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veep ee a! Nae Dili ake bk Bie ~ Lah. Ar DE Tae A PUe MPT ee |! OREN ey a et a OTAAT NE?) heaet Beta THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 27, 1905. ! # w The #« Woodcraft Indians. As Organized by ERNEST THOMPSON ‘SETON. Conducted by “BALD EAGLE,” Medicine Man of the FLYING EAGLE Tribe. eee - to find out all about this fascinating play. There will be an article cach week, with instructions for camping, explaining many games, new and old, and telling what various tribes are do- Tho most attmictive things about Wooderatt are the camping out and the games. Mr, Seton says: "Moat boys love tosplay Indian, It 1s a great pleasure to camp In the woods just as the Indlang did, live Indian style ing. and We themsel after the manner of band of redmen," n " Wolf, as the L rs _ Ms. Beton, oF Black Wo a ane ‘he tent used hy: Wooderatters is the Bround fa on a Mttle Knoll toms Playing Indian. mocarryrere Call hi lacengions Indian teepec Almost anybody can & hundred yards from the ehita)) be everywhere, And as he Is the Bix manage an ordinary ridge pole tent, put 2Me. They nave a halt domen Aha) onk trees, Dut no real forest, One pf advantage they do have ts that when’ the supply of Dread and bacon rune 10% they do not Nave to go far to renew to put up and successfully manage a tocnee 4s quite a cever acntevement, Besttes, a teepeo udmiis of ‘having “ = Medicine Man of the whole nation every Written by “Bald Fagle,”” wooacratter will nave him as a brother i Medicine Man of the Fly. “tnivn” fire on the tnsvo, and that Is a great {M i } ing Eaéle Tribe 80 whoever you are or wherever you atiraction, Dows ana arrows are used RAGMOR Be Re oe OO a wot ¥ le live, start 4 tribe. There are tribes of in pace of Arcarms, the council) fire 1s up for a night's council fire and a h- ITP biggest and host interesting praves and tribes of squaws. Now and kindled With ruphing steke IMENT OF goog, enose warttors Atv navel Ala T of all outdoor clubs for young then news comes of a tribe that has Ltt Hee he aan Ge testS camping ground a half mie Or mone } papple is the one organized by chosen the mother or father of some ‘The games Include numerous ol ones aaa five aes raphy ot that Indlan praves and Indian *quaws ings, Many of the honors can De Wom played for centuries, ant some most en- right In the city. ‘ Joyablo new gam tit Black Wott Tn other words, you way be a Woods Mr, Ernest Thompson Seton, called the one of the braves as thelr Medicine Woodcrafters, It 1s made up of several fran, And Bald Fagle wishes to say A NEW BRAVE IN THE CAMP, . hundred trbbes, spread all over the that he thinks this a fine idea, especially United States and Canada, and teaches for the younger members, Tf you are byes and girls how to “play Indian,” the right kind of boys, careful and / S y /] ns Ce ae FET? Mr, Seton himself is the most enthu- good, you will have a much better time Y, ‘ silastic Wooderafter of al. He not only with mother or fathor along to enjoy it ATA RAISING A TEEPEE. . tells how, but he actually “goes and al with you and make suggestions, If . : Himself has devised, ‘Then there aru crafter anywhere, ‘The main thing fe | it" Nothing else appears to pleae you happen to be careless, well, then @vout one hundred. stunts for which 10 Make up your mind to play Indian @ mM so much as to get im the Woods Vow necd them anyway. have contest# with eaeh other, But Tar chief, chief of the painted robe, by ballot, Then the head chief may ap- ‘he most is declined most Worhy tO honors are awarded, In athletics, eye Anyway. TP you are not so fashlonanle ij fub oUt roots Bnd DRIER where he” a try to start. with congenial fellows, #nd medicine man—all in one, point a medicine man, some person to be the heid of the tribe, Thi8 VAN gist, yoroism, camper-eraft, arene as 10 go Away for the summer play In: ints to make a camp. cut and trim , 2” ‘arting @ tribe the Arst step 18 oenore may be admitted later if they ‘To get the mast out of Woodcraft. a Whom he can go for advice. More will ‘has worked very successfully. Hatureiscudyic DHELoETABNT) URS dian at nome, ff you do go away to BE REID: ‘ to decide who shall belong to it. ‘The show a willingness to follow the rales, tribe should have from five to twenty be told about the duties of these ofM- Next choose a name for the tbe orar that Wooderafters not onty have {Ne country commence at once ro plan ho tent poles, put up the tepees Pree ni way would be to let all come in and thelr doing #0 will no doubt be members. ‘This makes everybody more cers in the next talk, Mr. Soton says the first tbe called ene most possibie run in thelr outdoor f0F 4 teepee, bow and arrows and what- Wwe comfortable beds, chop a lot Of Yo, wished, but unfortunately some sood medicine for them enthusiastic and helps along competi In choosing the head chief fitness itself Blue Buffalo Band. Many tribe® piay, but at the samo time they learn Ve? Tegana you can aford—nead pang y wood, kindle the council fire with | ae The number in a trike makes little ton in the games, A new tribe becomes ought to count more than popularity, luke the names of criginal Indlan many interesting and useful Untngs. hunting shirt, moccasins, &, ibbing aticka and est in @ circle we Cove Cont Bley well with voters: seironce, In several pisces thero are & momber.of the whole Woodoratt Tt ts likely of course, that the boy who tribes, such aa Sloux, Lenape, Delas MAM MVCNSUNE NNN WEN NT | Next week Bald Bagre will tell Just jght. with the boys and girls who Wille Norrie doesn't care for that BI gouge who are playing Indian tion by sending In name of tribe, with {# fittest for the position will be most ware, Troquols, Other names are Kings 0) MY vey, GGT be Mv Moots how to commence, Plain directions will AM AURAL SUSE Baal a 8 | F© Stetson, and Jerry Buck would not 4oIn come who are invalids and cannot even Name and address of the chief, popular. He has to enforce the laws bird, Setting Sun, Flying Hagle, Red Qyiay moceusury. We should rememe peat for ymaxine lespeey tows, ransformed Into chlegs and braves and qi all if that Ute Charle Van Dorn camp out. At teas who Hves After selecting the boys who are to And Keep order in the camp. He should ‘Trall, ‘Turtle, Wolf, Fox, bor thai {he vribew OA (ho BINlha ahd ond’ bande ana eo, foeticl Mal mn yuan ling stories of the woods and hay need, It is better to choose only on historie Indian ground, a devoted form the tribe officers may be chosen, be plucky, cool-headed and firm, Each brave @hould ats) choose an prairies hardly ever had forests to lve Maas Vour Wine trom Weae to week. © prairies us only he ean tell tham, — boYs who are Hkely to work and pliy Woodcrafter. though there are no other They are Head War Chief, Second War A good way to select a head chief 18 Indian namo for himse.t, such as ta, Woodcratters who haye to Yok may otven need to ree Sage. Joys and girls who read ‘The Evening together in harmony, Often there are boys of his age near. He his named Chief, ‘Third War Chief, Wampum to get the boys together and have 4 Taughing Squirrel, Deerfoot, Roaring in the open must pretend to bo & Purticg y 8 read T rf is Pt Y a 1 them, And when the series (s complete Soria: OhlgvBUTAINGR. WII LHAWOYA BhEREDD Stee ete eres neighborhood good his tribe after tho tribe that formerly Chief, Chief of the Painted Robe, Chief series of games, Count the points made Bull, Sea Lion, Copper Wolf, Waubun, of the plains. Ihdd Bagle knows one they will make a vaiuable guide for L BvenG 82 plan, because the competing tribes may lived there, but he 14 the whole thing of the Council Fire, All these are chosen by each player and the ene who has Ovter, Prairie Wolf, very enthusiastic tribe whose camp camping and outdoer sports, Reena essen Sea aa ah aas 4 OVOA0 008 drove me back. It was the sound of bare feet coming along a corridor. @uch things nowadays,’ it if I tried, it was too heavy; andeit fitted so close that I felt and heard forest of dead gums? It looked perfectly ghostly in the moonlight, And 1 “My narrow stair w: ti I bled it with If iT a ’ i M ! j ly na stair was stone, I tum! aown it with little noise; and “What were they, then?’ the air squeeze out in my face, Every shred of light went out, except the found it as still as I lad left 1L—so still that I pulled up there, my first 4 aad only to push opengthe iron door, for I had left the keys in the safe. “*Bank thieves; the one that bad the pot shots was the very brute 1 streak underneath, and it brightened, How I blessed that coor! *halt, and tay my ear to the ground for two or three minutes, But I heard 9 eS As I did so I heard a handle turn overhead and thanked my ee ‘ Grove out of ihe bank at Coburg with a bullet in him!’ “*No, he’s not down there,’ I heard as though through cotton-wonl; nothing—not 4 thing but tie mare's bellow and my own heart, I'm sorry, © shut every single door behind me, You see, old chap, one’s caution doesn a knew it! tUen the etreak went out too, and in a few seconds I ventured to open once Bunny, but if ever you write my memotrs, you won't have any difficulty in. f ilways let ove in, ‘Of course you did, Bunny; co did I, down In that strong-room; but more, and was in time to hear them creeping to my room. working up that chase, Play those dead gum trees for all they're worth, “Who's that knocking?’ said Ewbank up above. old Ewbank didn't, and I thought he was never going to speak again. “Weill, Ww th . + ' i aa “Youre deilrious,’ : ; going i |) now thure was not a fifth of a second to be lost; but I'm proud and let the bullets fly like nail. I'll turn around in my saddle to seey I could not make out the answer, but it sounded to me like the irrele- pine re deiirlous,’ he says at last. ‘Who in blazes do you think you to say I came up those stairs on my toes and fingers, and out of that bank Ewbank coming up iicll-to-leather in his white suit, and I'll duly paint it } vant supplication of a spent man, What J did hear plainly was the cocking He riateee atiane (they'd gone and left the door open) just as gingerly as though my time red, Do It In the tnird person, and they won't know how it’s going to end,” of the bank revolver before the bolts were shot back. Then a tottering Pe eer. had been my own, I didn’t even forget tg put on the hat ite doctor's mare “But 1 don't know myself,’ 1 complained, 6 mare carr; all tay hank! . ‘The new manager's in bed and asleep upstairs!’ ? U Lea akan 1 EPR tep, a hard, short, shallow breathing, and Ewbank’s voice in horror: ic@rnatata Recerca P up ! was eating her oats out of, 18 well ag she could with a bit, or it alone would the way vack to Melbourne:” ‘My God! Good Lord! What's happened to you? You're bleeding “This evening,’ i have Ianded'me. [ didn’t even gallop away, but just jogged off autetly in "Every rod, poie or perch, I had her well seen to at our hotel and: ie a pig!’ “Call himselt Raffles?” the thick dust al the side of the roud (though I own my heart was gallop- returned her to the dovtor in the evening, He was tremendously tickled to ‘Not now,’ came with a grateful sort of sigh, + *¥@g,! ‘ r] bod} and thanked my stars the bank was at that end of the township in hear I had been bushed. Next morning he brought me the paper to show ‘But you have been! What's done it?’ ich I really hadn't set foot, The very last thing I heave was the two me what I had escaped at Yea,” “Well, I'm di ed!’ w. J \ ‘ Bushrangers. Pee at ws wyeehes Le eae ae ‘aoueny Uma Just managers raising Cain and the coachman, And now, Bunnys—— “Without suspecting anything?” ; } ‘Down the road?’ jon jul italia gala ae fe A 3 ‘ e man upc i! te an He stood up and stretched himself, with a smile that ended in a yawn, “Ah,” said Raffles as he put out the gas, ats a point on which I've ) This and Whittlesea—tied to a tree—cock shots—left me—bleed to igh ike aa inte eeu Mone as ie of the gang, He's going The b!ack windows had faded through every shade of indigo; they now never made up my mind. The mare and her color was a coincidence ie ars : framed their opposite nefghbors, stark and livid in the dawn; yt by e cl Lid } ‘eh baILGBEN . “tt he hasn’t done eo already,’ muttered whank after him; ‘If he’ goomed turned to nothing 1m the gioves, ‘ Sea ae ree Hate ie oy ee one Beane ee ee of ae me The weak voice failed, and the bare feet bolted. Now was my \Me— wogtairg atill! By God, if he is I'm gorry for him!’ r i have told a tale, The doctor s manner was certainly different. I c) {f the poor devil had fainted. But I could not be sure, and there I \ But that's not all?” I cried, to think he suspected something, though not the right thing, I wasn't @o= crouched down below in the dark, at the half-ebut iron door, not less “His tone was quiet enough, but about the nastiest I ever heard, 1 “I'm sorry to say it {8 sald RaMes apologetically, “The thing should Pectlas panne tear my appearance may have increased his suspicions,’ i wy tell you, Bunny, I was glad I'd brought that revolver, q ‘ 0 1 asked him why, spelibound than imprisoned, It was just as well, for Ewbank wasn't gone \1 1 ust be ming against bis muszie to muzzle Mt looked as though have ended with an exciting chase, I know, Dut somenow It didn't, 1 sup- “I used to have rather a heavy mustache,” sald Raffles, “but 1 lost tt minute. " Dose they thought I had got no end of a start; then they had made up their the day after I lost my innocence ‘ “Drink this,’ 1 heard him say, and, when the other spoke again, his “Better have a look down here, first,’ said the new manager, minds trat I belonged to the gang, which was not so many miles away, and (THE END.) voice was stronger. “While he gets through bie window? No, no, hes not down here,’ one of them had got us much as ne could carry from that gang as it was, nega GSE“ APE TIERONE TTT POC PRBEIDT Peps | Vy “(Now I begin to feel alive-— It’s easy to have a look, ; But I wasn’t to know all that, and I'm bound to say there was plen NEXT SATURDAY—“Wilful Murder . tte Dienty of Hae ARIE! “Bunny, If you ask me what was the most thrilling moment of my ¢xcltement left for me. Lord, how I made that poor vrute trave? wien 1 the Fourth Adventure of ““"It does me good, You don’t know what it was—all those miles alone, infamous career, I say it was that moment. There I stood at the bottom got among the trees! Though we must have made It over fifty miles from $ee oo one an hour at the outside. I never thought I should come through. You of those narrow stone stairs, inside the strong-room, with the door & goo Melbourne, we had done it at snail's puce, and those stolen oats had brisked Raffles, the Amateur Cracksmoen must let me tell you—in case I don’t.’ foot open, and I didn’t know whether it would creak or not, The ‘light was the old git] hp to such a pitch that she ¢ irly bolted wien she felt her af tt it " bi hirtee ventures in this com} “Well, have another sip.’ coming nefrer—and I didn’t know! 1 had to chance it. And it didn’t nose turned south, By Jove, it was no joke, In and out among those trees There willbe risen Ad . ue Sat Ht new sets pate | “Thank you. * * * I said tushrangers; of course, there are no creak a bit; it was far too solid and well-hung; and I couldn't have banged and under branches with your face In iio mane! T told you about the ; siggy aT sananan ciate ) Wrens! . RAMA UAEUUROREEMENTAAAAAAAAAEARRAAAAOAAAEE LOMAAMARUTATORASASTALUEASANAESAA LANA AAANADSAAAAAAA ASA AAA AAA MEE ation and inference which I had ~alren {{ more than a year, But you nave taken. some \ ~ 4 vg 66 e 9H 322.0%! for some Uume smoking and turning thom and consideration, & J. P,, and a landed proprietor, obs Over. Donnithorpe fs a little hamlet just to the north of formed Into a system, although T had not yet - pains to bore the head of it and pour melted jead ” e Tria of @) “You never heard me talk of Victor Trevor?” he Langmere, in the country of the Broads. The preciated the part which they were to pliy in my — Into the hole so as to make It a formidable weapon. ” e asked. ‘He was the only friend 1 made during house was an old-fashioned, wide spread, oak- life, ‘The old man evidently thought that his son T argued that you would not take such Pregaus \/ the two years I was at college. I was never o beamed brick bullding, with a fine lime-lined ay Was exaggerating in his description of one or two tlons unless you had some danger to fear,’ By Sir A. Conan Doyle. vory soclable fellow, Watson; always rather fond nue leading up to it. ‘There was excellent wild trivial feats which { hud performed, *Nnything else asked, smiling. ‘of moping in my rooms and working out my own duck shooting in the fens, remarkably good fsh- “Come, now, Mr. Holmes,’ sald he, luughing “you have boxed a good deal in your youth! (COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY HARPER & BROT HERS.) ; little methods of thought, so that I never mixed 08, & small but select Nbrary, taken over, a8 I good-humoredly. ‘I’m an excellent subject, If you “omicht again. How did you know it? is my rt much with the men of my year. Bar fencing and understood, from a former occupant, and a tolert can deduce anything from me.’ nose Knocked a little out of the stralgh rs, ‘Chey have the pew ble cook, so that he would be a fastidious man who ‘oy sald T, ‘Th is your HAVE some vapers here, Id my friend © message 1 saw Holmes chuckling at the expression boxing, I had few athletic tastes, and then my line "Tl fear there is not very much,’ I answered; ‘1 . Sherlock Holmes, as we sat one winter's upon my face, of study was quite distinct from that of the other COUld mot put in a pleasant month (here might suggest that you have gone about In cullar flattening and thickening whieh mark the night on either side of the fire, “which t “You look a little bewildered,” said he, fellows, so that we had no points of contact at all “Trevor senior was a widower, and my friend some personal attack within the last twelve: boxing man,’ i really think, Watson, that’ it would be worth your "I cannot see how such a message as this could ‘Trevor was tho only man I know, and that only his only son, month! ‘Anything else? 4 Inspire horror, It seems to me to be rather through the accident of his bull terrier freezing on- “phere had peen a daughter, I heard, but she» sy 5 5 we © done a good deal of digging, by your hile to glance ‘over, ‘These are the documents In [ . 5 “The laugh faded from ils lips, and he stared a it beh a i feihe Gio Bootes and tesque than otherwise,” to my ankle one morning us I went down to chapel, had died of diphtheria while ona visit to Birming- me in great surprise. callo the extraordinary case af the Gloria Goott, a ery Hkely. Yet the fact remains that the “It was a prosale Way of forming a friendship, ham, The father Interested me extremely, He “Well, that's true enough,’ said he, "You know, “Made all my moncy at the gold fields’ this Is the message which struck Justice of the reader, who was a@ fine, robust old man, wus but It was effective, I was lald by the heels for AS a man of little culture, but with @ considera: Victor,’ turning to his son, ‘when we broke up that “You have been in Now Zeatlond, Peace Trevor dead with horror when he read It,"" Knocked clean down by Jt as if it had been the butt ten days, and Treyor used to come in to inquire amount of rude strength, both physically and poaching gang they swore to knife us, and sir “ORight again.’ end of a pistol,” after me. At first it was only a minute's chat, tally, He know hardly any books, but he had dward Holly has actually been attacked, I've “You have visited Japan,’ He hnd ploked\from a drawer a little tarmished “yoy groume my curlosity,” sald I. “But why but soon his visits lengthened, and before the end travelled far, had seen much of the world, and always been on my guard since then, though 1 — ‘Quite true,’ ‘And you have been most intimately aysociaved Ith some one whose Initials were J, Ay and whom you afterward were eager to, entively forget! cylinder, and, undoing the tape, he handed me ® did you say just now that there were very partious of the term we wore close friends. He was a had remembered all that he had learned. In per- have no Idea how you know It,’ shovt note scrawled upon a half sheet of slatersray lar reasons why I should study this case?” hearty, full-blooded fellow, full of epitits and ron he was a thick-set, burly man with a shock of — “+You have @ yery handsome stick,’ 1 answered, paar, “Because Jt was the first In which I was ever en- energy, the very opposite to mo in most respects, gHazled hair, a brown, weather-beaten face, and ‘By the inscription I observed that you had not had ashy ‘ MiRLAKAbh: meciae nemarncMAN Re, Dut we had some subjects In common, and it was \ blue eyes which were keen to the verge of flerce- Fs he, mbit of bey a .e erat T had often endea' to eliclt from my com- a bond of unlon when I found that he wua/as ness, Yet he had a reputation for kindness and ly up," it ran, “Headkeeper Hudson, we bellever panion what had first ‘\rnea his mind in the direc- _friendiews as I, Finally he Invited me down to hiy charity on the country side, and was noted for itat has been now told to receive all orders for fly- thon of criminal rescarch, but had never caught father's place at Donnithorpe, in Norfolk, and 1° the leniency of his sentences trom tho bench. The conclusion ot this Story will be published in to-morrow’ si, Paper and for preservation of your hen-pheasant’s him before in a communicative humor, Now ho wocepted his hospitality for a month of the long * “One evening, shortly after my arrival, we were " Piette, SU SRD j tf lin hi " spread out the: 1 Pras nth at sitting over a glass of port after dinner, when 2 .