'The libraries hold many book By authors long since gone from sight. Ton think, as o'er the list 70a look, There should he nothing left to write. So many men hare sought to teach A wandering world the proper way, You think in all this mase of speech There should be nothing left to say But as the leaves and blossoms die," Enriching soil whereon they grow. So book and speech forgotten lie And yet forever bloom anew. Washington D. C.) Star 'V The Llhrmtoni. By Taac N- Stevens. Price, (I mk B. W. Dodg & Co., New York city. M Hh mawtfrful. bold sweep. ' Mr. Pteiena, who Is the publisher of the 1'ut'blo. Colo., Chieftain newspaper, has written a moet interest-combining novel dt'pk'ttng the near future of American politic. The days selected for illustra tion are probably tho.se of 1112 or 1?K, and the theme around which the story swings is the. Government ownership of public utilities. The hero, George Randolph, a Congressman from New York, and the principal Hsure In a new political party 'known as the. People's Alliance, is even more radical than William Jenningts Hi wan. Tho book, which extends to 252 pHKi. U so rilled with urpries that the reader is kept guessing as to what Us going to happen next. Mr. Stevens commits the common error of the Indulgent novelist who makes his si ory -character speak longer and more learned sentences than they would in real life. This remark applies to the ouver satiorw of Mrs. Gertrude Strong, the owiht of untold millions of dollars, and a woman whose picture resembles one of the Gould family. Graft and 'corruption in municipal, state and National poli tics receive continuous ventilation, and rHm; like a cloud of steady mofe from a Chinese Joss-house. "The liberators" begins in an Illinois farmhouse, with patriotic advice given by Colonel Payton Randolph to his only son George. The Randolphs are descend ed from that celebrated Edmund Ran dolph, who, in the beginning of the Re public, moved in the Constitutional Con vention that the word "slavery" be stricken from the proposed Constitution of the United States. Colonel Randolph's advice to hut son was: Dktn't ever believe that a nation's fighters art' greater than Its thinkers, or that a man who lekds a regiment to battle Is greuter than the man who has Riven the men in that regiment an Idea that they are willing; to die for. Tom Paine and Franklin did at much for the Colonies as any soldier of them all. No general f ih Civil War ranks beside h comruander-In-chloi, Abraham Lincoln. No generation Is without its war. and ttioush It may not be accompanied by trump and drum and th rattle of artillery. It Is none the less n ari a re. Our forefathers believed that they -were living the foundations of a government un der which there should be equal rights for nil and special privileges for none. But already privileges granted by the govern ment are menacing; our free Institutions, an1 in your day a mighty contest is cer tain to arise over the power of the people to revoko these special licenses. I want ou tn tnke your place in the world. When the conflict is on there Is no place for non cnmhainnU. 1 want you to enter public It fe. but only in uch manner that you can be of real sr ! to mankind. Young Randolph enters Harvard CV1-I'-ge, where he makes an intimate friend or a fclKw-studont named Frederic Ames, whoee father was the head of a family estate that owned or controlled all of the principal railroad and steam ship lines in New York and New KnRland. three of the great transconthirijtal rail way linns, the rapid transit lines of New York City, and street railways and light , tiiR :ind water plants In some 50 other American cities. Ames is evidently a book-name for Vandcrblit. The head of the Amc family, at the time the story opens, is Charles Henry Ames, who is a proud plutocrat, and looks upon America as he mould upon an orange squeeze it and then absorb it until all the juice Is gone. The two college students, Randolph and Ames, spend a portion of one Kastor vacation at the Ames house, where they meet two of Frederic's slsters. Margaret and Virginia, stu dents at Smith College, Northampton, Mass. Another of the house guests Is Mrs. Strong, whose leading wish is to be able to portray the utter serfdom of Americans tu public life, and point the road out of bondage for future generations. Her talk approaches socialism. The Ames family think so much of young Randolph that they take him with them to Italy ou a pleasure trip. Once Randolph accompanies Mr. Ames to the American West to Inspect railroad properties In which his patron is interested, and a grower of peas asks the traffic manager for the low. est freight rate to Si . "How many peas have jou raised?" asks the traffic manager. "About SiVO bushel. m - "And w hat can you get for them in S ?" ts asked. "Three UolUrs a bushel." "H.-w much did they cost you to raise?" "Sixty cents a bushel, he replied, with another glow of pride. "Well, we h e no published tariff on pea, in citrioatl Iota, and we shall hae to i-nurse you 12 40 a bushel to carry them to ." The young man choked a sob and with I h.nuid lwk dragged himself out of the ro-MT!. Young Randolph, after graduating; r tH . V " a J V , A- . , r .a J from Harvard, becomes a lawyer, and receives an offer to become one of the Ames counsel at a salary of about $25,000 a year, but after busying him self in securing legislation in the West for Ames' properties, he discovers that Mr Ames Is such a whole-sale briber of Judges "and legislators that his soul 'revolts and he becomes an Independ ent lawyer in New York City. In the meantime he had. fallen in love with Virginia Ames. The great private public-service cor porations had ultimately been organ ized on the "community of interest" basis until they were stronger than the American Government. Both Re publican and Democratic parties had sold themselves to these plutocrats, and the only hop before the plain peo ple for liberty lay in the promises held out by a third political party, the People's Alliance. Randolph began to be known as a master-orator and So cialist, because of his success as one of tho chiefs of the new political party. The Alliance declares for Govern ment ownership, and Randolph ad dresses a meeting at Madison Square Garden, New York, before 25,000 peo ple. He is then a candidate for the State Assembly and the avowed enemy of special privileges. In the campaign that follows the Alliance wins in New Y'ork State. Tammany holds only two districts in line, and all the others give large majorities to the Alliance. Every candidate for the State Senate is elected and all but two for the As. sembly. In the next National campaign the Alliance carries four states for Govern ment ownership, and receives a popu lar vote of nearly 3,000,000. The United States Senate is still an impregnable citadel of strength for the railroads, and 52 railroad attorneys still hold seats in that august assembly; but the Alliance carries the lower house of Congress by a majority of 20. The Al liance introduces a bill through Con gress fop the Government ownership of railroads, and Congressman Ran dolph makes the principal speech In favor of the measure, on the (sixteenth day of the debate, and argues after this fashion : The modern .barons, more powerful than their military prototypes, own our greatest highways and levy tribute at will on all our vast Industries. And aa the old feudalism was Anally controlled and subordinated only by the combined efforts of the Kings and the people of the free cities and towns, so our modern feudalism can be subordinated to th public good only by the. great body of the people acting through their government, by wise and just laws. Randolph creates applause by re marking that he had just used a por tion of a speech delivered by James A. Garfield June 22, 1874. An unlooked for, but welcome, interruption is in jected into the debate by the arrival of a letter from the Ames interests, by which Its Immense railroad properties pass under the provisions of the Gov ernment ownership bill. And so American railways, after com pensation has been given to the late owners, become the absolute property of the United States Government. It is an intelligent story of revolu tion, not by. bullets, but ballots. Old Wivea for New. By David Graham 1'hilUpn. Price. Jl W. D. Appletea St Co., New .Y'ork City. One long chuckle, ending in a grin! Surely not in the present generation has one American novelist such courage as that possessed by Mr. Phillips in thus writing of tho relations of the sexes, and laying ba with a surgeon's knife the coarseness' of the unhappily married, to whom divorce beckons like a ghoul sud denly restored to activity. Not that I think divorce ! immoral. There are cases in married Ir'Ac where, because of suffi cient cause -i r-ce papers are just as sa cred as roiLi.aKe certificates, and where moral lepers should be cast Into outer darkness. Iove. shrieks when hate enters, and God did not "join together" two pv ple who never were ritted to live together decently. I Relieve that such marriages are Inspired, uy the devil. But, one is disappointed after reading such a cleverly constructed novel as 01d W ives for New." to find divorce pictured in so nauseating, salacious colors, and to meet with so many is wear words. Clearly, the novel is not for maids or innocently minded boys, but for men and women of the world. Sell? Of course, the book will, and probably the more it is abused the more eagerly will people buy it. Why? It is so outrageously, brutally frank about the inner lives of married people. "Damn" is too often jsaid, lingerie is too prom inently thrust before you. and subjects that are usually forbidden are boldly t h ro w n on the can va. Th e book is a "shocker." Aieu wili pity Charles. Murdock, the abused husband, and women will naturally pity Mrs. Sophy Murdock, the martyr wife. So the world wags. Sophy's first appearance before mar riage haunts one A pale blue sun bon net far away, down toward the creek fence. The little bonnet, so blue, so airily light, suggested a quaint boat adrift upon that bright bronze sea; its occupant was a small eweet face, like a flower afloat in an azure shell. ... He did not kiss her. Instead, each continued to gaze into the other's eyea. The blazing sun stung their vigorous young bodies; the call of the birds seemed the passionate cry of their hearts. Their lips met." They are married. Years go by, and ft eon and daughter grow up. Crash! Mrs. Murdock degenerates into a waddling, peevish, whining mountain of flesh; living only to eat and find fault with her hus band : and a confirmed sufferer to neu ralgia and indigestion. She becomes as sociated with ham and eggs and other fried horrors for breakfaet. She is too lazy even to wash her hair or bathe her seh. Why? Hasn't she won a husband, a sort of perpetual annuity and why should she care for appearances? So she reasons forgetting that it is far more difficult to keep love than at first to win It. Her husband keeps young and they distres singly drift apart, though they keep up the appearance of living together. She consults Dr. Schuise, her medical adviser, how to win back her recent youthful looks, so that she etill may be physical I y attractive to her husband. This is the doctors advice: ' He looked at , her pityingly, dubiously. "You'll have to change your whole course of life. You and your husband have reached the perilous period of married life among the well-to-do. Things aren't as they used be the husband and wLfe working; to gether, growing old together, sinking to gether Into the stupor of old age when they ought still to be young. Now, one or the other fs sure to keep alive, and the one that dies rouat Inevitably be' sloughed off.1' He ' was soliloquizing, unmindful of her presence. "When It is the woman that stays alive, the tragedy usually ends or takes on another, a more acute phase in the divorce court. When It's the man. we don't know about the tragedy as often men axe mora merciful to women than women to men. In fact, mercy isn't a fem- Inine quality. Nature made their nerves eas sensitive than men's, because they are chlld-bearcrs; so. they are naturally lees sensitive about giving pain." He notfd Sophy again. "But In your case " Ho pa u ?ed, reflecting. i ll do anything you say anything:" she repeated. "I doubt it frankly." said he. "But I'll tell you what to do. Rouse yourself. Tako an Interest in things In helping th3rt about you. Make your house your own.' In stead of a mere hotel with your house keeper as manager. See that your hus band is fd and clothed and made com fortable to- the smallest detail. See to it that there's a reason besides pious flap doodle a real reason why your husband should prefer to keep with you. Make It absurd for him to think of replacing you and trying again for comfort and com panionship and love." Mrs. Murdock Is too indolent to take this advice, and complacently adds to her fat probably becauso the Other Man had not yet arrived in her life. Mr. Murdock, who is a rich financier, says that too many married women are worthless be cause "unfortunately, there's no competi tion among housewives." When the Mur dock children are grown up, Murdock pro poses to his wife that they separate. BY ARTHI'R CHAPMAN. WHEN Pat Garrrtt was slain a short time ago by John W. Brazel, a young ranchman, near Ias Crnces, N. AT., one of the most famous characters of Western frontier days was stricken, from the cast of life's drama. One miprht say tragedy, Instead of drama, in Garrett's case, for he had played leading parts in many gTlm tragedies In the days when the Southwest was outlaw-ridden and when the task of exterminating the deperadoes fell to him and was well carried out. There Is a saying In the West that the man who lives by the gun shall die by the gun. Though Garrett's life in recent' years had been a life of peace,' yet those who knew him best say he had the gunfighter's premoni tion that he would die "with his boots on." Although Garrett's gunfighting was all done in the interests of peace, he was not absolved from the danger that always confronts the man who has made a record with the universal weapon of the frontier. For, s soon as one of .the frontier gunfighters established a record as a dead shot, there were always scores of men seek ing to "get the drop" on him, for no other reason than to gain notoriety as the man who slew So-and-So, the gun man. Wild Bill Hickock. the greatest gun fighter the West ever knew, met his death at the hands of such a man in Deadwood, and only Garrett's watohfulness and quickness had saved him on many occasions. But the day finally came when, like Hickock, he relaxed his vigilance for an instant and his death resulted. A book might be made of Garrett's career, for he was Intimately con cerned in the bloodiest struggles that this country has ever seen between outlawry and law and order. Not until Garrett with his own hand slew "Billy the Kid," the most desperate outlaw in the history of civilization, did New Mexico begin to rise superior to its bandits, who were more to be dreaded than the Apaches themselves. It was Garrett who stepped in and brought an end to the Lincoln County cattle war. a bloody feud that lasted for years and created a reign of terror in a territory as large as all New Kngland. One out law after another met in personal en counter, and always the lanky sheriff came out unscathed, while his oppon ent crumpled to the ground in his death agony. When he was 18 year old. Fat Gar rett left his father's plantation in Louisiana to seek his fortune in Texas. He took up the life of a cowboy and fol lowed this adventurous calling & few years, traveling with the great trail herds across the open range, and undergoing all the hardships that fell to the cowpuncher's lot in those days at the beginning of the cattle industry. In 1S7S Garrett penetrated father west, and the tall, shambling youth, who was six feet four, settled down as a cow boy and later aa a ranchman near Fort Suntner, N. M. About this time the Lincoln County cattle war was raging in New Mexico. This was a war between rival cattle interests in the Pecos country, John Chisum, a Texas cattle king, had set tled at Bosque Grande and had gained the enmity of surrounding ranchmen. It was claimed Chisum was given to adding the cattle of other men to his herds, without authority and without price. He had surrounded himself with a bunch of cowpunchers who had crim inal records In Texas, and who loved nothing better than a gun fight. The cattlemen opposing Chisum organised themselves into a well-knit faction, and began to fight fire with fire. They hired cowboys who were fully as bad and as eager to fight as were Chlsum'a men. The opposing faction was known as the Dolan and Riley outfit, and If a D. & R. cowboy met a C,hisum cowboy on the range there bullets exchanged. Instead of civilities. Soon it gat so that the cowboys did not travel singly, but hunted each other il v ' "What kill the goose with the golden eggs, she reasons? Not much! Aloud, she says to bim: "I haven't lost all my religion, if you have, I still believe in a God and a hereafter. Marriage is sacred to me. O God! Is this man the father of my chil dren, the man who used up my youth? . . . I never felt at ease with you after I came to know you. . . . It's only among: the trashy and the sinful that di vorce is tolerated. Juliet Raeburn. a pure-minded woman, comes into Murdock' s life, and in secret they love each other. Murdock, who is no saint, leaves his wife and the Murdock divorce follows. Much mud is thrown about, in which the idle rich and demi monde figure, and Tom Berkeley, roue, cornea to a fitting: end. Mrs. Murdock marriea her ex-husband's secretary, and Murdock after being a drunken hero is rewarded with the tried-by-fire love o one of the very few pure-minded women in the book. She says to him: It 1 men who cower before opinion. But not women real women. When a real woman finds her master, she follows him. Mad quite mad. Do we not love each other? You are angel and devIL both in one. And I adore -you! . Storie Retold- Edited by James R. and Minna M. Kern. Price. SO cents. The American Book Company, New York city. Most little folks, are familiar with he German stories written by the Grimm brothers fireside stories of the common people handed down from un told generations. The editors of this little volume belong to the faculty of De Pauw University, and they have succeeded in presenting 13 interesting stories in the German language, all carefully graded, on the assumption that the beginner is a child learning that language. Questions are given on each story, and the vocabulary is an ample one. PeraonaHsm. By Borden Parker Bonne. Price, $1.50. Houghton. Mifflin & Co Boston. Mass.. and the J. K. GUI Com pany, Portland. One of the Harris lectures delivered at Northwestern University, consisting of scholarly studies in metaphysics or scientific research, the subjects being: Common Sense, Science and Philosophy, Problem of Knowledge,' Phenomenality of the Physical World, Mechanical or Voli tional Casuality. The Failure of Imper sonalism, and The Personal World. The. general reasoning is of the orthodox, comforting kind. Judge Three Legs and the Shanghai. By E. E3. Shcasereen. Illustrated. The Iron Trail Publishing Company. Minneapolis. Minn. Judge Three Legs was a rabbit, and a noted runner, and lived in one of the Da Rotas, while the Shanghai was a loco motive engine, which he raced. Once he raced in front of the engine and emerged from the contest minus one leg. A pretty, well-told story both for children and adults. The neat illustrations are by Ida A. Wolfe, Erasmus: The Scholar. By Professor John Alfred Faulkner. Price. SI. Jennings & Graham, Cincinnati. O. Forms part of "Men of the Kingdom" series of books recognized for their abiding interest and written by men of admitted scholarly ability. Professor fw&twea, NOTED PEACEMAKER Of THE" G?Es4T GCSrFGHTtt WHO STOPPED WAR BETWEEN TWO MURDEROUS CATTLE CAMPS. tV" : 1-7 ' ' vyvvi 7 7 f;'J7v- 7---'-. -1 . -, T , I - ' .7' - 1 I 7 ' " ' s ' i L v u"'' ;- - 7' ' 4 ff ' 2 'i VV-r. . t-i y- k '' f"U 1 ft ' j , ' vs , & v ' ? '4- J ,v,3 EI' ' - - Ji ' H - r , Vi' "vC- g $ . j3 - . . . 4 i x v. , - . - V' - ? v firVyrf4viiiMirtffiT,lttfrri PAT GARRETT. in small armies. No one knows just how many pitched battles were fought and how many cowboys died "'With their boots on." At that time Lincoln County consisted of about one-third of what is now the Territory of New Mexico, and all this vast empire was in a turmoil. Everybody was mixed up in the war, on one side orf the other. Politics played its part, and one side would elect a sheriff favorable to Its interests. Immediately the other side would choose another sheriff. Warrants were but excuses for murder, and assassina tion were too common to arouse much attention. Both sides had, at one time or an other, employed a cowboy who was known as "Billy, the Kid." Billy's name was William Bonney, and he was a New York street waif, who had drifted far from home. He was pale, slim, light-haired and high-voiced, and murder was bis pastime. He had broken jail several times when a mere boy, and finally killed a blacksmith at Fort Apache. He had killed several men in wanton fashion, when he was hired by the D. PL side in the Lin coln County war. But Billy was a "little too strong" for his employers, and soon he drifted over to the Chisum camp. Here he made a record by as sassinating Sheriff Brady of Lincoln County. This officer was on his way to the court at Lincoln to secure war rants for a number of the Chisum out fit. As he passed the corral of a Chisum lieutenant named McSween, be was fired upon by Billy, the Kid, and sev eral other Chisum men who were hid den behind the logs. Brady and a deputy named Hardiman fell dead, and another deputy named Mathews was wounded, but managed to prop himself up and return the fire, wounding the Kid. , . , The desperado's wound was not fatal. Faulkner occupies the chair of historical theology in Drew Theological Seminary, and he is of the opinion that probably only two other literary men were ever so popular as Petrarch-Eras ruua and Vol taire.. An illumining picture of Erasmus is given for his work in the revival of letters and toward a more complete un derstanding of religion and philosophy, in one of Europe's dark ages. Erasmus was bora in Rotterdam, Holland, sbout the year 1466 and died in 1536. ' By many students Erasmus is remembered as one of Luther?s opponents in the work of the Reformation. The creed of Brasmu is a curiosity neither Catholic nor Protestant. Othello, The Winter's Tale, sad the Tens pes. By William Shakestare. Edited by Charlotte Porter and Hlen A. Clarke. Thos. Y. Crow ell & Co- New York City. Three -companion books which nat urally fit into one's library, and which will easily hold an honored place among Shakespeare reprints. They are carefully edited with notes. Introduc tion, glossary, lists of variorum read ings and selected .criticism. The edi tions go back to and reproduce the fa mous first folio text of 1623, the one which gives Shakespeare In the orig inal spelling and punctuation. Five-Minute Object Sermons. By Rev. Syl vanus Stall. D. D. Price. $1. Vir Pub lishing Company, Philadelphia. Pa. A welcome reprint of 43 little talks, first published and sent forth 14 years ago. Eminently suited for young chil dren, and will be found valuable in the nursery or Sunday "school room. Such heart-to-heart object lessons am ''The Oyster and the Crab," "A Broken Chain" and Husks" will even captivate adults; J. M. QUENTIX. IN LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. Bright and Interesting accounts of days spent out of doors In fishing and tramping or in other things dear to the hearts of those who love the woods are given in Henry Van Dyke's "Days Off." The book will appeal to all who feel the need of a few "days off" In the big woods and keep them ever young. A book dealer in London has discovered a copy of a book by Desiderius Kraamus "Chrhnlanl Matrimonii Instltus." It Is a first edition and contains marprnal. notes believed to be in the handwriting of Henry VIII. The book beara the royal arms and the statement that it was bound for King Hfmry Vlll.'s library. The handwriting re sembles that of the King. The current number of the Century in cludes Anne Warner's "-Seeing England With Uncle John, Agnes McClelland Daulton's "Frit si," and "The Four- Pools Mystery." whose author Is not announced. Before writing these new Uncle John sketches, the author .went over the Itinerary set down therein-" Liverpool. Carlisle, Edinburgh. Mel rose, Newcastle, Durham, York, Lincoln arfd Oxford and many of the funny Incidents there described entered into her own experi ences. fc . Margaret Cameron,' who bae Just pub lished her first book, be-aring the piquant title "The Cat and the Canary," in private life is Mrs. Harrison C. Lewis. Although now a resident of New York, she is one of the many writers who have spent, most of their life on the Pacific Coast, especially In California. The special literary province of Mrs. levis from the first- has been the funny situation in the short story which has a delightful social environment, and Intro duces agreeable men and women of the sort most commonly met with. Mrs. Lewis did not begin to write for publication until she . - however, and he served with Chisum a year or two longer, taking part in the desperate battles at Lincoln which ended the war, about 50 of the Chisum outfit being securely intrenched in McSween's house. Here they were besieged two days by a small army of D. & R. retainers, and most of the Chisum men were killed in a charge, after the building had been fired. The Kid' escaped by rolling into an irrigating ditch, in which he crawled to safety. After the war the Kid acted as a sort of outlaw free lance. He was partic ularly bitter against his former employer. Chisum, claiming the cattle king owed him money." He made a vow that for every man or steer of Chisum's he killed he would knock 5 oft his account. He killed four or five of Chisum's cowboys, and always sent word that the sum of $6 had been deducted for each main slain. "If I kill you," he sent word to Chisum. "the account will soon be squared."' In addition to Chisum's men, Billy had a long list of murde-rs for which he had never been called to account. Once he killed four Mexicans at a water hole, "just to see them kick." Generally he worked alone, but sometimes he led an outlaw gang, including such desperadoes as Dave Rudebaugh, Billy Wicon and Tom Pickett. His name became a syno nym for terror in the Sonthwest. There is a well-authenticated list of his murders which shows that he committed 21 kill igns before he himself met -death one murder fr each year of his life. The Lincoln County war, with afl its at tendant banditry, was at its height when Garrett was elected Sheriff of Lincoln County. The law-abiding citizens liked this tall, quiet, determined man, and con cluded he could bring order out of chaos. And the manner in which Garrett went about his duties showed that he knew full well the meaning of his oath of office. He knew there was a den of rattlesnakes to be exterminated, and that the work could not be done gently. Sometimes he did had arrived at young womanhood, when her sparkling stories soon became known to the magazines, and appear now from, time to time. May Sinclair, who of late has been turning her hand to short stories for the xnagaxines, h to publish, another novl soon. Miss Sin clair is one among the many writers who are In London at the present time; but the greater part of her work ia done away from the capital, in a small, rambling country home near J?idmouth. one ef the more silent suburbs of South Devon. The new novel by Miss Sinclair will appear In the early Spring. . "Serapniea, the neroine of Justin. Mc Carthy's new novel by that title, and Duchess-of Bapaume in the story. Is a fictitious portrait of Watteau's Duchess of Bapaume, whose portrait by him in her bridal gown is hanging in the Louvre. The painter him self 19 represented In the romance as drawn to hl vtvaclou young subject by one of those tentative, ideal attachments which are characteristic of the artistic temperament. . One of th genuinely American books which- hay come to have a nub lie value at auction Is the first edition of "Salama- ' gunat; 'or in wntmwnains and Opinions of Launcelot Lang staff. Esq." This was the .joint work of Washington Irving, of his brother Theodore, and James K. Paulding, and was published first In I SOT, and taken over by Harpers' in the days of their early history, in "Salamagundl" was not a book at all in the beginning, but a period ical, and the published volume comprised the- first two series of the paper, To those who make the mistake of believ ing that one primary characteristic of a best seller Is that It shall b written In a hurry, it may be of Interest that "Ancestor" oc cupied Gertrude A the-r ton Interna ittemly for the greater part of 10 years. "Ancestors' Is sharing London favor at present in com pany wfth 'The Secret Agent" and "The Broken Road," and over here has been re cently announced for a new edition. The author left London two weeks ago, and is now settled in Munich, where he will re main for several month to come. There, seems to be an unceasing variety of opinion as to Just what sort of book "the great American novel," when It comes, will be. Foreign opinion on the subject, while it is exceedingly diverse, has it least a claim to independence. Down In Mexico the title Ls being claimed for "The Settler," by Her man Whi taker, a story which deals with Western Canada and tho frontiersman's life. Mr. Whltaker ha lived this life- in the North as it is described In his book, but he Is also well acquainted with the South, and Is at present living at piedmont. Cat. "The Settler" first appeared as a xerial in the Pacific Monthly. Arthur A. Denny's "Pioneer Days on Pu get .Sound" will be reprinted unde the edi torship of Alice Harrlman, of Seattle, and will be ready for sale about March 20. About ftOO copies have already been sub scribed for. and the editor In preparing the new edition, has had the assistance of George H. Hlmes, of this city. It is expected that 850 copies will be printed from type, on high-grade, deckle-edge paper,, numbered and signed, and that no more copies than these 850 will be issued from the present reprint. Every resident of "old" Seattle is sure to b interested in this record of pio neer day. "The Greater Mischief," byMafgaret West rup. one of the recent books published, is remarkable as being one of the few Eng lish Rtories which bear even a remote- re semblance. In method and conception of character, to American fiction. Miss West rup's heroine Is a distinctive and very Eng lish creation; yet she is a reminder of the New England maids of Mary E. "Wilklns Freeman, and In her childhood she recalls the little-girl characters of Anne Hamilton Donnel. The Puritan temper is one of the most English things we have in this coun try, and the author of "The Greater Mis chief is to be congratulated upon her per haps unconscious discovery in her own land of a type that la dear to American hearts. not bother to provide himself with a war rant when going after a "bad man." His six-shooter was warrant enough for all practical purposes, and results were what the occasion demanded. First Pat went after Billy the Kid, and to the amazement of the Southwest brought, the desperado back in irons. The Kid. with a bunch of "bad men," had been rounded up near Fort Sumner and had finally surrendered to Garrett's possef after the new Sheriff had killled two des peradoes named O'Foliiard and Bowdre. A mob tried to get the Sheriff 's prisoner and lynch him, but Garrett hustled the Kid into a freight-car, while Billy was plead ing for a gun. and announced that he would kill the first man who made a move to take his prisoner. The Sheriff's firm attitude awed the crowd until finally the train pulled out. Billy was put in jail and sentenced to be hanged at Lincoln. He laughed In the face of the Judge who pronounced sentence on him. A few days later, when one handcuff had been re moved so he could eat, he struck down a Deputy Sheriff named Bell who was guarding bim. and then drew the man s revolver, killing him with it. Amhher deputy, who was eating supper across the street, heard the shot and dashed toward the Jail. The Kfd was waiting for him. and killed the deputy as he started up the stairs. Then, coolly walking out of the jail and making a blacksmith file off his leg chains, the Kid mounted a horse and rode away. - When Garrett heard of the murder of his two deputies he said little, but his eye was ominous. He started on the trail at once, and hung to the Kid like shadow. The Kid was afraid of Garret? and used every" trick and wile to remain In hiding. Garrett, accompanied by two deputies, went to Fort Sumner. They arrived at night and made a careful re connoisance. Garrett finally went to the house of an old resident named Pete Maxwell, intending to ask him if he had seen or beard anything of the Kid. The deputies sat down on the porch, in the moonlight. Soon a slim young fellow came rapidly to the house and entered. The deputies had not the faintest idea that the youth was the Kid himself. As he entered Maxwell's room tho Kid asked him. In Spanish, who were those men outside. Then, realizing that some body was sitting at the foot of Maxwell's bed, Billy drew his revolver and asked, as he tried to penetrate the darkness, "Quien esT" (Who is it?) The instant's hesitation was faatl, as Garrett, recog nizing the high-pitched voice of the Kid, had flashed out his revolver and fired. The Kid's weapon spoke at almost the same instant, but it was caused by his convulsive plunge forward in his death agony, as Garrett's shot had gone through his heart. If it had not been for Garett's quickness of perception in recognizing the Kid's voice, as well as his quickness in draw ing and firing, he would have been added to the desperado's victims. At the time Garrett captured the Kid he did some remarkable shooting. The outlaw gang was "holed up" in a eaiii. There were two horses tied in front of the building. Garrett . shot one of the animals, causing it to fall so it blocked the door. Then he shot the rope that held the other horse to the doorpost. These shots, when the circumstances were considered, were nothing short of marvelous. Garrett killed upwards of half a dozen men who had been concerned in the out lawry in Lincoln County, and made the "bad men" hunt other quarters. Peace was restored when be finished his term of Sheriff, and he "ranched it" for awhile. In 1884 be organized a company of Texas rangers and broke up a bad gang of cat tle thieves. Then he returned to New Mexico ranch Ufa and served as Sheriff of Dona Ana County for two terms, mak ing: a fine record. In 1901 President Roosevelt appointed Garrett Collector of Customs at 1 Paso, in which, office he served four years; Such, in brief, is the remarkable career of Pat Garrett, who did more than any other individual to bring. law and order to the frontier. The stirring .chronicles of the Southwest hold no personal record more creditable. Greatest Women Criminals . Continued from Page 2 lesser crimes which shs was continually committing to cheat the insurance com panies. When" justice stepped between her and her plans, she would effectively do away with those who administered Justice. Mrs. Martin's brain is as free from the taint of -mental decay, except for her perverted consideration for hu man life, as are the brains of the men she sought to kill. "Mrs. Martin's not crazy." says "Baby John." "She's Just naturally mean In her heart. She'll have her way or she'll kill; but you can bet she's not crazy." The beginning of the end was really . the Ogden incident. Judge Ogrien through previous transactions with Mrs. Martin , had been disqualified to sit in the trial of a case brought by the woman against the Westchestershire Fire Insurance Company upon the company's refusal to pay the loss on a. smatt cottage be longing to Mrs. Martin that had burned. Arson was suspected, but there were no means of proof. "Baby John" now ac knowledges the crime. In the trial of the suit Judge Sargent, of Santa Crux, was substituted for Judge Ogden. The evidence caused the jury to decide thn suit against Mrs. Martin, althougb she ' had made a great personal legal tight in court. The case was soon forgotten, along with hundreds of others in which Mrs. Martin had figured. In the following March the explosion at the Ogden home occurred. There was never a suspicion cast upon Mrs. Martin. It was thought that the fqiends of some man whom Judge Ogden had sent to the penitentiary for a long term were seek ing .revenge. The Judge? of the Alameda County fcourts offered J10U0 reward for the capture of the perpetrator . of the crime, and this action now disqualifies all of them for sitting in the trial of tlfe? case against Mrs. Martin when she -shall be brought to Oakland to answer for the Ogden outrage. Plenty of corroborative evidence is now at hand, and at last the authorities feel that a woman, more to be feared than any other criminal tlicy have dealt with since the days of the bandit Joaquin Murietta, will be finally disposed of by a long sentence behina prison bars. It was in 1S94 when"Baby John" was an infant In arms, that Mrs. Martin first used the boy in court as a means of car rying out her designs. She claimed that he was a nephew of Henry Martin, of Weaverville, and that he was entitled to the J300,000 estate left by that hardy old miner. Attorney Delphin Michael Delmas, who defended Harry Thaw In his first trial, appeared' for the estate. Mrs. Mar tin's claims were disproved and the case was thrown out of court. Probably her most notable appearance in the scene of criminal activity was in . 1902 in San Francisco, when- she held, the ' police and detective force of that city In suspense for weeks by the promulgation of some theories in the famous Nora Ful ler murder mystery. Her apparently care ful reasoning was thought by the police to be the thing that would lead them out of the dark in a case where they were completely baffled. Thus she toyed with the entire police department in one of the most sensational murder cases that the West,has ever known. Some or hep exploits have given her an international notoriety. Last year she went to New York and made the claim that "Baby John," whom until recently she had always garbed in Lord Fauntle rov costume, was the son of the Princess Chimay Carman, who was formerly Clara Ward, of Detroit, Mich. As the guardian of the child. Mrs. Martin sought the Ward millions. Her suit was finally dropped. She afterward charged the wife of Janezl Rigo, the gypsy violinist, with slander. Mrs. Rigo was formerly Mrs. Casper Em erson, of New York. Nothing ever came of this first attempt, but Mrs. Martin had planned to try again to secure some part of the Ward fortune. But the rope has been run. Mrs. Mar tin's last support having given, way under her, she Is hopelessly alone to make the biggest and most important court battle of her career. She denies the charges, but the written proof of her' schemes is at hand. She moans and feigns illness in her cell in the Weaverville jail, for she seeked to create sympathy for herself. If only she could know of the futility of this subterfuge, of the hatred of the people of Trinity County for her, she would snuggle back behind the last flicker of that old defiance and she would set her back to the wall, flashing fire from those quick sharp blue eyes at the pack of the law that is upon her. ' "She doesn't know how well off she is in that Jail," says District Attorney Hall. "If we were to give her liberty now and allow her to walk the main street, she wouldn't live to reach the station. Some one would surely shoot her." Chief of Police Adelbert Wilson, of Oak land, for 37 years a student of the crim inal and his ways and regarded as an au thority, says: "Well, at last It seems that Mrs. Martin has played her string. Her plotting is at an end and I know many persons who rest easier because of this fact. "To me she Is the most remarkable criminal of the age. Madame Gould, of Monte Carlo simply murdered and took what she' thought the surest means of concealing her crime, as did Emma Le Doux. at Stockton, In this state, when she killed her tormer husband,' Charles Mac vicar, and placed his body in a trunk for shipment to her mountain home. Annie Ross strangled her victim and Mrs. Cor delia Botkin is well remembered all over tho world, although she sought only to take one or two lives In a family and call it a job. "Not so with Mrs. Martin. Her opera tions would never have ceased if she had been successful. She Is not insane. I know her too well. She Is the smartest person we have ever had to deal with around this office." Mrs. Martin's power to terrorize is gone. The granite walls of the Weaverville Jail will hold her until the gates of the state penitentiary receive her. HOTEL CLERK Continued from Page S foolish English clothes," said the House Detective. "We're all slaves of some sartorial tyranny or pther, whether we get our disease out of an almanac, by the light of a log fire at night, or buy them in direct from a high-priced specialist on Fifth avenue," remarked the Hotel Clerk. "The main difference is that out in the provinces they don't off after new tailor-shop goods every time the cal endar moults a page. They seem to stick closer to the old idols. A high ly shellacked white shirt with a white tie and a diamond stud that's the gambler; same with the tie but with out the stud that's a local pastor: same with the tie slipping around un der the ear and a marbled design of tobacco juice on the , bosom that's a member of the Legislature; same with no collar, no tie, no stud and craving a trip to the laundry that's the man who cleans up aronnd the place for 50 cents a wtek. Why," Larry, th wardrobe is everything in the country, when it comes to dressing a part. The average politician in a back district can lose nearly everything else and still hold bis own and a little bit of somebody else's if he clings to two things." "Wot two are them?" asked the House Detective. , "They're his real vital organs," said the Hotel Clerk. "One's his voice, and the other's bis Prince Albert coat."