. - ... - - - I I 1ADI READ! IS OFFICE IS PUEl'AltED TO DO ONLY FIUST-OLASS WORK, AND DOES IT FOR KEAaONABLE PRICES. WAVEuLAND. A TALE OF OUR COMING LANDLORDS. BY BAKAII MAIilK l'.KKiHAU. Copyrighted, 18S0. 1 nee the lana CHAPTER XV. A DOUBLE MF.F.TIVO. From the Duke of Melvorne's great es tate in Dakota we went south through the beautiful prairie country of Nebraska, thence into Colorado. There Melvorne had another, though smaller estate that b wiwlwwl t vJuit lost -O- IF YOU AUK IX NEKO OF I LETTER HEADS - I JILL HEADS, ' STATEMENTS ------! . . . - ENVELOPES - - SALE HILLS - - POSTERS or in tact anything in the 0- STATIONARY LINE- CALL AT THE HEBALD office, I WE CAN SUIT YOU, AS WE -o- 1F you wieb to succeed in your business, the public know your prices. People like to X hant who offers them "the best inducements. h trade wonderfully. Try it. advertise it and let trade witW the mer It might help your -o- As the most important Campaign for $Iars is Coming upon us every Farmer should f q provided with a good live newspaper that will Keep them posted on all important ques tions of the day, THE HERALD is purely a T?nrlifan Daner and would be glad to put a - JLT A. our name on our list. Only $1,50 a year. qpp nnr Clubbina list with the Jeaaing pa- r I npers published. r i tlEftfilxf) PUBMSIPFQ GO. BOl Cor Fifth arid Vine St. tot ATTQMnTTTH - NEBRASKA T7fjICllK WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Complete line of Drugs, Medicines, Pairrts, and Oils, DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES ANDVdRE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Hours 4 Everything to Furnish Your House. AT I. PEARLMAN'S GREAT MODERN J HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM. (,c.r V x3,n rmmhasecl the J. V. Weckbach store room on south Main street where I am now located can sell goods cheap cr than the cheapest having just put in the largest stock j WvnMit to the citv. Gasoline stoves OI neW gOOU.a uici iv.0 - - and furniture of all kinds sold on the installment plan. I. PEARLMAJl. What do tliey live on? Las just been broken." "You have seen the little provision siore and iH)stoIIlce; well, that is Kept uy my agent and an account Is kept with each tenant of the amount or provisions ne is in dubt for. It is brought liere iroin various . . . . . . i . .. .1 1 I . . . . r . . Do you lurnisn me iarm impieuieuujr , side by Deaiuuui trees. I asked. "Yes, I furnish every tiling; but I pet a discount on large purchases and reduced rales on railroads, so it is not so expensive as it seems at llrst sight." "You see this is fine soil," he saia, nrt ing a handful and examing it. "It is a fine, rich, sandy loam," I said. Then this is the fine country where the great desert used to be. The home of the buffalo and roaming red skins has been re deemed and is now being purchased by English and American landlords at a rapid rate." "It has not been three years since I first located these lauds. Then I was far in ad vance of civilization, but now it has gone way beyond me. If J.ord Sanders hud not come with me I should never have got pos session of so much land all in one body as I have it now." "I was just going to ask you how you got possession of so much laud. ' There are two classes of land open to settlers: railroad land and government lands. The railroad land.- I V.mglit by the sectio!!. I was told that no foreigner could obtain lands from the government in my form, but lAid Saudvrs understood the ways (,f the land office and helped rue. Tiieiv arc Hire forms bv which government land can be obtained, home stead, pre-emption and timber claims. Homestead laws give to each head of the family a right to enter a quarter sec tion by living on it live years und then proving up. The pre-emption laws re quire the applicant to till the soil and pay from one dollar and twenty-live cents to two dollars and fifty cents per acre, ac cording to the location. And the timber claim allows a quarter sect ion to the quali fied man or woman who pays fourteen dol lars and breaks five acres the first year, cultivates it the second and pi -.Hits citlier seeds or cuttings for timber until he can show some six thousand living trees on the land he claims." Well, you could not comply with any of those requirements, could you?" "That is where I,ord banders lieipea me. We thought of every name we could ana then went to the land office, and, with the aid of a good bonus, we had names enough entered to take up the alternate sections. Then, as soon as my tenants came, each one was placed on the desired quarter sec tion ami began to cultivate it. When the time comes for proving up it can be shown that the lauds have changed hands ana are in the hands of actual settlers. I shall enter it in each tenant's name and pay till the fees and rent the lands to them, while they transfer to me the fee simple." Now I see how you managa it. muh i should think the American people would object to foreigners coming here a nd hold ing so much land. "Thev are always clad to have foreign ers come and makikaetual settlement and my tenants will qualify just as s."on as possible; then there can be no objection to them. And the railroad lands we can buy aa miif ri nf s we like: thouch some wild fanatics are making a fuss about it. I understand that Englishmen now nvL-n nVmnt. twentv million acres in tne United States." "I "believe that is true. We are gaining the lands our fathers lost without fighting any bloody battles for them." I remember reading in an isngusn pa- - -r - -I J.1 a. 1T per oerore l leu nome mai- -u mauci what course Congress may take to prevent it. the inheritance of the American people will vet come into the possession oi me English nobility.' Now I see what it meant. But some are working to defeat vour dans." I do not wonder mat me Aineraau neonle are wakintr up to the truth or tne situation. English and Scotch landlords already own as much land in America as the entire state of New lone. "Here is a piece of ground that must have been under culivation before you saw it." I said, as we came to an old log cabin. Yes. Waverland. that 1 nought oi an old man who had lived here a number of years. When I fenced my property he found himself without a highway." "But you had no right to do that." "The cow boys I had here herding my stock made him feel a little uneasy." Then you forced the old man to leave this beautiful piece oi ground wnere ne had toiled to start a home?" I asked. 'I bought him out," said the auKe, wincing under the word force. Did you pay him tor nis improve ments?" "No, I could not afford to do that. I paid him the same that 1 paid ior rauroau lands." Then his two or three ye.ars hard work went for nothing." He had one or two good crops from the land." I think the 'equal rights to all' clause in the American constitution nas Dcen right' has 11 1 1 I r'V a r EUfril Jt' TTT -Lc wti S'- York. Trice 60 cta.l fcauiBaJw " SUM ntalished and 'misrht makes n been inserted in its stead." "You are right in that, Waverland. The boasted liberty of America is only in the name, when they submit to being gov erned' by money, backed up by physical farce. Just look at .Jay Could; he counts his wealth by the hundreds of millions! When he wants to steal anything by law lie finds plenty to help him. Liberty, in deed! It's all bosh!" 'I do not wonder that we hear of riots and strikes. No one would object to his great wealth if he would allow fair wages to his employes. UUl wnen. momn aner month, he cut-s down their wages a few nts t a time, until starvation is at their doors. I am not surprised that they rebeL Then I have heard that his men are eora- palled to pay a monthly tax to establish and maintain a hospuai iunu. unuer mr. jv cir.nlTs finelv organized system of tyranny," I said, as we started iorour little tvwrding house after a long ride in this dukedom. Thus riding and chatting from day to day, sometimes n horseback, sometimes on wheels, but always in hunting suit; with game bag, dogs, servants, and gtfns, we spent two weeks on the duke s great estate. It is in extent about twenty-five miles wide by fifty long, equaling in size about two counties of the common size in Kansas, Illinois, or Nebraska, a medium principality in Germany, or a small duke dom in England. It is a huge joke on the American theory of liierty aud equal rurhts. uenver, tne quaint city of the West, was our final resting place. It lies at an alti tude of 5,375 feet, and about fifteen miles from the mountains. Going to the Windsor Hotel, we enga- , ged rooms, had dinner and went out to see the city. We passed down one of those lone Btrairrht streets, shaded on either On eacn sine oi every street Hows a constant stream oi water, often as clear and cool as a moun tain brook. The water is supplied to the city from the Platte river, by means of an open channel. The fountains and water works are supplied by the Holly system of pumping the water from the river. It is sent with such force through the pipes that in case of fire it sends a strong stream of water through the hose. "The muttering sound of water is re freshing this warm day," I said, as we were piissing along the shady street. "Denver never seems to me oppressively warm. The number of its trees and foun tains aud these little rills always insure a refreshing ter.iperat lire," said Melvorne. "This city, v.iwi its wonderful develop ment of art; t!ie .i.-iexpect-Gd intelligence of its people; their n. lined method of thought and handiwork; il.-'lr knowledge o science and their creat mat rial wealth, exhibit the beautiful theorem f Emerson when he says 'The powers of a busy brain are miraculous ami illimitable !' Once this was a sterile waste. But mind, probably the mind of one man, if we could trace it home, was what conceived the possibilities of this mighty city," I said, after spending hours looking at the wonderful things brought into use in the few years suite this was known as the great uescrt oi tne West. "Why, Waverland, you are quite elo quent in your praises ol tins new worm. But it is won-.h-riul as you say. it is HKe the fairy pal.n.-es in the Arabian Nights." Do you know how many inhabitants this city has?" "About scventv-tlve thousand.' "How clear and mire the air seems. It is a luxury to breathe it," I said. The climate is one of the things that Denverites are verv proud of. Do you see that man with the hose watering his nlants?" asked Melvorne. calling my at tention to a beautiful yard where a foun tain wns sendinor un its silvery spray, that rrlistened in the rays of the setting sun. "Y es, I see him. hat is tne use or. nis watering things? Everything looks aa bright and fresh as those lilies at the base of the fountain." "That's the secret of all this beauty. If it were not for the use of the ditches, pipes and hose, the sifting sand would choke everything in Denver." "Why, are there never any showers to supply nature with the needed moisture?" "Seldom any rain falls, though clouds often appear. The display of lightning is magnificent and sometimes very destruct ive." "How clear and bright the sunshine is. What would they think in England or Ire land of this climate?" "It would be hard to tell. But the clear hliie heavens and the bright sunshine are among Denver's greatest charms." "Where do thev get their building ma terial from, there is such a variety?" I asked. "There are brick kilns in the suburbs of tliA citv. Stone and other material is found near by. There is a great variety, nml men of taste choose the material best suited to the style they intend to build." "I have noticed that there seemed to be an individuality in the style and shape of the buildings. Not two are alike." "Every one seems to vie with his neigh hor in making his home the most attract ive. Taste and wealth have worked with magic power in changing these wild cactus-growing plains into these charming homes, with crrassv lawns and beautiful flower crardens. "Thorp ia a fin buildins. what 13 it?" I inauired. "That's their opera house; one of the fin est on this continent." ''School houses and churches are numer ous. The people believe in education and the cardinal virtues of morality. Here they seem to strive for the poetry of life the hieher thought." "We find here the intellectual culture that makes life so attractive in well estab lished society. It is made up of New York, Boston and the East, transplanted ana developed into a more healthy state. Here ran tha "Rnctrmian fnrcet tO SSV. 1 am from Boston.' " We soent a most delighful afternoon, but when evening came we were so iax away from our hotel that we were glad to tate a street car for the return trip, i nese handv little horse power coaches travel the streets of Denver vith as mucn pomp as in anv of the older cities or the iisiern States. It was hard to believe that this proud city was little more than half a score of vears old. Here was to oe seen the wonderful electric light; and the tele nhnne wires formed a complete network over our heads. The city was well f urn ished with eas. Every luxury or need of man's nature had been provided tor. When we reached the hotel we passed into the dining rooms. At a table to the left of our own was a group of happy peo ple, if we could judge by their merry voi ces and mirthful laughter. "What's the matter, Melvorne? asked, for his face was as white as i ghost. "Great heavens! Can it be she?" he ex claimed, without hearing my remark. While I was watching his face I caught the sound of a familiar voice and ex claimed. 'Stella:'' Thoueh mv back was toward the table was sure it was my long lost friend. Hope sprang to life and defied self-control, was near the dearest object of my bfe. soon should know if my future was to be V.ritrht nr rlnrk. Sunner was of little mo ment now, the inner sensitive life was su preme. Melvorne left the table and I fol lowed. We sought the hotel register. There we found the names of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Lollard, I.ady Irving and Miss Stella Everett, all of London, England. With out a word we each passed to our rooms. There, like David Copperfield. we spent some time over our toilets. . At last Mel vorne came to my room, saying: "Are you ready to go to the parlors? I have sent word asking the party to meet some old friends there. For I discovered that Miss Everett was your friend, and, no doubt, you recognized Ividy Irving as mine." I was ready in a moment, and together we entered the magnificent parlor. As I entered the door, I heard my name called, and I fancied in an undertone of gladness. I crossed the room, scarcely kuowine what I .lid. and taking SU-llas hand m mine said In an undertone of tenderness: "H.-.vo I found you at last, my long darling?" For a moment a glad light sprang to her ev..s Li-Jt instantly it changed and sho withdrew ner Hand, lurnmg to me gen tleman ami lady sitting mar, she present ed me to Mr. ami Mrs. IjollanL How can I explain th th night' of the moment? Stella's voice and the glad sur prise that beamed a joyous welcome from her eyes, had been so full of tenderness, and, I fancied, love, that my soul was agi tated by the sweetness of the hope that love had been returned. But this repulse, what could it mean? For a few moments my thoughts were beyond my control. I neither sjoke nor moved. Hut only lor an instant. Composure returned and 1 was master once more. Turning to Mr. IxjI lard, I said. "Are you intending to take a tour of the 1 J ..! I.. ....... I mountain Scenery 111 Viinnirri, ui mc JIM ; Just passing on your homeward journey?" "We came to Denver, thinking of spend ing some time here. Are you at lilcity to join our party?'' "Yes, sir," I answered, "that, I think, would be agreeable to both the Duke of Melvorne and myself." "Then that is the famous Duke of Mel vorne that I have so often heard of?" asked Mr. Ixllard. Melvorne and Lady Irving had left tne room without presenting the duke to her friends. They were now enjoying a pro- nenade un the broad piazza of the hotel. "Yes, sir, that is the Duke of Melvorne. We have just been visiting his rancn m Dakota, and are now going to visit his smaller one in this state," I answered. "He seems to have found a friend in Lady Irving," said Mrs. Lollard, a lively littla brunette. "He was vory much surprised when lie discovered her in the dining hall. And I was equally surprised to hear your voice hi thU stra;ig! land, .Miss Everett," I said, iuriiing to Slel! i as 1 spoke. ".May I ask how you came to be so far from home?" "I came wilii Lady Irving. We have been traveling togL-ther," she said.. "How are vmir l.j-.iii.v v.i 1 .'Mi-ior?" "5.1 v mother i. uv.v.l. Myrtle is with An nie Wr.-n," I s watching her fa'-e as 1 mentioned Amite's na.iie. Stella changed aer p-Lii.a as I spoke, b;;t I had found a key rohev in'li.Terent manners. "Your mother dead'." she exclaimed af ter)! moment's pause. "1 have so often pictured her calm, sweet faco with a look of welcome on it for me, when I returned, for I always meant to see her again, she was so kind to me." The tears glistened in her eyes as she spoke of my mother. "And little Myrtle, how I would like to see her, she was very dear to me. Mother died in the winter. I had been to IiOiidon, and was called home suddenly on account of her illness. She lived only a few hours after my return." While I was 1 rounn imij Irving, M you see. we have In-en traveling together a long time, she answered evasively. "But did you find her at once?" "I cannot tell you now. It would take too long. I have found friends continual ly." "If f had known you were safe I should have Ih'cii happy." "I do not b. lit-ve that," she said archly. "You would have tried to find me if you had known where I was." "You are ri!:t. 1 never would have been contented until I had learned my fate from your own dear lips. If mother had not coma to the library dor just when she diil, I should have known it then." "I felt the impulse. And I knew that my life would be very dark without you. My hungry heart was ready to respond to the call of joy and hojie." "My hoies were rudely shattered when I came home and found that yon lutd gone. What a dreary life I led for days and days. But one evening it seemed to me you caino and said, 'If 1 were you i wouiu not. i.u my inheritance go to w.iste.' Then other words that you had uttered, words of conv fort, and words of cheer, came to my mind They inspired me with courage anil filled my heart with hope. I was almost sum that sometime we would meet, and that I should yet win your love." "How long was that after I left ?" "About a month. Why?" "I remember one evening about that time I had leen feeling that in all this great world there was not one individual that needed me, or that I could benefit by living. There seemed to be no place for me, no loving heart to claim mine in ror turn. While I sat musing in that melan choly frame of mind, 1 seemed to hear your voice saying, 'I need you! I am coming for you!" From that time I never Ix-lieved that you WOUld many iim.-, ... u. loved her. 1 re'nember thinking how pleasant it would be if mi..'! chM flower mind. It seemed almost as real as li;V.' "Hut this is real." I said, "mind can an swer mind, and heart can speak to heart. But how came you hen-:' I never divaincd of finding you this side of the Atlantic. Or have you been lending me on vi!h your magnetic powers, to liud you here so far from home?" "We have been other," kIii said I.r: thought of Wavei !.; have often sketched But it would not 1 your mother is nut dear to me. My ln-ai (ihig toivard each "I li- ve ( fleil " :ir old place; 1 Lady Irving, '.-i me, now I hut Ificiv. She was very t went out in syinpa- 'Sir, I never gave you cause to take such liberties with me." telling of my mother, Stella had forgotten her self-imposed task of appearing coiu and haughty. While we had been talking, I had been thinking. The old adage came to my mimd, "Faint heart never won rair lady." I thought that 1 would test ner in difference, and said: "Miss Everett, would you enjoy a wauc on the piazza? ouenng wj uiju spoke. For an instant she seemed unde cided. Then she answered by placing her hand upon my arm. As soon as we were alone I asked: Stella, have you no words of welcome for me after these long, weary months of absence?" No answer. "Dovou know that I sought far and near for some news of my lost friend, and, now that I have found you, when my heart is full of rejoicing, you have no words of welcome." Still no answer, though I paused a mo ment in our walk that I might listen. "Darling, have you no love for me in your heart?" I pleaded, taking her hand that lay upon my arm in my own. She would not permit even that, but turned from me; saying: "Sir, I never gave you cause to take such liberties with me." I thought there was a sound of pain in the girlish voice. Once more I pleaded: "Stella. Miss Everett, excuse me," I said, "for troubling you, but I must know the truth. My mother told me all she said to vou that morning before you left Wa verland. Did you believe that I loved An nie Wren?" She turned her face toward me in the brizht moonlight. It was full of reviving hone as she answered: "Yes. Sir Lovd. 1 believed it and that was why I left Waverland." "O. mv darline." I said, taking her hand, "now could you believe that anyone whs dearer to uie than your own sweet self?" V "I believed it because your mother said it was settled lone ago, that you were to marrv Annie." There was just a quiver of pain in the voice that made thus confes sion. mi'nu ... tVi wnwn that VOU left Wflr 1 f Oio Him " ' - - - verland?" "It was." "Then you loved me just a little, even thouzh you left me?" "es, Lovd. I loved you," came in a whisper too" faint for aught but a lover's ..... - T V, . . 1 . 1 I. tt m V ear. lint it was euougn. i . - j heart and kissed the sweet lips and pure white brow. My heart uttering all the time in a glad refrain the words of the old song. "My heart now sadly dumb shall speak to you alone." How changed the world seemed! I had secured the love of the one individual in all the world that could inspire my heart with noble aspirations. We did not need words to tell the old. old story, for the sweetness and the honor of the new-found compan ionship had a language all its own. "No more weary hours, my love!" I said, as I led her to a seat. "Did you think you could hide your love from me by assuming indifference?" "I was afraid I could not, that was why I left Waverland." "Do you know the anguish I felt when I knew that you hail gone? Where did you go? How did you fare? Tell nie all, my darlimr." thy for her in her loneliness, aii'I I sought to make her happy." "And you accomplished more than you can ever know, my dear. My mother re remembereii you. and asked us to forgive her for the pain she had i-iium-i! us both. She gave her dying blessing on our lovo and prayed that we might meet. She said that she had missed you more t han words can tell. I believe that grief for yon short ened her life. She had learned to love and trust you, and when you left her all was cone. But where have you been nil theae months?" I asked again. "Traveling with Ialy Irving," she an swered again. "I am so glad she has at bust met the man she has loved from child hood. Her father promised her liand in marriage when she was but a child. She obeyd his wish and became the wife of her father's friend. But all the while tne imne of Melvorne, or James, as she calls him, was her heart's idol. We have often talked of old friends, and how often she had hoped for a chance of meeting the duke since she bad been a widow, for Lord Irv ing lived only a short time after their mar riage; and, what was very strange, her father died about the same time, leaving her alone in the world, with no nearer rel atives than Sir Wren and his daughter. Her mother died when she was a little child. And now in this far away land she has found the happiness for which she longed." "Not only Lady Irving and the Ihike of Melvorne have found the longed-for friends of other days, but on. -selves as well," I said, leading her bac't to the par lor. When we entered the parlor we found Lady Irving and the duke engaged in quiet conversation. As we entered he came for ward with the lady by his side, saying: "Lord Waverland, allow me to introduce to j'ou the future Duchess of Melvorne!" "Allow me to introduce to you the fut ure Lady Waverland, now Miss Stella Ev erett." I rejoined. "What part of the world have you been traveling through?" asked Melvorne of Lady Irving. "We have been through parts of Italy, France, Germany and the East Indies. Then through the Sandwich lslaniLs into California since last fall." "You are only birds of passage, I should say from the short time you spent in each place," I said. "We were thf re long enough to see the places of greatest interest but not long enough to become attached to any particu lar spot," said Stella. "When did you reach Denver?" asked Melvorne. "On the afternoon train from the west. When did you reach Denver?" she asked. "On the morning's train from the east," answered Melvorne. "So you came from the east and we from the west, to prove that the world is round, by meeting in this queen city of the plains," said Stella. "There are a good many grand things on this round balk Ir the past few months we have seen wonder ful sights." i "Yes," said Lady Irving, "California alone is an art gallery of exquisite pict ures, painted by nature's own hand. 1 wish we could have met there." "Colorado ranks high among the art galleries of the world for charming pict ures," said Melvorne. "What are youi plans for to-morrow, Iuly Irving." "I believe Mr. Ixdlard has been study ing the guide book for points we want to see. Of course we will all travel together. It will be so much pleasanter," she an- 1 I "Tn1oe1 it. will." I said. "You would have to evaporate into thin air to get rid of me now, or else make me a prisoner be hind iron bars." "Me, too," laughed Melvorne. "I just now begin to appreciate American scene ry." Good nights were said with a glad re frain. Continued Tomorrow.) Miles Nerve andlLlver Pills. Act on a new principle regulat ing the liver, stomrch and bowels through the nervs. A new discovery-. 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