Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 65, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 March 1915 — Untitled [ARTICLE]

sight of a glossy spaa of horses that in their perfect beauty of symmetry, high heads and tossing manes looked as though they were just prancing out of some Arabian dream. The animals seemed nude of rein or harness, save only a jeweled strap that crossed the breast of each, together with a slender trace at either side connecting with a jaunty little phaeton whoso glittering wheels slivered the sunshine into splinters as they spun. Upon the narrow seat of the airy vehicle sat the driver. No lines were wound about his hands—no shout or lash to goad the horses to their telling speed. They were simply directed and controlled by the graceful motions of a long and slender whip which waved slowly to and fro above their heads. The great crowd cheered the master as he came. He arose deliberately, took off his hat, and bowed. The applause was deafening. Still standing, he whizzed past us and was gone. But something in the manner of the handsome fellow struck me with a strange sense of familiarity. Was it the utter disregard of fear that I saw on bls face? Was It the keenness of the eye and the perfect self-possession of the man? Or was it —was It the peculiar way in which the right arm had dropped to his side after his salute to us while curving past us, and did I fancy, for that reason, that the palm of his hand turned forward as he stood? “Clear the track, these!" came a far voice across the ring. "Don’t cross there, in God’s name! Drive back!”

The warning evidently came too late. There was an instant’s breathless silence, then a faraway, pentsounding clash, then utter havoc in the crowd: The ropes about the ring were broken over, and a tumultuous tide of people poured across the ring, myself borne on the very foremost wave. "Jest the buggy smashed, that’s all!” cried a voice. “The bosses hain’t hurt —ner the man.” The man referred to was the professor. I caught a glimpse of him as he rose from the grassy bank where he had been flung. He was very pate, but calm. An uncouth man t brought him his silk hat from where it had rolled in the dust “Wish you’d just take this handkerchief and brush it off,” said the pro* fessor; "I guess I’ve broke my arm.” It was The Boy from Zeeny.