveral other tribes, He told of thelr | o ailc ot with the gleaming knite and uing for one week we will ; J knowlodge of words and wild spaces—trom | Fible headaches of a congestive sort, caused | gaiies, of their life in the tents it WS G TS A LK e g > ¥ by an accident some years hefore, which de- | “They're fine as the Greeks, only different, | With the flow of blood, and with the In- place on sale our full line of i a love of mountains, from the breadth of | ¥ GO OO ST EE e ose " ai | of course,” he sald. “I am going to do a | filetion of pain; and yet surgery is the most | j the plains. Like the Ameriean [ndian, he | ferred with the blood circulating in the | series of studies of them at their games | intelligent, the most progressive and the k. has come to feel nature as something very | passages and thelr hunting. Nothing finer in the | most merciful of all branches of the healing 9 close and very sentiment. The phase of his | __There lie was, worst of all, working for | world hey'll muke a superb friez art. In administering drugs, we have to Séle > 32 per day with the ceaseless urging to do ow did their life in general impress 4 . Character (hall Jocular In its exprestion) 18 | gonoihing, he had no elue to what it might | You?' 1 asked. ke B e U e Aol [ r ) ‘1 j perceived first of all b6 ; As being very natural. They left you | system, in the hope of reaching some one / In amswer to my knock his light, rapid | “The only thing which gave me keen | free to do as you liked. They did not sug- | spot. We have to go by guess work. We il C walk approached the door, it opened a slit | pleasure,” he said, “was studying the wild | gest, but helped to do. I think I learned | try experiments, the effect of which we learn and his Impassive face looked forth a | #nimals in the park. 1 had determined | more there dufing that six months than at | wyon the effect has taken place. Sometimes P e et Then his hand | 10 Keeb working along at all Kinds of things, | any other time, and right herc let me say, | O b . Sald ol nicment’s space in silen hen his hand | 40 e T ike. the right thing at last, | don’t make too much of my hunting. 1 was | We learn by an autopsy. Said a med cal T b extended, his gray eyes expanded. 1 felt sure 1 would know It instantly. At | & hunter for a purpose—to study men and | expert in a well known college: “When “I felt ye,”” he said, with a curious intent- | jast it came.” animals. 1 am a sculptor of animals from | we give medicines, it is like firing into a U R ness and gravity., I knew ye were near. This moment, which he then described | choice, not because it is easy. 1 expect 1o | tree; we don't know what will come down.” ( E Come in.” to me in wwitlly moving phrases, Is one of o more“and more in the way of human | “True," was the reply, “very often it it 0 ] 1 stepped Into his modest studio, untmpos- | J¢ papitned (o see an old sculptor modeling | Of this wild life and this mountain rogion | the patient.” The surgéon knows just what ing In its walls, but full of interesting | the head of a wolf. Quick as lightning came | Which we both love so0 well we talked | he wants to do. He fires with a rifled gun, things. Everything was of the wild life. | the thought to n long and his triumphs are indeed almost incredi- 9 A miniature bronze grizzly paced across a ‘I can do that! I felt it for an absolute Well, now, you went back to New York | ble. As I myself, but & layman, look back | Vi s e 1 i * &1 cortaiity. The old man laughed at me, but | after each trip?” G5 e T el Remember this is no job lot of in pedental toward a lithe faguar. An Arap- | G RGY RS DRGSO BUEIEE 37 B cors | * Hiis Tace darkened and he made a gesture | UNITLY vears o the period of war, 1 whink of y alge warrlor Inclined iIn relief upon a 1ab | {tened to get hold of that wax." of defense. “Don’t ask me. I don't iike to | Multitudes whom I have se:n die, whom the rains, shop-worn or remnants A King buffalo calmly regarded some distant | He then related with wealth of detail | think of that part of it. Yes, I'd go back to | remedial surgery of today would have saved. 1 obfect from a helght. Wolves, coons, | the wonderful night he had. He carricd w York and work till I sold something, | PRESENT SACRIFICES FOR FUTURE % 1 5 Itte ohlcke .0 | his bunch of wax to his room too excited to | and fhen—back west again.” 5 but the choice of our stock for prairie chickens, elk, mountain sheep, looked i ¥ GOOD. BTN Srotes. Bl i eat or sleep, and there modeled his wolf's They did buy things occasionally % . E at from bronze plaques, or casts or clay. | 16a"\ {in e jaws open. The old scalptor | *¥es, T had friends who believed in me, | Surgery sacrifices a part to the welfare of one weel only in order to re- 4 Splendid Indian ornaments, moccasins of | had been working upon ome with the jaws | Theodore Roosevelt, Julian Hawthorne. I | the whole; it amputates, it extirpates, that chicfs, quivers and weapons of various kinds | closed had lovely frierds there, couldn’t have lived | it may save the whole body. Surgery sacri- % : hung on the wall “And then I sat down and waited for day- | without them. i 1| fees present ease o tuture welfare: it pro- duce stock before moving, 1 I i 3 <ott, | light in order to show my work to the fam “When did that trip abroad come | it e Lttt g rom there I turned to the man himselt, | ;o™ oncaq ‘to be certain. I wasn't sure | asked, recalling him to the east. olres ‘permansat rellet and fecovery by in 1 an erect and active figure. e was drissed | py( py fmagination had made me see a 1877. 1 went abroad to see what they | flicting present pain. Surgery acts promptly, i in a sort of long trock of yellow and white | wolf's head in a lump of wax. 1 knew it | would think of me over there. My friends | rzalizing that the quickest and most radical o linen ln“|d :nreln xn;»'n velvet ;‘fll' llh' ap- | was a eritical moment with me--the most | all said I must do it. [ didn’t want to go, | step is usualy the most merciful. Surgery peared to be about 45 years of age, hair a | critical of all my life. I went down carry- | and 1 nearly died when I did go. Home- | cybordinates sentiment to sense. Sentimed ‘ ; liltle gray, moustache " cllpped short. He | ing the head covered with & handkerchiof, | sick all the time—miserable! Lost flesh. 1| save oabs thin o sottomne \Sentiment | 4 locked a bold, resolute man of middle age. | I shook with cxcitement. 1 wanted it a | don’t know what I would have done without | el poor suffermg leg, which . His figure, thin but sinewy, was active as | test, so I said: ‘Now, I've got something to | Hawthorne. I went to England first and 1 | has been crushed and is mortifying, be b E an Indian’s and as erec show you. If you recognize it say so quick, | held an exhibition there. Then I went to | 8entle with it; dont sacrific: it." Surgery i Take a chair. Take that one on the | don't hesitate.” Then I jerked the handker- | Pa 1 stayed there until I put the buffalo | Sav€, “Sacrifice it, lest the whole body be 1511 DOU‘TI'\S Stl‘CCt 4 left. You'll find it easter,” he sald as | chief away, ‘It's a wolf,' they said.”” and wolves Into the salon. Oh, but I was | Sacrificed.” Sentiment says, *‘Deal merci- 5 2 he :;"}f“ ‘“’ FrabeR clay head o ’;('fl ~'H=«[l I realized the dramatic importance of that | homesick. When [ found myself on ship- :‘:')1:' b “l:\‘ "‘x’:!n t‘l‘nrohm:!g l“lf”fu sur, By 3 ~Don't _do that, want to look at it. | moment, but something in his voice led me | board with my nose pointed for America, I | $avs, “Out w , cost wha ma; i What s it2" to understand that he ot reached the | could have turned handsprings all over the | Was once present when a physician was open- After October 1st, 1818 Dodge Street. k. “It's a bust of Du Luth. I'm working on | climax of the story. deck. Since then, to make a short story of [ In8 an angry sw:lling upon the forehead a an order for twenty hmedallions for the “I was wonderfully pleased, but 1 was not | it, I've had my studio in the east. but at | 9f & child of tender years; after the incision 4 Marquette building here, to include ex- | catisfied. I went back and modeled another | every opportunity I've made pilgrimages | had been made, and the pus about halt E ploters, cruiers de Bois, Indlans, etc. head. 1 brought it down just as before and | to the wilderness. 1 don't know that I've ‘,,‘\,'”_““"‘- the sympathizing mother said, ] The facd of the old French explorer was | when I uncovered it, they said: ‘Why, its | told you the things you necded to know. Now, don’t do any more today, let it res i serious, intent, like one who had also faced | Lap!' Lap was their dog. That settled it. “Now you must come home with me,” ‘”'I“’"'""U“- The result would have b:en | God's mystery in the woods. I'had come to my own. I had struck the | added the sculptor, laying his mob cap of [ Prolonged and needless agony. - As I rose to look at a fine grim old | trajl,” he added with characteristic resort [ green velvet and his apron of linen aside. STATE SURGERY AND ANARCHISTS. ] smvnl!ms"ruce "nll nh;u\” mv(“““w "’\""h:" to the vernacular of the plains to cover his Mr. Kemeys has located in Chicago. % State surgery will act with wise prompt- i ne of the curious horns of a mountain | geep emotion. “I'm a thousand miles nearer my work,” | nessness and efficiency. About nine years | prophylactically with those who are not yet 1 N NN the Union Pacific, right on the border of Ne- E sheep and it fell with a clatter. Kemeys | =~ “All this without instruction?” he smilingly sald. His home is on the south | ago the Chicago anarchists murdered s-veral | here. It will shut down the door before we ‘ Cl ],T RU‘NS THE PR"““SH branka and Colorato; midway batween OgiEe y caught It and s:t It up ugain carefully. | «Nothing but study of the fact,” he said. | side near the Bryn Mawr station. The cot- | policemen. Tne murderers were convicted, | hecome further swamped by shiploads of lala and Julesburg. 1t wi 1877, on the 4 The old fellow wanted to be noticed, It was magnificent to see him mow. He | tage is not noticeable outside—inside the | and some of them were hanged, unfortunately | ignorance, superstition, violence. Black Hills trail and camping parties of 3 }‘;r;:::l l:vuhl a smile, “He :‘,uvl([ llk«‘l;y be | walked away a little and returned. presence of the sculptor is everywhere. not all. )rms action gave a decid:d check FOR SO-CALLED CHARITY by Texas stockmen, on their return after driv- en. I never can go by him without G L DRRAIY hOWRFTUILY In the little hall as you enter are his | to anarely; presently the action somewhat Lithen gt £ G izl §% in | fng their cattie’ north e 3 ssing 1rom o l‘f";"‘"l Wi U (L h":f.Am“J'fi“g‘lw.l“ii' :u:m“mh‘xln)' Bie Wad no | trophies. Over the mantel a mountain | spent its force, and the governor pardoned l""l'“' time will come whien state surgery will Demoraliging Effect of Urban 1% on Train A party) of Kaventrien \l“:vrltlufllul::hufln(m{:::s. excuse me' tha old fellow smooths out | 8% et b i shesp, opposite a huge black buffalo glows, | the surviving criminals. Then followed the | d€al With ignorant and fnjurious and destruc- i es fro a q again.’ Al this with qualnt convincing | 63 OF thought of belng egutistical, —His . opy Raiders, miles from Ogallala which [s twenty miles zly | murder of the mayor of Chicago. The mur- | tive fo-called *cha R epread clutehe ¢ under the corner is the head of a gri: rity” which s nourishing earnestness, trcng hands spread and clutched like an 1 from Big Springs, in the summer of 1877, i . eaglo's talons, his volce was full of down- | bear, the hero and almost the victor in a | dercr, after considerable delay, was con- and multiplying the tramp class, which is o They were ‘nuv:mml to be Is':«:‘c(kmgn fl"d 3 ,. A banjo. Do you play?’ I said as we | warq inflecti-ns, his words came Lke gusts | battle with the sculptor. A beautiful bronze | victed. Then came delays and investigations. offering every inducement to men now in- OWARDLY AMATEURS P AS VETERANS | %ere quite frequently in town. “The seeming E faced about. L R U BEATAE Winos prairie clock brought back my days on the | It is doubted whether the murderer was | dustrions by constraint, to join the great | C! L URS POSE leader of the party—the others called him ‘Oh, I touch it up a little in my own way,’ “About this time I woke up. No more in- | farm in spring. A mountain lion in perfectly well balanced. It is altogether | army who live by their wits (or rather by | captain—was Henry McDonald; the others 4 ] he replied, evasively. “I carried & banjo | jocision. 1 began (o feel my wings ex- | beautiful and singularly gracious pose looked | probable that every murderer lacks some- | the want of wits in other people), the mis- were Billy Hefridge, Bill Bass, Jack Davis ‘"‘,,.?.2 my trips Into the wildernes: pand. 1 felt I could do anything, any- [ down from a stand as if from a high rock. | thing of perfect sanity; and, indeed, if i leading .charity that is drawing people from | The Picturesque Deviltry of Former Days | Jim Berry and one other, whose name wi 3 snThat must be u part of your southern | {iing in sculpture. All | needed was sub- | In each room bronze reproductions in | quisition were made to find any man, in jail | the country where they might eurn a mod- Compared with the Chicigo Articlo— either Mason or Collins. On the night of | nheritance. ' You were born in Georgia, | jourg’ That night I sat down and made a | frames decorated the walls. Indian orna- | or out, in the asylum.or at large, who ab- | erate subsistence, into the city where they 4 September 10 the east-bound overland mail 2 weren't you?” “He sat down facing me and | 1655 (/6 thinge T must do.” ments, heads, arrows, pipes, on all sides | solutely and always obeys the dictate of | swell the host that haunts soup houses and TheEAMOUNI IV SPEIIRE und express was signaled to stop at Big studied me with riturn intentness. “Of what character?” abound. perfect rason, the inquisition would be vain. | feasts upon unearned bread. Hold-Up. Springs. 1n an instant the train was in the 1 Yes, but I came north when I was a | .al i, Deer fighting panther, welves | The chisf ornament of his home is his | And so Prendergast went unpunished for | State surgery will summon up strength and hands of the six bandits. They made a rich 3 f fil’l'fly, ,'m Welsh descent. Kemeys Is pure | fopting buffalo, and that sort. The first | beautiful wife, his actual comrade and help- | months, aithough justice came to her own | courage to deal with the saloon by the ways haul, for in the express car they secured 3 | 80 it i r'a alw group I did I sold to Philadeiphia for the | meet. Mrs. Kemeys is also a sculptor and | at last. And the criminal virus spreads. An | that experience shall prove to be most effec- That close contact with cult lowers the | $110,000 in gold and currency. Three of the - : S i always supposed it to be | SrOWP J 4 B SO0 G A P hte "stcond | works with her husband each day. She | attempt was made on the life of the prime | tive. It will at least make the saloon pay ik Yo u tan 4 de ) Eang went through the train and robbed ¢ German. It's another one of those typieal | Pt " eold in England for $1,100, and the | superintends the reproduction of his work | minister of Italy. Now the best ruler that | for the damage which can be traced to the | S-endard of the hold-up profession 18 made § vory pascenger from “headlight to bull's- b Amcrican combinations, ain't it? Here's a | (hird group carrled me into the salon of | and aids him in a manual way when she | France ever had has died, as a rsult of | gigon; and when that is done, the saloon | Manifest by the exploits of Griswold and | ,yo'' Ng one was hurt, and the train pro- wr]u hlmrn in Georgia of Welsh parents of | payyg. 18 not studying. She hopes to be able to | laxness and criminal weakress and the ab- | Wil no longer be profitable. g Lake in the suburbs of Chicago. By some | ceeded on its way to Ogallala. The robbers elsh descent become our sculptor of wild | "I Glapped hands in . enthusiasm. “Glori- | take up his art and become his fellow artist. | sence of state surgery. In the strong lan- 5 Stfedtn ¢ it is characterized as an exhibition of west- | were all masked. A young man from Mead- S Nows 1 he Al ;) a Y 4 ge af 2 valued o hondent, wh CRIMES AND CRIMINALS, i ; I'm going to confess that | gugs ANl without instruction?’ 1 wished | She modestly disclaims the possession of | guage of a valued correspondent, who uses f ville, Pa., Millard Fi Leech in th Qs Nowp Im wolng e ' 7 d IR L S L, (s B RRES Wil recigntad thatialanens ern train raiding. The designation is an un- | ville, Pa., Millard Filimore Leech, was in the 3 ¥ ere to find out how that happened. 1|t emphasize the point. any special power. v ness peech: gery recognize the ldleness of employ of the company at Ogallala. He was o want you to put me in possession of the | “.Nhbolutely. I never had an hour's in- | She s almost as remarkable in many | “HELL IS GOING AROUND ON BI- | Imprisoning men for six days, twenty days, | Just and an undeserved reflection on the | HGht, delioate. youth, wht had: adre wast SN maln facts. How did you begin?" It i s Lt ways as her husband. Her marvelous CYCLES." 100 days, a year, five years. It will imprison | careers of many eminent d:speradoes who | g =Lt CURAC G WG B0 SO0 WEER b | He did not spaak for a moment. His “That's royal. That's the power which | physique, her skill as a hunter and her en- S \ the culprit until there is tne fullest reason | have passed away involuntarily and other- y o tead dropped and his face grew grave. ty b tnd adaptabllity make her a pertect | Prompt and radical steps with the Chicago | ¢ pelicve that the necessity for his further Hemt s SRR L e o ) % I B Pl sl (ke thcongtew Canave. | creaton;. $ " ergy_and adaptabllity mak " & hertect | purdorer would have saved no one knows joyelihatithe nocenslty wise. True, there are a few members of the | they telegraphed him to take hold of the ] ik ”“l‘xu‘:“l ngtll :r:r:y‘uh:t;l:l::;\ nn[llw:’l:w ‘::f 55’;'.'.\2",',‘@!" nifURwhen e 80 9 how many lives, each one worth a million b e tkas A Ao by sexual passion, | Profession lingering hers and there, but age o J; 'r‘i (‘la‘lrk was at Lmfi time pmlldn"t E casa : 2 oW i e rne: o mucl i Rt ’ 2 ssion, . [T ;i i of the r and a great believer in Leech, A | ‘When T think of the things I've been | skelotons &nd the muscles of animals. [ | We eat down before the open fire and con- ;,’:I";Ed"‘;u,;r“:‘;";y "‘,E'r':j‘ m‘e{; he Jind besll surgery will deal in the only way which | And & desire to deprive sleuths of liberal | Tf e 8o CEC 6 Erel BtReTCr LMot through Ho drew a deep breath. | knew their equilibrium of parts from actual | tinued our talk. As the night fell and the | | R R0 W must cut out the can- once just and appropriate and sure to | rewards keep them in seclusion. But it can | ("5 oha1a who had opened a little store. ; It's as if some angel of life had said ‘I'll | stygy. " firelight grew in power he took up the banjo | REY€ DER TNE: C RE TS For find the ax, | Prevent a repetition of the oftense. be truthfully said of them that they upheld | wrhe party of herders still remained in camp, E give you gifts—but Il give suffering, too.’ You went to nature?” and sang snatch’s of negro song and imitated 2 SR e ox | State surgery will not be liable to the | the homor of th: business. An express car | Leech worked on several clews. One day g 1 don't complain, understand, but I've pald Yes, and then I always had, scme way, | the Indian chants for me and told more of STATE SURGERY AND STRIKES. condemnation that is inely pronounced | well loaded was usually to them the chief | as he was about to go to Julesburg to follow 2 With the blood out of my heart for all I'va | an infuitive conception of what animals | his life with the Indians. A strange and As I write, the strike riots are at their | against those of whom it is said, ‘‘They have o ', : i up a tip and was putting his horses aboard ] A done. I've had to be alone, I've had to do | would do under certain circumstances. I | wonderful people. A people of great dignity | height. ~ State surgery would have acted | hegled the hurt of my people slightly.” State | OPJect of solicitude. And on some occasions | 70 o U G0 Yol RECNE 0rea" Up and. re= 1 my work alone. ould see them—see them in groups. 1| and power, mixed with cruelty and ignor- | promptly In the very beginning, before the | surgery will s0 heal that the healing will | It Was thelr wont to give an exhibition of | T gt "' yone"™\ou catch thoe fellows 4 [ know what you mean. It is not the | knew nothing about conventional composi- | ance. strife had grown to its present dimensions, | ast; in the great body of instances, it will | fireworks and Introduce themselves to the | yeech™ 1f you will wait for me I will go 1 first time parents have bequeathed a great | tion, but I could see my subjects, every “They are a psychologic race. Put any | and would have saved measureless loss and | geek to heal before the crisis has come, be- | passeng:rs. Of course, if messengers were [ and get my gang and go with you.” Leech F gt to @ son and then failed to understand | gesture, Intultively.” white man on the same environment with | bitterness and agony. fore the disease has proluced irreparable | injured, it was because of unbecoming zeal | could not wait. When he came back from LR 2 g “1 reckon the intuition could be accounted | the man who comes todominate them in a | [ regard o all murderers we should €x- | disaster. The time for warm water and | n behalf of employers. That was unpardon- | Julesburg he learned that the herders had i es, but T can't trace a particle of my | for on natural grounds. You had always | psychologic way—maybe mesmeric on’t | ercise state surgery In the interest of the [ gniin fr o gVl Y W Dice Vhe time broken camp. An impulse selzed Logch to , power to my people. That's the strange | loved animals and observed them uncon- | know that I can explain.” innocent. It is not the murderers alone who | yo oo’ oo cvato curg A able, and had to pe rebuked. Even the con- | v i Y : 1 o e s oo f = ) : state surgery. ductor was rarely touched, except that his | Fide out to the deserted camp. Here he thing about it al sciously, isn't thet so? In everything he said there was deep earn- | have rights. Dr. Andrew D. White of the L R e y touched, except tha P B el f “It might have been latent in 'em for all He replied in one of those unique phrases | estness and a curious dramatic intensity, | Social Sclence assoclation, 1892, said in sub- o DG b R e o) 8 p:rson was utilized as a shield againgt hasty : S 4 i 3 1 t Philadelphia, Pa. B iR elAt kaAS T AKS Rhcysd turned out was part of a mask worn by one 9 that. But tell me of your early life." he uses when nothing but hyperbole is capa- | such as he puts into many of his groups. stance: “Every year 7,000 innocent men are 3 gunning. Griswold and Lake showed no | Arire PRV WS PRvh B B (WAL RO0F 16, but In a few words he sketched his early boy- | ble of expressing the fact. He is a religious man. Not in the way of | murdered, and not more than 200 murderers S symptoms of professional training. They i b g hood In Scarborough on the Hudson, where Yes, 1 always studied an‘mals. 1 could ced. I do not think he has a creed—but | legally executed. I plead for the 7,000 men | FOURTEEN HOURS IN THE SEA, his father lived till Edward was about 13| sit down before an animal and drink him | he feels purposes and powers running all | ipnocent of crime, who, during the year to years of age. His face was somber as he told | dry.” through nature, and all through his own | come, will be murdered.” We neéd a state were amateurs i the business and cowards | Showed it to his father by accident. “The at heart. The holding-up of a freight train | 0ld man said: “Why, I sold McDonald six k- conductor proved them to be ruffians of the | OF seven yards of that gocds about two days Experience of a Young Englishman Who ©f his home In New York City and his school | “'Can you account for the power?"' | it surgery that will not wait for the action of iied o BWilEARLOrE lqwl" lchw. : Ad xvrufvs?lunu)l( \i\v\gld not betfore the ""f" was held 1. 2 life there, but at length his face brightened “No, cnly the Almighty gave it to me, All things seem to come round to me | law to be frustrated by the ill judged and With nothing but a life preserver betwesn :’u! (.lll‘:!‘lg ‘;r wl"l;n\m»: {f,fi‘ A :!:;ll|;‘rlt‘ £ That night young Leech was on the trail. k. up. ho said, With o swift return to solemniiy. | If I wait.” he sald. He spoke of the things | often criminal exercise of the pardoning [ nim and cortain death George Moord of | Moreikely he would toxs them a handful of | He rode fast, and on the third day he unex ““Then came the first great event in my life, | But vou hadn't seen the buffalo— e wanied to do. 'To put intg Lronas some | power. Bricl nstand. spent. foustsen Hours i | ncniioe, nd bld them tske mi'tiin', But | pectedly camie In sgnt of them. = They.MAW 4 my firs trip (0 the west {o vislt some relac Bl on. we're getting ahead of the | of the splendld pores of American workinen, | Tk CASE OF APPO IN NEW YORK. | the Atiantic ocean, off Cape Henry, on Suni- | sess none of the quailties that uminate.the A Ao ot oral i aaT RERE A tives down here in Tlinols. 1 thank the g A v : r i The other day, in the course of the Lexow | day, July 22, says the Boston Herald. | yeo SLAUAL Kion ! 3 Lord for that trip. 1 was only 13 years of ame back to his eves, ~When [ sold thal | the street, =\ 0ier came dashing up | lovestigation in' New” York, there came on | Moore's case, which was broughit to the i renduIRE vala L e dstalla ol orime | eotiiReipies Gl ot SE PR AT ageand 1 was plunged right into the richness | BTOUP of wolves to the park 1 naturaly [mounted lamp Nghter came dashing U8 | e stand George Appo, whose father, Quippo | attention of Commissioner of Immigration | 4d chase and capture for a single incident | ha crawled up (o withn ity fet of them ; Of these prairies in the '50's. You can im-. | headed for the west. O, that trip®” = He | to the corner and lighted tho lamb wimost | 4ppo s Chinaman, is serving a life sentence | Delhanty yesterday by Captain Wiley of ed uf n fifty - e e wwore: (ou can I~ | glowed with the memory of it. “I saw the | at gallop. He lingered on the eye with a invested with the glamour of western dasn. | Well for him that he did. They had fust Having robbed a freight train conductor of | completed a division of the spoils and were 1 : 5 lie schooner Cactus, is both remarkuble and e ). Bl R iap aaeat at Sing Sing for murder. The young man's | t SR8 prairios s Jou Gor the wholo of theny | buffalo. I am one of the few arists Liv- | superb backward (wist, We looked at each = &3 bringing up has been all that hell in its | pathetic. his watch, they shoot down an officer, and t cDonal 9 birds, snakes, flowers, but the big gume was | 5 "R forwara he proceeded without in- | *Triere is one. Right at your door.” Tost exorbjtant. demands could desire. He | Moore fs 18 years old. Me decila to | 8 YISH N¥ U0 QoWE AN TR G | 1o Seharale a6 COvNEeR o o Mexat: e 3 Just a liitle west. Oh, how T used t0 IOt | comairion ta vl e ottt oeendertal (o |1 hevoe e e replled, "1 wateh for him | breathed crime from his birth. He began to | steal his passage from Liverpool o America | gpposice dircction takes them nearer cap- | Berry went east. Jack Divis and Bill Bass i and scheme to get out there! And the sad | e t-d of the wagon train crawling slowly | every night. I'll do him some time.'" be arrested when he was 15, and has been | and he secreted himself in the hold of the | (iyity, Another officer is shot and mortally | started for the southward. Leech heard 4 part was T had to go back to New York City | toward Fort Leavenworth, he described the | “You must. And that mail clerk in the | arrested at intervals ever since. Probably | steamer Wemplemore of the Johaston Mne. | wounded. Tiey levy on a farmer's team, | Berry say to McD:nald as they parted, ““Writ 2 § in winter. But the work was done, I had a | plains as they seemed to him then, he told | mall car, too.” he has never done a stroke of honest work | Here amid the suffocating heat he icmuined | grive a mile or two, then to a corn fleld | to me at Portland, Callaway, county, Mo. L taste of wild life. From that time I lived | bf his first antelope, of his first view of the | 1 had ealled his attention on the way down | OF earned a loal of homest bread. State | In hiding for nine days —ile was dis- ] and surrender. A threat of lynching makes | This assured the detective that Berry wa 1 ) only to get back west. I marked off every | Rocky mountains locming over the level sod | to the splendid pose of a railway postal clerk | surgery would have interposed long ago, | covered by one of the saliors “wacn hrée | (he rufians tremble in their boots and beg | on his way back to Missourl. MeDonald 3 day on the calendar and said: ‘One day | almost 200 miles away. “Glorious things | in a car door. He was dressed in a thin | Would have put an end to George Appo. the ys out, , instead, of informng the | protection. and Hefridge would probably cross the Kan- . L ; captain, the sailor took pity on the youth nearer happines again.' After that visit peo- | to travel to, those cloudlike masses there in | whit: shirt and white duck trousers. His | budding criminal, and would have put in his | Cptalf, the . { Bia Sonldn't hurt me In' the clty, When they [ the western sky." he ssid, with & little catohe | neck was bave to his hreast, and his lithe | place & clvilized citizen. I was realling in | aud give him some bread and water when Call that an exhibition of the western des- | sas Pac.fic rallroad near Fort Hayes or perado? Shades of James and Younger, | Buffalo, % & A D ech hunted up a ranchman, ran against me or struck me I wasn't there. | ing of the breath. figure was £plendid to see as he stood there | some account of the Salvation army about L'r:!;ltblv“ \Al\n:":n‘flzr r@“:fl::l; l'l°:~| T, ‘-(IR Sontag and Evans, Black Bart, Bill Dalton | gave him some telegrams and an order te % was dreaming of the west. That waa the | It all came back to me with mighty | leaning to catch a breath of air. mothers In London offering (o the slum- | Short, us the sailor &id Mot dare to run the | anq the lesser fry in jail and und:r ground! | the station agent at Ogallala for {200. The 3 beginning of the whole campaign.” power—*I know, I know,” I broke in. *The “‘There are a million subjects for the finest | lasses their children for a shil- ol g 8 ering £uccor 10 4 | Or, go east and read up the record of Abe | rancher delivered the messages. A tele- By T felt T was getting at the most @cret | Spanish peaks and away to the North Pikes | artist right here and now,”" he sald ling or a sixpence, often for | stowaway. oo eers | Buzzard of Pennsylvania, and of the Starr | gram was sent o a fighling frontler sheriff i springs of his action. peak. How lng ago was that? "What 1 like about your whole campalgn, | & Elass of gin. It may seem without prece- | When nine days out one of the engineers | and Reno gangs of Indiana. It some coura- at Buffalo nomed Bullock. He got some v £ B R frants you Tahoulatibave ‘han Twenty-two years ago." Kemeys, is this: You've been yoursclf, you've | dent, but I believe it would be wise for the | dlucovered the siowaniy and aulckly in- | geous medium could call their spirits back to | troops from Fort Hayes and sterted out on % those longings for the wilderness. A man “How I envy you that tri 1 never saw | be:n American, you've stood for original re- | State to buy these children. =~ When the 00re Was | earth, it s not improbable they would rejoice | the trail. In the mist of the early morne born In the west could feel thelr significance | the buffilo, they were always just a little | scarch all through. It hasn't been ‘corn- | mother 1s wlilling to sell her child, it is a brought before the captain he was threat- | i having pas d away ere the profession | ing two horsemen came over the hills, s Z X Lo 's g o dication that the worst thing you can | ened with imprisonment = when the ship | fell into disrepute and deca; “Phrow ) Y more intensely.” beyond. The deer and antelope and wolves | muck’ all the way, but it's going to count in | plain in M B AR Bt cay. Throw up your hands,”” shouted Bulloek, L e wast asamied nativa fo ] W6 Mad, but not the bustalo, = Well?! American seulptare. = Like Howells and Whit. | do with that child is to leave It ln her | fedched Bapimores aibo with the treadmill | Somo of the florid accouns of the affair | “Trapped.” said McDonald, as he reached 4 me, as it I had returned to it from a strange “I found myself finally in the buffalo | man and Riley, you've taken things at first | hands. “'mm b Km Addabin »uu:JI ot Q"“" i lf‘ presume to class it as the work of viterans. | for his gun. It caught in his rubber ccat, land. And then the prairies were full of all | COUBtry, but strapped for money and no- | hand. No doubt of that.” DRUNKARDS AND WORSE. : L dRdl Y hueh y as finally set | It happened in the suburbs of the city, amid | the soldiers fired, and McDonald and Hefridge 1 beauty then. But that was only part of it. | Pody to help me cut. I went to one hunt- “I've tried to," he replicd. “It would be Not far from my residence is a family "',“"'_'m""; K“If" ""'."‘; ";\‘ and water. | a net work of streets and tracks, where | fell full of lesd. On their horses was found I wanted to get further west, the plainas | INE party just ready to go out and asked | a great pleasure to me if I could ald the | (if it is right to use that heaven born word ossible ‘mdprl»(mr:lmn In two couniries was § pursuit was certain and apprehension in- | §40,000 of the stolen gold. F e b e ot (o hemain® | them what they'd take 1o let me go along. | young sculptors to go ahead in their own way [ in such a connection) in which the father is [ Bof & Very Geeivable outlook for the vounk | evitable. That ls but additional broof of | porry was traced to Missourl and killed EICE e dot and T went 1nlt ‘What c:n you xh?" they asked. ‘Well, 1 | and to do the things that are characteristic { 4 drunkard, the mother, 4 not badly mean- | ‘I,’{“:_:?;”m AI‘;u'x"z[n‘1':;“;::;111;:||||‘10r:”;fin"\1“21’( llln-‘lillur‘vinrk.‘ It )f.l\ls nLhnN‘ url the mark, | E R A ot s ‘trae by Cthetaharia el d 7 can cook a little and shoot a little and piay | of America.” h e bl Beidionat B i cape, e ore _8tood t s outclass:d. Oliver Curtis Perry set a | 40 i 1Y e “You must have been a mere boy? t ng woman, eak, o ¥ R s Enn e e Je A s 4 AR e Audrian county, who had a posse out in s he banjo. “Your example will do that, but it will be se. has succumbed.. And she, too, Is a | Cape Henry in thi y morning of July 22 | pace for suburban dare-deviltry that is not | AUIri A ] = :::e‘;::m:m”l"::;:m:“ l‘:;" :n;“n;r‘::n:: enBacU s Rl hantat Gilmna c antiiay || VSRR SPIRM BT SRR S I Bt aR ;‘:l:::‘."’d St ‘a‘m‘:z’e‘u-‘u“‘m" At le:.ulre mluu]-nk' n:lel Iwaxlllglhlu on w‘:'erldl likely to be surpassed or even approached ;‘(ann:n:‘l“:"rv.n‘:l; ,fl‘la\‘“i"l';(‘l“;‘yh Pp,":f.“" ";‘f" 3 d it, come right along." well as deed.” is demorallzing hnd infecting the | Salling vessels for lights on the coast. Being | for tome time, Perry did not hold up a | O b Tesnd P { fever and was discharged. 1 went again | 'QOn. we had a moble life! T was happy | | He lingered a bit and his thought was clear | Saiey i ot 0T e Are Browing | @ 800d swimmer he concluded that he could | freight train. He wanted richer game. In | 3} 4 stistaeds the teader of & MRUE LIS later as second lieutenant and got to be first | now. ~Every night I had all the animals I | and definite. He knows from wh:nce his ok Satitutes and criminals, | €scape by jumping overboard and swimming | October, 1892, Perry climbzd on the roof of | yif ’ e ut by the 3 % lieutenant and finaly captain of the United | could use for dissection and posing. I used | success has come. D e B aollutiad, perhaps some | A8hore. ~To think was to act. He hunted | the express car of a train on the New York | " PEer® i States colored artillery, Great days!" He | to sit around on a roll of hides afier supper HAMLIN GARLAND, | oot e cub T aven uma vars "Myt | the deck over until he found a life preserver. | Central leaving Albany. He carried a rope | Josh Davis was killed in a drunken quarrel 3 IRt Rha Rl Die HAIME SATS [Land singe - Thethork alwary elieg for Dl —_—— Cmgit we not o Faise.the Inquiry whethir | He next ook off his shoes and tied them to | ladder with hooks. These he attached to the SRR AL e iting guerr! s, camp | Lady in Crape.’ They never seemed to tire | A company playing “Dora” in Ohlo car- | there is not here a question which should be | the preserver. Quickly getting his head and | roof of the car, whil: the ladder hung down he man Masor, or Collins, was always & at night hearing the negroes sing, thunder | of it rled no child for the part of the little boy, | toneidered?” State sprgefy would long ago | Shoulders through the preserver he jumped | the sides. Climbing down the ladder, he | mystery. At the time of the robbery he 1 OF guns, battleflelds thick with dead Johoniey | 1 don't know that one. sing It! slug It | but depended each nikiit upon borrowing ons | have broken up this ome, would huve con- | Into, the occan. Instead of swimming'to- | broke 8 pane of glass on the side of the car, | held the beg In which the money’ and Jewa 4 staring up at the moon—" He broke off with | ~He snatched up the bunjo and gave & few | for the production. In one town they bor- | fned the father and mother uatil ~ they ward the shore he went in the oposits | pointed his revolver at the express messen” | elry of the passengers were put e di & oeture of verbal wonknaat, THAYG lite fof | auick charactaristc passs actots tho eirioms | rowed the Byearcia on of the landord. | showed some slana,if fmprovement, and | dliection snd when Q4aLlEy! came thers was | £ S SOGURILEt M SCQUT, 108 SO | e Seprean ar, and”hean away. with 0 er, b v L 1 pe. col his lanilord was notorious throughout that | wo: ve assumed..the office which the | MOthing to be seen of land. e me er did ed, and Perr; ex) ar, something worth while.” ditty of deliclous absurdity. At the end he | vicinity for b:ing the toughest man and the :.l‘:,':l..h':,.;.,m, ;,.& al ,'f“c..yd_ 151“, l; His position was perilous in the extreme; | swung into the car. Similar persuasion in- [ what he had in the bag, prcbably removing | “Well, didn't this war break i on your | sald with a quizzical smile most_ abandoned swearer in the community. | what state surgery would have done with the | death at any moment scemed certain, The | duced the messenger to open the safe, and hun disguise and continuing east on the train artistic places?"’ “Fancy singing that for a serious produc- | and his little boy was a ‘“chip of the old or of ' the Juke mily, thus saving | S¢a was rough, and wave after wave rolled | Perry bagged the swag, over §10,000. A pull | he had robbed. e was heard of several A “I didn't have any places of auy sort ex- | tlon every night for six months.” Block." In the play the littie boy I supe | ooy o oy ant ot ohd of human degra: | over his head. His endurance was remark- | of the bell rope slackened the pace of the | years ago in the copper reglons of north i cept to get out west. Just as soon as the | He stopped playing abruptly. traveled | posed to be of the Innocent seraph order, | dation, and of mora), and physical cop- | able considering the fact that for nine days | train, and the daring highwayman jumped | Michigan b A war closed 1 started for lloinols again and | With those fellows till I had all the bost of | and his scene 1s accompanied by plaintive | tagion. s he had had barely enough food and water o | off and fled. In the inception and execution | One must compare Big Springs with Chi- b went to farming with my relations near the | the plain’s — animals—buffalo, antelope, | music. Ed Wight was playing Farmer Allen TRNEMENT ‘HOUSE EVIL sustain life, He swam and floated on and | a8 well as his attempts to elude pursuit and | cago to appreciate the depths (o which ihe E/ i seatral part of the state. coyote. It a curlous (hing, but I've always | He takes the child upon his kiee and aske Blals Lurerrs Walla’ oot b the maiss of | 28 o6 fourteen hoars, until st laat. wheo It his capture, the lold-up of Perry is un- | professicn has descended A He digressed to describe a barley field in | accomplished the thing I wanted to do and | “How old are you, my child?” The boy | ¢ * o y of | goemed as if every moment would be his | equalled for picturesque daring et 1A July, and to assure me that he knew all | that was the best for me—without any | answers as he has been instruct:d, “I am | tenement houses which are the hotbed and | jast, he was seen by the lookout on the [ What a change a few flecting years have - i, | about the scenes of my storles, threshing, | money—as if Almighty Providence put the | 7, sir.”” A jealous chum of his, seated in the | distributing point of every form of com- | gclgoner Cactus, bound from Baltimore to | Wrought in the ftrain = robbing business! THE BULL TEAD . binding grain—all of it.” Those were restiess | things in my way.” first row, calls out: “Now you know you are | Mmunicable disease. When one thinks of the | Boston. Captain Wiley of the Cactus low- | What a fall from $110,000 at Big Springs to . days, he sald. His people considered him a This note he struck again and again. In | not; you ain’t but 5. Tie little bully clam- | tuberculosis and the typhold and the filth | ered a boat and sent four of his men to the | & conductor's watch in Chicago! . Cy Warman in McClure's Magazine, i fallure. He lacked “anap” and “push.” He [ bis marvelous life. full of toll and unrest, | bers from Mr. Wight's knee, takes a stand at | discases which pervade these ulcers of s0- | resoue. Moore was completely exhausted | Prior to 1875 the highwaymen of the west [ The sturdy bull, with stately treat, f did little but dream and hunt, the fact cf succeeding had been so mysterious | the footlights, and, shaking his fist at the | clety, I wonder that the death rate is not | and fainted when placed in the bottom of | confined their attentions io stage coaches. | SubMIsEVE wilent, bows his hend 'AU this point his mysticlsm came out again, | It seemed like predestination, perhaps it was, | offendsr in the audience, says: *You just | YasUy greater than it is. This same state | the boat, His head, face and neck were | For ten years previous desultory train raids | fioilfSeis (he yoke: the creaking wain 5 His ‘whole expression changed, his voiee be. | who shall say? “Now Jusi see.” he weni | shut up, Jim Howard, Eol darn you, 111 | Surgery will arrest at whatever cost the | badly scorched, as he had no protcction | were made by the Starr and Rero gangs in | Across the. (rackices, treciess land : " came low and very grave (his voice is very | on. *'I wanted to go on to the mountains, | break your darn neck fer yer when I get | Feckless dissemination — of tuberculosis | from the July sun. Captain Wiley is proud | Indiana. But their plan of making a more An undulating sea of sand, " ¢ : B flexible and follows every minute change in | but the party was turning back. The very | out.”” He then resumed his place on Farmer | through the dry —and powdered = sputa | of Moore's achlevement and is so well pleased | equal distribution of the coin of the country Where mocking, sapiess rivers runm, k v his emotion). night- before they started east I fell and | Allen's knee and proceeded to busin ss. which are scattered upon the air, and which | with his pluck that he has shipped him be- [ did not take root beyond the Mississippi With swollen « ngue cnd L1 odshot eye, h i About this time I felt a great change | broke my arm. I couldn't travel, so they —_—— - the street sweepers by their malevolent art | fore the mast until 1875, when the James gang began op- SUll on 1o where the shadows lle, | i coming,” he explained with solemn inflection, | just left me there with my pardner. That | The Yale Review publishes statistics to | convey to the sensitive lungs of multitudes. | ~ Moore looked none the worse for | erations at Gad's Hill, Mo. Two years later [ An¢ onward toward the sciting sun. 3 “All this time I had been resiless and un- | night I became delirious. When I came to [ show Ethat while there has been an up- In all the mining and manufacturing dls- perience. 00d 's' | the Union Pacific train was robbed g t ¥ his experl Several good nigh's' ed at Big With tearful eyes he looks away i satisfied. 1 longed to do something, 1 didn't [ myself I was in the tent of an Omaba chief. | ward tendency in the expenses of Yale stu- | tricts there are hordes of Hungarians, Poles | rest and substantial food have put him on | Springs. The amount of booly sccured by | To where his free-born Lrothers play B know what. I couldn't cont:nt myself much | His name was White Buffalo, and he became | dents for the past three years, a com- | and Italians, ignorunt, addicted to the an- | his feet, and he now laughs as wiat would | the robbers has not been equaled since, and [ Upon the prairie wild and wide E longer dreaming and hunting.” my friend and helpcd me in every way | parison with longer periods show & de- | archy which is the reaction from despotism, | have been certain death for one with a | the ease with which the deed was done, the [ He turns his head from side to side; He felt my sympathy and he uttered his | possible. crease. In 1874, 18 per cent of the students | who are murdering American citizens because | lower stock of vitality tracking of the robbers, their capture and He feels the bull whip's cruel stroke, 3 ht-:lll-m without -ml::ou}'i mIlln abrupt, di- 5 "Sw"h‘;‘l‘ \-:\! ?fhll"““n ll:;y pnln 1 was rrcelvit:l “?1 1:;.... college funds, 20 per cent | the Americans desire to work for a wage —_— killing, and the recovery of the money, fif“l‘;‘m";“ r;'l:’-;x-;l:;«‘l‘ :nedgr\l,:g. rect language mas Al mo - rop) rig nto an Indian fe. Pt 884, 2 g 194, 1 g v Vi c| y Vs " b D g {y " i %t o R .BI_MI"";II:":V#:‘_ ll‘l‘y_ REEACING A Iadian 1ee, m'fi"l'll;:{ :x.:m‘nlwr a .‘ul‘::l'"f:":l': lc':‘!l:mel";: l:‘l;‘l agreed upon between themselves and their | Rev. Dr. Edward Beecher, Henry Ward's | forms a story of thrilling interest undimmed He pauses at the river's brink, employers. State surger; 11l deal pr tl; 3 pther explanation of it might be. "It was | Art whose home was in the west. I thought | was 512, in 1884, 612, and in 1894, 1,086, V4 R ok e ie) | ldeet. hrother, osiebinted his Dish iribdey by age. And drinks the while his drivers il pi with those who are here, and it will also deal | anniversary Mcnday, G Big Springs was a water tark station ou | Almost beside the selting sun,