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99P999PP9P9VV1P9PJ9V! rent of rage mounting steadily to ward his head. "You're no coward. I can't shoot you down like I want to. It's a fair fight now." He .was thinking of the white skirt that ha"d fluttered be hind the screens of the patio. "If you can go go back to her then you won't have to pay any more " Ramon waited, his hands hanguig listlessly at his sides. Bill drew the two big-shooters from his belt and Ramon accepted one of them. "And the signal?" Ramon asked. He broke a twig from the mesquite and, kneeling, braced it in the coals. Bill rebelled at the injustice of having to balance such an account with a man who was not afraid to turn his back. "When the twig burns out," Ra mon said, rising. He walked around the camp fire, and Bill, moving back an equal distance, faced him across it. Across the fire he saw that Ra mon's lips were moving, as if he pray ed. The mesquite blackened and Bill raised his six-shooter. As the twig broke he saw the light on the other gun barrel. He fired, and the echo rang in the dunes. Ramon moved as if he were about to step forward. -o He ran to him and caught him in his arms. There was blood on the shirt above the heart, and there was no pulse in the wrists. Bill laid him back gently in the sand. When he saw the quiet smile on his lips he knelt down and began to cry. The sobs were torn out of the very depths of his being he was crying over other dead things than the body beside him. The tears poured down his face, but he did not know how to wipe them away. He had had no need of tears. Afterward, under a new dawn bright with promise, he dug a grave in the shadow of the dunes. When all was done he looked out across the changeless desert to the Mexican hills where lay freedom. When he turned back he was smiling. "He took his six-shooters from the sand to clean them, for he had a long trip before him. He emptie'd the cylin ders.; only one cartridge had been fired. He sat a long time looking at the pale light that hovered over the east ern dunes. Then he slowly mounted his burro and turned his head toward the jail-at Cochina. (THE END.) o- AMERICAN BOY IS REAL HEIR TO THRONE OF AUSTRIA GRANDSON OF SUICIDE PRINCE terview she has granted since the assassination of Francis Ferdinand and his consort in Bosnia, and as she talked she sat on a great pale blue dias flanked with the Hapsburg coat of arms, with her arms thrown tight about the six-year-old boy that she is "afraid they will take away to put upon the throne." "Oh! I am so sorry this tragedy has happened," she exclaimed. "It makes little Rudolph just so much more valuable in the eyes of the Haps burgs. Every assassination brings him nearer to the throne, and I do not want him ever to come within its sight. , "What could there be in a throne BY H. P. BURTON New York, N. Y., July 6. "My lit tle Rudolph is the one true Haps burg in all the world, and yet I will see him dead before I will watch him mount that blood-stained throne of Austria." Alma Vetsera Hayne, just a slip of a girl herself and looking for all the world like the pale, tragic Marie Vet sera, who, with her lover, Crown Prince Rudolph, was found dead in the royal Austrian hunting lodge at Mayerling twenty-five years ago, spoke these words today in a luxur ous 5th av. apartment in New York, where she is practically hidden. She had accorded me the only in- JliSSwiiJk