THE OMAHA DAILY J3EE: FKIDAY, JUNE 1, 1900. it i I A FLAG OF TRICE. ! i 4. BY MARTHA McCULLOCII'WILl.lAA'.S. A 4 4 S S S 'S 'V ., ,;, ,;, r.j A, ,;, ., A, .j, ?, ,j, ,j, (J Aj (Copyright, im, by M. McC'ulloeh-Wllllnms) Mjor miiiard eat In tho chimney corner pulling big clourtg from his after dinner elgar. Morris, his ton and heir, who had come In lato to tho noon meal, was Just fill ing himself a second gliss of wine. The major chuckled Inly, but pretended to frown is ho said: ''Youn laan, I've been hearing thlnca! Thlngo that do not particularly please mo." About me?" Morris asked. 'That Is a pity Such a model son as I am known to ,', Vnal' the matter, governor?" "No very crcat matter." tho major said, jvlth an Indulgent laugh. "Still I wlih It badn t happened. I'm not a bit straight laced, You'll bear u Uncus I have tried to rnlej you 11 wan, not a milksop-wlth, I Way say. fnr nuccess. A man must have his amusements. I have no thought of In terfering with yours. All I tsk Is that they shall Ho In good taste" "You surely don't accuse mo of wasting ny time on ugly women, sir?" Morris said, lightly, though hU breath came, a little Quicker. Tho major laughed again. There ftas evqn a twinkle In his eye to ho raid: "No, sir! That Is bo little a Hllllar. rait I should certainly disown n son wb showed It. Your river bend flame, M t, bwan Hlnton, wculd do credit to a man o twice your experience. Dcn't think I m a to lecturo you about her. nclthor ku your going with her to river bend pirtl v or chumming with her worthless father, .Id Nat- He Is an entertaining old vagrant and Lord! hnw ho can flfh! llcflJcs ho It. a ort of king among tho r or wliltca. You rtntust get to know them you must Indeed know all corts and condltbnn tf tho perplc you may ono day aspiro to represent. The proper study of a politician Is man ho hal better be careful th ugh how he mixes It with a study of woman. Ho cannot of course leave tho ruling sex wholly out of It tho thine in to study that sex at Jut the proper angle" "Thank you f:r nothing, governor. You'vo boon setting mo tho examp'c tia! Is so much better than precept, ever Hlncc I was In short frocks," Morris said, gulp ing hln wine. Then he walked to the fireplace and began kicking the h ckory logs wbl?h smoldered and sputtered thsrc, though the windows were wide open and the world outside warm and sunlit with the warmth of lato May. Major Hllllard. "who loved his land and bis son with almost equal passion, let his eye range tho broad acres of his estate, then brought them back to Morris and said In a voice of pity: "On my soul I'm sorry for those llln ton girls. Handsome enatigh for duchesses, every one, and then their gift! They truly have music In th?lr souls, yet they would bo better off without It." "I don't know thty love It so. I be llovc they love, too, tho distinction It gives them." Morris said, looking carefully away from his father. "They are proud of being the only woman band ever seen here about. Then when they play at tho balls unci barbecues and falra of e-tirsr they arc brought In contact with with bolter peo ple than their own sort." "There's the rub und thp pity of It," Major Hllllard sail thoughtfully: "This contact with tho better sort will make their own sort distasteful to them. They are big, pplcndld animals, ns soft-hearted as they nro underbred, as lnnocont as they are Ignorant. I wonder. Indeed, that they can toe old Nat's daughters he Is certainly a tough citizen, It must bo they take after ho mother, who Is of decent farming stock. If only her girls wero kept quietly nt home It Is likely they would marry farmers LhcmecHMc and- bq happy oyer, after. But hawked about as they are they learn to flout tho de:ent youngsters who would make them such excellent hus bands; oven that, however. Is not the worst. They will end by loving where love may mean ruin." "Old Nat will not listen to any talk of marriage," Morris said, still looking away. "You know ho lives easy, sln:e the g.rls bring in so much money." "I fancy whoever married one of them would marry the whole family," Major Hll llard raid. "And that brings me to my grievance. Of course it is ridiculous I dare, say you thought It was only a piece of Innocent vaunting on the girl's part, but you should have checked her. Dick Daly lolls me at the last party you stood quiet when Swan called hetBclf Mrs. Mori Is Hll llard. For ourselves It does not matter hut I have a feeling about It. You ought to have rememberort that that was your mother's name." The major was dark, with square Jaws, black beetling brows, a firm chin, a thin lipped, almost cruel mouth. His ton was fair and blue-eyed, with a pure Greek pro file. He had Indeed the faco of tho mother who died when ho was born. But some subtle Inner stirring brought uppermost the race likeness, Indefinable yet beyond mis take. It was n Hllllard of Hllllards who an swered, slightly dropping his head as ho spoke: "I didn't forget, sir! Swan spoke tho truth." "The truth!" Major Hllllard reeled as from a blow, covering his eyes with bis bands. Morris' faco bad reaffirmed his words. After a Irng minute tho father held out his hand, saying steadily "At least you show yourself oiy son. You had the courage not to Ho to mo. You knew I would bcllcvo you against tho wholo world even against myself." "That waa why I couldn't do It," Morris said. Major Hllllard rcclel again, but Mor ris did not offer to steady hint Tho two were comrades, much more like close-Jcnlt brothers than father and son. The major's very life was bound up in his boy, wham almost from the cradle he had treatol as a man and an equal. Ho had aimed to teach him beyond everything what It mean, to have been born a gentleman and a Hllllard, tho last of a lino of spotless gentlemen. Ho had no mrro dreamed that Morris could many beneath himself than that the sun could drop out of the sky. "Ymi niU3t love thki girl very deep ly." ho ald at lnt, with his eyes on the Hmouldcrlng fire. M rrts set his teih hard. "Yes. I love her," he said vcr slowly. "And awav frcm her I hate her almost as much. I know all ou ran say iliut 6hi Is ignorant, vain, vacuous, that sho known nothing of the rejervcu and refinement which should bc'ong to the wrman who nhn'l take my mother's rdace. What Is the good rf talking, though I am a m.m. Sho is tho most bautllul woman In tho world. And she loves me. Yes, she doty loves rac madly. I might have made her anything I chose. You have brought mo up to know that a KOducer was worto than a mad dg bide. Wherever Swan may go. there the tr'ba of Hlnton will go likewise. Perhaps tho best thing I can do Is is ask you for money encugh to take the tribe and vanish." "By the Lord! you hall not! I will nn be left desolate! You shall not throw away your life, your future, In thle fashion!" the major roared, springing 'to his feet. "Mor ris! Morris! Why did you keep all this dark? You aro under enchantment, clean out your mind! I say nothing against this poor girl but tell mc, has tho marriage been made public?" .Vorrli shock his head: "Old Nat nuspe ts but nobody knows, except the minister," he said. "Tho people ot the pirty thought Swan was only fooling as she was when sho called herself Mro. Ben Isham. Ben Is mad about her but she will hardly look at him now." "You aro sure of that?" Major Hllllard asked. Morris smiled, half angrily, half confidently. "Swan would break her fiddle over his !)tud If ho even looked lovo at her." he said. "But tell me, governor, do you mean to 'Isotvn me? You would bo Justified In doing t." "fiod knowo perhaps I do not." Major illllard mid. "But promise me. my son, to ecp qulot for three days longer." Thc shlftlersness of all tho river bend set lemcnt reached It Mcwcrlng In the Hlnton iot:ee. It was a tumble-down log structure, ust on the edgo of the water. There was a ow rail fenco about It. Where the gate 'hould havo been the rails wero stretched ipart. "PC whites, they bound ter click or po' white ways," old Nat Hlnton said to Major Hllllard as that gentleman walked lirough tho gap, upon the morning after Morris" cnnfcsilon. OU' Nat loined against the Jamb of tho llg room door, hitching up the single-string talltia th.it supported his patched trousers. Ho was cntlrss and had ono shoe half off. A stubby black plpo pat up a mighty reek frrm one crrner of his mouth. He had small, shrewd, far-sighted eyes. All tho lower half cf his face was shrouded In a llecco of beard that reached nearly to his waist. "Yes. po white ways," old Nat repeated. "Them thar fine gals o' mine, now, Major, ey thoy was yourn, you'd ruthcr sco 'cm dead 'an carnln' good money, Jest a-tlcklln' fiddle an' banjo strings. But, they likes It, an' I likes hit. Tell ycr, 'twound take cr heap cr money cf any feller wantcr ter buy us outcn business now." "How much?" Major Hllllard asked. He had caught old Nat's drift and felt In tuitively that old Nat sensed his own errand. "Well!" old Nat's tone was reflective, "Lemmo see! Hit would take cr big pile yes, flr-ee! cr big one. The band's wuth bcttern $200 a year ter me, my own self, not countln" whut them air children wastes on thar mammy, nn' flno things fer thar own selves." "I will give you $1,000 In hand and $1,000 a year for life If you'll take them all, go away and nover come back." Major Hllllard said. Old Nat laughed provoklngly. "That does sound liberal," he said. "But It ain't! O! no. it nln't, not a-tall! Way It ain't half tho wuth o' tho dower right in Wake Forest plantation not fayln' notbtn' about all the money an' niggers." 'ttly wife Is the only person who could claim dower In Wake- Forest " Major Hll llard said slowly. "And certainly I shall never marry again. My son, although my natural heir, has nothing but what I choose to give him. It might happen that I would chcooe to give, him nothing not oven onough to keep him from starvation." "But but you won't never, never do that! O! Major, pleaso say you won't never do that." a soft young voice cried from he hind old Nat. Old Nat stepped sullenly aside. "You better po cn In and talk your talk out." he said. "You ain't no need tor beat about tho brsh. I knowrd as torn as I seen you comln' whut I had cusplclon d was the fact so. Yer b'y Is my son-in-law and you don't llko It. Well, now, whut air ye poln' ter do about It?" "All a man can do to save hl3 only s-n," Major Hllllard said, stepping wHn f e dingy room, which even Swan Hlnton' surpassing beauty could not Illumine out of sordines. Swan was slender as a re:d, yet had a figure of exquisite curves. Her skin, under the dashes of sunburn, was of a flno creamy pallor. Lips Intensely scar let, curving to a true Cupid's bow, accented tho pallor, as did her dark appealing oye, and her crown of hair llko black flcss-rllk. Her race, the nomad poor white, Is a sort of human century plant. On?e perhaps In each 100 years mysteriously It flowe's into absolutely perfect beauty. She stood slightly swaying and thrum ming an old Spanish guitar. Major Hll llard looked her over with a heart full of murderous compassion. The appeal of h-r beauty fully excused his son and took away TELL YER 'TWOULD TAKE ER HEAP UK MONEY IF ANY FELLER WANTED TBR BUY US OUTEN BUSINESS NOW." any llngetlng trace cf hardness toward him, yet In so excusing made him all tho more determined on rescue. In all his life beforo he had never willfully hurt a woman. Now that needs mum he hurt ono, be meant to do his best to salve the wound. "Swan you love my son?" he asked, IcoUing her full In the eye. "I I reckon ro," Swan said fumbling with the' ribbon at her throat. "That Is why you don't want hlra to bs and io 1 married her. It seemed to me that i poor?" the major asked. Swan nodd d. gulped, then sail tlawly: "He Morris I mutt disgrace either your name, or your training and I let tho name gx" "You did not think of mo?" the major said very low. Mcrrls covered his eyes and groanod. "Over and over and over," he said, "but look back, governor, rememltfr what It Is o bo 22. Fancy yourself loved, and loving; fancy, too, leaving the wrman you loved !n the re?kles?ncss of heartbreak, to throw her felf Into the bottomless pit. Swan l! leud and gay, and free, but she Is good. I kept my head until wr41, until It happened that 1 kissed her. Then well, nothing mattered bcildo keeping her alwas and enly mlno " Major Hllllard's hands clinched hard upon tho arms of his chair. "Tell me wha' tu mean to ho said llfeleosly. Morris smiled a dreary smile. "I have not made a plan, governor," ho said, "but bo certain of th's I shall not bring Swan here. My mother's memory for- ain't fl fen for that. He ain't to mo' fltten'n a racer's fltten to be a mule. 'Taln't nlcs, beln' po'. I know all about that" "No! It Is not nice you don't want to be poor all your life?" the major Inter rupted. Swan shuddered a little and bwH lowed hard. Suddenly t.he flung up her head, bcr whole face mbtly hardened. "No! I don't wantcr be po' always." ihe sold; "ncr I don't mean ter be neither. Ef I caln't have Morris and tho money" "You'll take the monov," Major Hllllard supplemented as she choked and grew si lent. "That is very wle. I am s'ad In deed to find you so sensible." "1 ain't sensible I am drovo tor death," Svnn crIM. hiding her face In her hand. For a minute gurty sots shook her whole frame. All at on:e she dashed the tears from her eyes, dropped her hands and aske-1, watching Major Hllllard narrowly as ah spoko; "Did Morris send you? Er did you come on yo' own account" "That has nothing to do with th case." Major Hllllard t-ald diplomatically "See here! 1 want Aggers. Sentiment's good, but gimme dollars and cents " Old Nat growled from tho dor. "Dollnrs an' cents In er lump er big lump at that," he went on. You may come yer soft sawder over that there fool gal. but you don't como It over me." Major Hllllard looked at Swan as though eld Nat had not spoken. "I will settle $10, 000 on you If you leave tho state and never como back to It," he said, "and give your father half as much tomorrow upon tho samo condition." "That ain't much for er high-toned gen tlemanwhen Jest cr plain llkrly nigger's wuth fifteen hundrej," old Nat began. Swan stopped him with n violent cuff and rushed away in a passion ot tears. The houso at Wako Forest stood quite thrco miles from tho Tcnnessc river, e. tho plantation ran down to the stream, and Major Hllllard had his own landing. In tho third year of the civil war a village of white tents about it stretched far back from tho water side. There was another smaller village of them up around the house. Tho fences were all swept away. Horses fully accoutcred stood champing and danc ing all about the lawns. Men clattered up and down the broad veranda stepj, sooie with swords clanking after them, more In undress uniform, and a very few In the garb of ci vilians. Not ono of tho original inhabitants remained. Major Hllllard and Morris wero both In the confederate army. Their hun dreds of slaves had been sent further south as soon as the fall of Fort Henry gave the wholo river region Into federal control. Now tho fortunes of war had mado Wako ForreM the camping ground and base of operations for a considerable federal column. Its aim and object were secrets Jealousty guarded, slnco It was knr.wn that Forrest's flying horse, the most dreaded among all the en emy, lay almost in full strength not so many miles away. CJtncral Bruton, the ranking federal offi cer, wisely made his headquarterw upon tho river bank, within range of the gunboats. But his chlof lieutenant, Colonel Flowiow, who wan really tho working soul of the column, had quartered himself In the plan tation house, and from It directed every thing that went on. He was not a military sybarite, yet made himself very comfortable there, drinking the good wines in tho cellar and smoking the best cigars In the major's own (fecial locker. Tho camps were bcth full of black vagrants contrabands in tho phrane of that time. Bruton gave them ra tions and listened sympathetically to their stories. Ho had so many of them for servants, Indeed, they wero In each ether's way. Flowtow hated them, wholo and sev eral. Brought up a lieutenant In the Ger man army, ho had resigned, come to Amer ica, engaged In business, dropped It at the call to nrms, and gone into the fighting al most purely from love of fighting. "They cumber us theso blacks!" ho said often. "They ruin d!f:lpl!ne, too. Then how shall you keep army secrets when they go In and out like the air?" But now oven ho had taken one Into bis service. It hap pened In this wise: Thrco days earlier he had been reconnoltcrlng when his detach ment was charged upon by a, single mounted man, riding at full speeil, and crouching low over the neck of the horse. The reason won plain. Behind came half a dozen men In gray, also mounted, spurring as for life and rhootlng as thoy rode. It evenjed a miracle that some bullet did not touch the fugitive. The federal cavalry parted to let him through no soon as they saw his face. He was a mulatto, evidently a camp servant making a daih for liberty, since he wore over his Jean trousers a castoff gray over coat. "Shoot mo, please! Don't send mo back," he said, riding straight up to-tho cclonel, Flowtow eyed him u ralnutn then askcil gruffly: "Why did you run away?" For answer the mulatto flung off his coat and bared his back. It wa3 marked all over with cruel crimson welts. "Nobody ever dared to touch mo bofo'." ho said. "1 was a house nigger and I don't belong to the man that done It." "How camo you In the army?" Flowtow atked, suspiciously. The negro locked full in his eyes and said: "I went to take keer of my muster's son. He he's dead now. I wnnted to go and they tried to make mo stav." "Hump! Who in your master?" Flowtow asked. Majrr Hllllard that is, he used to be major. He's colonel now under old Mr. Forres. If he had been there nobody wouldn't a-dared to touch me." the negro said. "That'n how como I to know all this country so well. I used to live at Wake Fores'." "So." The exclamation waa ono of pleasure. "Then ycu may be worth keep ing if you will be a true guide." Flow'ow said, pursing hi ll' '''"" vrua'Iy "This major he Is your father, too, eh?" "I hears 'em say po," the negro 6ald, looking down. "Please, sir, take mo to wait on you. I can co.k." "I may have bettor use for you." Flow tow Interrupted. "Rldo you here bes'do mo n little. If you serve me well you Bhall havo money and frecdem. If," with a stern lcok, "you try to trap me then I will cut you alive Into little teony bits." "I don't want money, only to be froo and to learn readln' and wrltln'," the negro raid. "As to trappln' you no nigger calnt do that. You are too smart for even our white folks." So yellow Ned came to be free of Flow tow's quarters, following the colonel like a dog wherever be went, crouching pathntly beside the hearth while Flowtow wrote or talked, alert for any service, but seemingly heedless cf all he heard. He hnd found an old notebook and stub of pencil. The sen try at the door had set hlra copies of Ict'e s and figures. These he reproduced In a thousand unheard of combinations. The sentries, as they changed, were much amused bv hla efforts and said one to an other yellow Ned must bo crazy ou slmp'y could not teach him that two and two made four, or that a was not z. It was mid May, four years from the month when Colonel Hllllard had ssnt the Hlntons away. Old Nat had come ba-k I very soon after tho federal vle'ory. Ho claimed. Indeed, to have a mysterious con nection with those in authorl'y, and swag gered amenc the other fisher foi- as to th vengeance he meant to take cn the s'ave holding aristocrats who had formerly so oppressed him. A year of rlo'ons living had wasted the Hllllard m"ney. Luce and ! Prude now chone to go their own way. hut Swan came with her father because her j mother camo perforce. With tho wreck and remnant of the'r sul- ; den wealth old Nat had chartered a traoing boat, ii miserable rcow-llke affair, which was towed up or down stream as occa sion served. Ostensibly it was a sut'er's boat. In reality it engaged in all manner of contraband trading. A cotton cargo, oace safe under tho hatches, meant more profit , than many weeks In camp. Old Nat had planned to smugr'o such a cargo aboard beforo the Lucy tied up at Wake Forcat landing. He had slipped outside tho lines tpylng where best to srlze It. letvlns ha j wife and Swan In charge of the boat. So'.dler villages gossip oven more than ordinary villages. Everything et heidqua ters Is scon the common property cf the camp. Thus Swan came to know very soo i all the particular of yellow Ned's arrival. She pondered what sho hail houd a dsy, th'n Just at nunset sevrtlcd her mother by saying: "I'm going over to the ou -port. Funny I never thought of It before but there Is my chance to see the Inside o' I Wake Forest," j There was no protest. Mr. Hlnton neTer wasted breath In trying to turn Swan from her purposes. But something, she knew net what, made her kiss her daughter oacj shjli. fearfully, cure, ai she fcit Swn tremble at her louih, out of the fulnisii of her mother heart. "I wlh 1 could take )ou. tco. but th.it would spoil everything," Swan said, paltirg her cheek and almost running away. She had rummaged out her old fiddle and put on a short frock, much frilled and spangled, which she had worn In the dtyj of the band, tl was black and cimo tow in the neck, so she throw over her shoulders a blue artilleryman's cape, disposing ono end so the scarlot lining would show. At th very last she turned back and thrust some thing deep Into her bosom, saying, with lazy smiles: "You don't never know what may come In handy when on go on a 'porstim hunt this time o' the year." As she picked her way through tho com pany stroats thcro were halls from every hand cries of admiration. Invitations to supper, banters for a tune. Just one but she stajed for none of them. Words nhs flung back In plenty; her tongue had gained In license, in piquancy and point. A very young officer, riotously full of beer, ran out and trlc.l to kiss her in tho face of all, but was rapped smartly over the ncso with tho fiddle bow, and ran back howling with rain. As ehe camo to the outpost tho pickets made u feint of halting her. She stu.-k the fiddle under her chin, played three the fiddle beneath her chin. Before Flow tow could protest she had struck up, "Run, Nigger. Run'" looking as she played straight at Flowtow's new servant. With out a break she gilded Into another strain, almost an Improvlslon. full of swelling chords and soft walling minors. She had played it first upon her wedding night Morris had snatched tho bow frr.m her hands and had dragged her brcathlcssiy away with him to find a minister. "My hiss! I cannot wait!" Flowtow sal I, clutching her bare shoulder. "Many things Impend, Swanchen. Pay now good measure, mind! When they are settled I wilt hear what It is thou hast paid for." "But maybo you'll be dead! Mister For rest is a bad man a mighty bad old man," Swan said, fending her Hps. Flowtow pushed her hands aside and tock a :ni kiss. The next second a stunning blow stretched him full length upon the floor. As he sprang up, livid with rage, he saw Swan struggling violently with tho mulatto, who was gasping, and had tho blazing eyes of n tanther. "O! You Dutchman! I never thought that little love pat would kno;k you down," sho crlod, "But look at this nigger, will you trying to murder mc! Must bo he thinks you're like his white folks too good to be touched by the common sort. That's what all the high-toned niggers think. I know I used to live down south. Where did you skeer him up, Dutchy? Did you have him made special for your guardian anrcl?" 'HOLD TIGHT. SWAN, NOW WE HAVE TO RIDE FOR OUR LIVES." discordant bars, and raid: "Let mo through or you'll hear worse than that." All tho camp knew her she had Indeed tho freedom of more than the army corps. Sho was kind In slrkness or trouble, a good comrade In health, square every man of them would have staked hln llfo on that and straight, for all her freedom, both of speech and action. So she won easily to Colonel Flowtow's door. Sho would havo passed the sentry there, as she had paH3d tho others, but that Flowtow himself was Jusi coming out, with Yellow Ned, ns usual, at hl heels. "You! What do you do hero?" ho said roughly, catching her arm In a hard grip. "Mo! O! I Just camo to find out If you all were dead," Swan said Jauntily. "I didn't know but 'Mister Forrest's crlttor company' had slipped In and made crow's meat of the lot." "What Is that to vou? Women arc not for fighting!" Flowtow said, still roughly. Swnn laughed, an r.lry, happy laugh. "No! Women aro for kissing," she said. "I'll kiss you, Colonel Flowtow and play a tune Into tho bargain If you'll do Juot une little thing I want."" "O! Ho! I nm to be bribed In face of tho niticlcs of war," Flowtow roared. "Well, bribe me, Swanchen. I will hear what it Is about afterward." "You shall take the tune first!" Swan said, throwing off her cloak and setting "Come again, wild Swanchen and you shall hear!" Flowtow said. "Or, wait! I shall come back before the midnight. We will drink together and have much games and you shull play. As for tho man I will send him to company with his horse. The darkness shall teach hlra bet ter manners." "Ho! I'll teach him myself!" Swan said to tho sentry, as Flowtow gallopjd off, stopping past him to tho eJgo of the veranda. There sho begun to play gay, rollicking tunes, that very shortly drsw all the idlers about her. Presently she flung down her fiddle, whirled about on tip toe, and said, sniffing vigorously: "Walt till I como back, everybody! I foel It In my bones that there's things to drink closo by." Sho darted away, followed by a chorus of uproarious laughter. But she did not seek tho cellar. In half a mlnuto 'he had rja hed n picketed horao and wa3 wishiperlng to tire man standing beilde It: "Morris, get away for Ood'o sake. Old man Nat will know you ho hen como back ho Is coming hero to see Flowtow this very night. Tha was why I O, why didn't you keep qu'.ct? What did a kits moro or lew matter?" Y u have bought your freedom." "Some things one cannot buy," Morris said, breathing hard. "Swan. I shall stay until you agree to go with me." "You are crazy crazy as a loon!" te cried. "Fitst to come here then all those paper. I know what they ate. so will o.d man Nat. lie taught you, remember, thi Murrcl elan cipher, so you lould write all rts of thing to me. Uo away, I tell you! Flowtow will hsng ,iou at sun-up, as sure as he finds out bow he has been fooled." "If you w .11 nune with mo," Moirls said, springing Into the saddle and ho.dlng out his aims. Swnn thought a minute, then waved him down. "1 muet ride and lead you with n, halter," she sal), "or we shall never get past the pickets. I will say I'm . driving you out of camp, back to your own I side, because 1 hate you. Then, when wo aro outside " "You will have to keep on," Morris said, doggedly. Swan shivered faintly. "We will settle that aa happens," she said. "You nro my wife still. 1 will never let you go back," Morris said when tho Inst picket was 200 yarda behind. Swan h d slipped from the saddle and was unbind ing his hands. Sho had driven him mer cilessly, flourishing a silver mounted il;r rltiger above his head. The pickets hal laughed at her, but had not tried to stop her. It was only ono of Swan's freaks anJ Swan, In their eyes, could do no wrong. Tho two halted In a broad clear foad. The moon shotio so bright It was nearly ,v light ns day. As tho Irst knn. came loos there wns a stir in the hushi at the road side old Nat' nmblliiK' mu'e spin g through them and o'll Nat himself cried: "So you've been a-splns--eh Morrs and your wife's hulplng you out? Mlgh'y nice game but I'll block It though 1 can't st i you now. I owe your father a day In harvest. 1 rerkon the time's comln when I can ray In full." The late wcrds came faint he had set the mule off In a headlong gallop. Morris sprang Into the saddle, leaned down and snatched Swan up before him. She tried to writhe out of his armR In thrco mlnutrs at most tho mounted pickets would Lo after him how could he eucapo with his horse douhly weighted? "Bo quiet! (live mo that pistol!" he said, rii mouth close- to her car: "Weight! You don't know Black Douglas as I do. They coulo. not catch him Jaded. T'nlght hn is a wlhl horse he ha3 had nothing but little niggling trotn tlnco his run the other diy." "There! I told you they were coming!" Swon cried, ns they caught the sound of shots behind and of hoofs gathering In volume. Morris laughed grltnly and shook his roins. Black Douglas knew what that meant. He weuit away at a long stretching galloa that quickened, quickened Into the plunging full run. Ills head was low, his atomaiii nlmrttt touched earth ns he stretched himself In long, leaping boun t. Now and again he snorted disdainfully on e there was a keen whinny of defiance. "Blord tells. Ho knows It Is a race." Mortis said, patting the satin fchoulder. With one arm ho held Swan cloto against hla breast. Her weight, thus over tho withers, hardly told on tho gallant beast. They had left tho chaso a mile behind. Morris wai about to pull tip and turn Black Douglas' nose a mlnuto to the wind whon they heard fcabres Jingling down n cross road 100 yards dead ahead. "There Is Flowtow himself," Morris said under his breath. "Hold tight. Swan now we have got to ride for our lives " He had neither whip nor spur. Ho must trust solely to tho speed and courage and intelligence of his horse. He flicked tho reins gently and gave a soft, low whistle. Black Douglas reared as he heard It then lunged forward and tore along the road, devouring It as flame devours dry stubble. He shot past the crossroad's mouth while Flowtow and his men were thirty yards awny from It. They cried "Halt!" and fired after him. Tho shots only urged hlra to keep at his best speed; so did the thunder of their hcofs behind. Flowtow was nearly as well mounted, but his horse had been ridden hard before tbe chase began. Still ho pressed for ward, urging his gray with whip and spur beyond the freed of all but two of tho b'st horRPd troopers. They had emptied their carbines without effect. Flowtow had a revolver, but the range was too great hesldes he had recognized Swan as he flew past, and yearned to overtake her a- A tear her bodilj from tho arms of the man who had tricked him Rage over the tricking wholly nwalluwcd up apprehension He knew the chise led htm straight toward the confelerat' linos. On. on he rode, the wind finding I.i his ears, his eyes fixed In stralnlug a;e on 1 the space between him and his quarry It lessened In a little while he would . om , up with the black would last" the tavago t sweetness of vengeance They could net a second time es;apc him thoic audacious ones! He could not doubt now that tho woman had been full partner In tbe schema. He gained on them swiftly. They wero Just thirty yards In front -he rose In his stirrups to cry halt after thrin. But tho cry was drowned In a louder noise the blurring boom of cavalry guns heavily charged. The flash came straight In front, a little way down the road L'ndervolclng , the sound, he caught the muffled murmur of many men nptlnglng suddenly to arms It was not a picket post, but a vanguard he had surprised. Wrathfully he tired his six shots In air. then wheeled and rode for life toward his own camp. "Morris! O, thank the Lord, wo didn't touch you," the captain of tho guard said as Morris leaped from Black Douglas. Morris had no word for him! Swan lay i Inert In his arms and he felt her head drop prone against his shoulder, and knew that the bullet which had stilled her heart was Intended for his own. The next day but one I'olonel Hllllard walked Into General Forrest's headquarters to rt.ay: "My dear general, please to send In a flag of truce. My son's wife has died very suddenly. We wish to bury her at Wake Forrest beside his mother " As he spoke, so It wns done. A Very Itriuiirl.nlilr ltemeilj. "It Is with a good deal of pleasure and ratlsfncllnn that I recommend Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says Druggist A. W. Sawtcl'o of Hartford. Conn. "A lady et!tomcr sow ing the remedy exposed for sale on my show case said to mc 'I really bcllcvo that medicine saved my life Ihe past sum mer while at tho shore,' and she becamo so enthuslartlc over Its merits that 1 at once made up my mind to recommend it in the future. Recently a gentleman camo Into my store so overcome with colic palnJ I that he sank at once to tho flour. I gvo 'him a dose of this remedy, which he'iid him. I repeated the dose, anl In tlftccn mln'ttes he left my store smilingly Inform ing mo that he felt as well as over." Mciimrlrn nf n Willi I. Detroit Free Press: "Did you ever try to danco with a foreigner?" asked ii Loulsvillo gentleman who had been traveling abroad. "I did once," he continued, "and that ex perience was moro than enough for mc It happened at a iball nt Mustaphn, nt tha Hotel St. Georges. I asked an Austrian countess to waltz, and when we stnrttM I suppesed wo would danco In the leisurely American fashion. "Tho countess had a different Idea In her head. She preferred to whirl madly, like a dervish, on n space that could be covered with a parasol, and, on account cf her su perior strength, I clung to her and wo began to spin. "Finally, when It seemed to me that wo were performing our antics on the celling with our heads banging down, I could stand It no longer, and, gasping for breath, sug gested that we sit down. I saw two chairs galloping around the room and prepared to catch them on tho next lap. We steered for them, I clinging helplessly to the athletic woman, and then we sank down. I sat dazed and almost insensible until I was aroused by the countess saying: " 'Excuse me, but we are sitting cn the 6amo chair.' " .'intKMM-nt Annlnst Police Officer. mil rr m.... i t..ja . . l . .nj .. uuwu iutu; luua entered formal Judgment or ouster ngalns: I AsUtnnt Chief of Police Ptncek nnd In spectors Hcldelmeyer, llartnclt nnd Knlas. Thl action was In nccordnnco with tho decision rendered by Judgo Tuley last week sustaining the Chicago civil service law tho court deiidlnc that the police orllclnls named were holding o.nco In violation of the oj crniions of that law. I SPEAKING GOOD ENGLISH . s "-tJsw tf3 A Guage of Intel igcnce Aa one acquires the slime of the street on a muddy day, eo one gathers the slang of the street by contact with careless people. P A Good Dictionary is an Armor Against Ignorance The public is possibly prejudiced in favor of old style, old time, antiquated and worn out dictionaries. THE STANDARD DICTIONARY BY FUNK & WACNALLS. i'p accepted every whore by scholars because it satisfies them. It is in fact, as well as name, "Standard. " T-ie arrangement is n nv the style different the scholarship superior the plan most cotnpleto and it is here that "'Ihe Standard" shows its sup eriority over other works of the sort. O lie important feature not to be overlooked is The Price One large volume, in elegant sheep binding. The regular price is 12.00 and you may never have another opportunity. The publisher?, Messrs. Funk & "Wagnalls of 2sTew York, spent nearly one million dollars in preparing this work, but the public apprec ates it most heartily. Hero are some ot the testimonials: SrV N ATI' 11 12 London. Knglnnrt. ,T. Norman LocUyor. the noted astron omer, editor, tnys: "it pnsson tin- wit of man to sucspst nn.vtliltti: wli'tii ought to have boon done that has not been tlono to make this dictionary u Mteccss." TUB DAILY POST. London, Knpland, adds: "It Is a monument to American industry no less than tho great White City uy Lake MUitl- Dlt .1. V. lALMi::i. writes: "I do not hesitate to say that t'ie STANDARD DK'TIONAKY is triumphantly the Vot "t all KiijIMi won! boohs: that In Its surprising comitlett'iiess aud iU'cumey It Is with out a peer." HIvNHY M. STANLEY, tho African explorer, says: "It comes neatest to my Idea of a tirst-ciass dictionary." ' , BOSTON DAILY HKHALD claims that "The STANDARD DIC TIONARY will And Its way everywhere by Its abundant and original merits." NUW YORK II Kit A LD states: "We are free to pronounce It the most complete dictionary yet printed." A. CON AN DOYLH, London, Kns.: "It has becomo quite a Joke with us that we cannot trip up this dictionary. We have several times been sure that we would, but have always failed," HDWARD KVHKKTT II ALU: f.ble." "It Is the blessing of our breakfast i I'DMl'ND (i. STKDMAN: "It h the most Inclusive and scholarly of recent KngUsh dictionaries In not more than two volumes." The ATIIKNAKl'M, Iondon. Kngland: "Its vocabulary Is the most encyclopedic that has ever been compiled. , . its treatment of compounds Is systematic. . . Tho editor has nchleved a hlghljw credltnble measure of success," ' Till: LONDON TIM US. April .1. ISIKi: "The merits of the Stand ard Dictionary are Indisputable and are abundantly attested by a lat e number of itiilinpeachab'.- authorities, . . Should command a wide anl deserved popularity." Til": .lOl'RNAL OF UDI t'ATION, noston: "In thoroup!mes, con" lit s. ini-.tii'.v. typ-isptaphy, stylo and Illustration It rli ' c-";i ii t' ism :"vi urn iat: Is admiration. It will make die u i.. I Its () htor n' d nil wh ) write nit. at praise It evermore." TKU NUW YURI; II Kit ALU: "Tho work Is adm i !' tr every point of view. Is entirely tip to date . . . We ure I : . i nortue It the most i omplete and most satisfactory dlctli. ..i.y yet printed. . , . High praise, to be sure, but It Is well merited T1IU INDUI'UNDUNT. New York: "It Is a noble example In which the mouern tendency to popularize knowledge has risen to the highest level yet reached," TIIU BOSTON DAILY II URALD; "It Is a monument of the highest character which the publishers of this work have reared In honor of the Hngllsh language." TIID SI'NDaY SCHOOL TIMES, Philadelphia: "Continual use of the ilrst volume, since Its Issue, has shown tho work to be a weighty, thorough, rich, nccurate, authoritative nnd convenient ad dltlon to lexicographical material. Tho collaborative method reaches high water mark and produces bold, original, Independent and scl.o! urly results." THU NUWLY ULUCTUD CHANCELLOR OF NKRRASKA I NI VURSITY, PROI'USSOU J. HUN.IAMIN ANDREWS, savs: "I be lleve that this dictionary fulfills the highest Ideal of its' project-irs. It Is an outandont new product and not, like our old dliilniMrles, the result of patching nnd amendment, little by little, the different pieces often added by many, manv minds." !308 FarnamSt. MEGEATH STATIONERY CO. OMAHA. w -rr. r. m. y. r. . w' " WV