THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER .!.. W. W. BANDKKS, PablWtier. NEMAHA. NEBRASKA. VV.VnV.Vn'.Vi'iVr'iV.ViYiYiViiiV.'fiVi'.iiriV. vi-.i-jL.juiAvm ui- a; XUCINDA BOWERS. I 3: BY JOHH WALKER HARRinGTOIt. 5 Copyright, 18D7. 3 LUCINDA BOWEHS looked at the little Invitiition curd, and rebellion uroBc in lier henrt. "I don't care," Hlie said, "I'm going." All the Ohio village of Valley City knew that afternoon that Luclnda Bowers was buying a new dress. Mar garet Elton had seen her purchasing the organdie at Dorchester's that morn ing. Hen Sturgls met itttth Ames, on IiIm way home to dinner, and told her jiiBt what kind of paper pattern he had sold to Luclndn. Mrs. Benson, who hnd issued cards for a lawn party on the following Thursday, could hardly have been ex pected to know who composed "so 'clcty" in Valley City, and who was beyond the pale though several well disposed persons, when they heard that old Sam Bowers' daughter had been invited, would hnve put in a word in the right direction had the list been submitted to them. "Mrs. Benson means well," remarked Widow Simpklns, "but she judges more by a pretty face and a lively tongue than by 'family.' " "I should be very grateful," said Young Mrs. Benson to Luclnda, "if you would help me with the ice cream mid cake at the party next week." Wherever Luclnda went, it was ex pected that she should look after the comestibles which Valley City called "refreshments." She dispensed the "layer" cuke at the strawberry and lee cream sociable; she filled the candy bags at Christmas time; and attended to the commissary arrangements at the annual Sunday school picnics. Indeed, Luclnda Bowers had been a burden bearer from her childhood. She paid the rent and clothed her brothers and piBters from the wages which she earned as a school teacher. She led the Christian Endeavor meetings when no body else would do so. She fanned the faint spark which still remained in the "Women's Missionary society, and kept the sewing circle from disintegration. ll seemed as though Luclnda Bowers had ulways been old. As a mutter of fact, she wns hordly 25. She might have been pretty if she had given more time to Bleep and less to care and worry. 'While the whole town was busy dis cussing the addition to Lucindo's ward robe, the young woman was busy at work upon her first new dress in two yenrs. The organdie was slipped over nn old skirt of blue silk which had be longed to her grandmother. A few bits of lace, a few lines of tucks, a girdle of blue silk ribbon, and the dress was done. "I suppose," remarked Luclnda on the evening of the party, as she looked at herself critically in the cracked mir ror of the old walnut bureau, "that it's wicked for me to spend this money on dress when Johnny may need a new pair of shoes before long. I wish I wasn't so rebellious, but I can't help it." The Benson lawn party is still fa mous in the social history of Valley City. The ambitious young matron who gave the entertainment was not content with the grass plot which surrounded her own pink cottage. She took the lawn belonging to her neighbor as well. Showers of wild flowers hung from the old cherry tree in the center of the lawn, Chinese lanterns shone from the fir tree, and a genuine "Bebepcn's Well" gave forth the most wonderful lemon ade lemonade fortified with the flavor of pineapples and oranges. "Yes," said Mrs. Benson In reply to .the gentle Inquiry of Widow Simpklns, "I got the receipt at my home In the easi. ji is very popular mere." She did not think it necessary to say that this marvelous sherbet was com pounded by Luclnda Bowers. Neither did she consider it of any use to tell her guests that the arrangement of tables under the old cherry tree was suggested by the young woman in the blue orgnndic. The fame of those "refreshments," which were served on the night on which Mrs. James Jerome Benson sprang into social prominence, still lives The "angel food," a species of sponge cake, was really the best which hod ever been served in Valley City. Even to the present day the matrons of that town are wont to say: "I'd like to entertain, top, if I could make such 'angel food' ns Mrs. Benson had at her lawn party." Mrs. Benson 1ms never explained that Luclnda made the am brosial confection which wus served at her tables oi that memorable night. The divinity who brought order out of the chaos of ice cream freezers and cake stands, was arrayed in blue or gandie. Luclnda Bowers, principally because she was not awnre of the fact, was positively pretty that night. Her Hieekb were flushed, her eye (sparkling. She directed the. band of white clad young girls who 'carried about the ice cream laden saucers and handed the tiny coffee cups to the guests. The attention of those who were there on that evening was divided be tween the "angel food" and a literary lion from fcw York. He had not been much of a Hon when he went away from Valley City many years before. Widow Simpklns remembered him as n red-headed, bare-footed boy, who trudged over the hills with his bucket of blackberries to sell. Since those days, however, William Dorrnnce had traded bags of wool and sides of bacon for a college education. Subsequently he had wandered to strange lands, and in one of his pilgrimages had unearthed a long burled city. It was not the city which was of so much importance, but a pavement, in a wonderful state of preservation, which showed that civilization was at least 2,000 years older thun any previ ous ltistory revealed. So William Dor rauce, returning from the dusty plains of the remote east, had written a book which caused all previous ehronologists to hang their heads. Valley City cared little for antiquity, but here was a man wJio had not only written a book, but was talked about-in the daily papers as a great assyriologlst and explorer. William Dorrance seemed to have no very definite Idea why he had come back to the little tillage. He had mnde himself believe that he wished to photograph some of the old plnces which he had known in his boyhood, lie had gone with his camera to the old mill, to the little house where he was born, nnd to the cabin on the out skirts of the village which marks the spot where the first white man made his home In Bottle county. Yet Wil linm Dorrance was not satisfied. It seemed to him that he had missed something which he had unconsciously come to seek. "Mrs. Benson," he asked, "who is that young woman over there, in the blue gown?" "You seem to hove been exploring among the 'lnyer' cukes," replied Mrs. Benson. "That Is Miss Bowers', a young lady who has kindly consented to as sist me this evening. By the way, pro fessor, have you met the Misses Fletch er? They're charming girls." "And the girls in. blue?" persisted the explorer. Nobody knew exactly what happened, but n few minutes Inter another young woman was dispensing "angel food" nnd others directed the ice cream lingadc. "Well, I never!" ejaculated Widow Simpklns. "How little taste." remarked Mnr- "AND THE GIRL IN BLUE?" gnret Elton, "these men of science have. Still, that blue organdie isn't so bad considering the fact that it's slipped over u blue skirt of about the year one." Lucinda Bowers went home that night escorted by Prof. William Dor rance. For the first time In her busy, work-a-day life, she had what the vll lake young people culled n "benu." The woman and the man who walked nlong the low hedge before 'the Mrs. Bowers' yard did not talk of "angel food," nor yet of burled cities. They spoke of a place way over beyond Kinney's hill, where the blackberries grew and the papaw-a nourished. They talked, too, of the days when the hand of the frost king was laid upon the persimmon, and a crystal sheen glistened upon corn and pumpkin of the days when they trudged over the field with sacks of un hulled walnuts, speculating, as they walked, upon the length of time which would be required to rid their small flngeis of the unsightly stains. t "Do you remember," asked the girl, "how you used to hunt arrow heads along the creek?" "Yes," he replied, "and I remember that It was at your suggestion that I started to explore an Indian mound. 1 wus just ten years old. I believe that it was then that I acquired my taste for archaeology." "I think," replied the girl, "that we found a sheep's skull und a mussel shell. I am sure that you owe your career to me." "I have olten thought so," said the man. Valley City was busy talking the next day. Then the young women began to act. They liked each other none too well, but all combined against a com mon foe. Here was one, not even rec ognized in the social register of the lV tie town, who had presumed to attract the attention of a distinguished ex plorer. This coalition of social powers at once began an active campaign. There were drives to the Bock house, and Luclnda was carefully excluded from the list of guests. Prof. Dorrance, ns the drives were arranged especially for his benefit, could not very well refuse the invito tions. There wns a dance nt Dr. Hyde's, and the nnnie of Luclnda Bowers ap peared on no dancing card. The pro fessor was there, for Mrs. Benson, who was a remote relative of his by mar riage, insisted that he must attend. "I rather think," said Margaret El ton to her mother one morning, "that the professor has forgotten all about our young friend of her grandmother's skirt." But the young women of Valley City who composed what was known as the "set" received invitations that after noon which caused them to open their eyes in astonishment. Miss Luclnda Bowers was to give an afternoon tea. If the brass ball had suddenly fallen from the cupola of the courthouse, Val ley Cltj would not have been more as tonished. "1 didn't suppose," said Widow Simpkins' daughter, "that the girl had three siher teaspoons in the house." The young women of the "set"' took counsel together over the inntter, and decided to go $o the tea. Of course none of them had ever invited Lucinda to a tea; but feminine curiosity is mighty, even In Valley City. That Friday afternoon found 1ft modishly dressed young women in the little house in which dwelt Mrs. Bow ers and her five children. There was no silver tenpot, und the silver spoons were worn yellow in places; but the napkin on the little tea tnble was of snowy whiteness, the tea gave forth a grateful fragrance, and the "angel food" wns of marvellous ilakiness. "I'm so glad," said Luclndn, as she toyed nervously with the edge of hemstitched napkin, "that you have, all come to-day. I have known you girls since we were children. I have some thing to tell which I wnntj'ou to know first of all. I am to be married next month to Prof. Dorrance." The young women crowded about her ASKED THE EXPLORER. nnd congratulated her, loudness of tone making up for lack of sincerity. "1 suppose," said Lucinda to her mother, after the guests had departed, "that It wasn't Christian for me to ex ult over them that way; but somehow when things go so far 1 rebel, and lv can't help It." Alrciuly ltvtvnrdotl. The last joke at the expense of the French Society for the Protection of Animals is to the following effect: A countryman armed with an im mense club, presented himself to the president of the society and clnimed the first prize. He was asked todescribe the act of humanity on which he founded his claim. "1 have sated the life of u wolf," re plied the countryman. "I might easily have killed him with this bludgeon," nnd he swung his weapon in the nir, to the intense discomfort of the president. "But where wns the wolf?" inquired the latter. "Vhut hud he done to you?" "Be hud just devoured my wife," was the reply. The president reflected nn instant nnd then suld: "My friend, I am of the opinion thnt you have been sutllclently rewarded." Pittsburgh Dispnteh. Un'COt Of It It ill Oil IllllllllllKN. Builders sny that the walls built dur- ing a rainy season are the strongest und that, when mortar dries quickly, it be comes crumbly and possesses littla binding power. LN OLD UAMELIN TOWN. Intoroatlnff Littlo City Mado Fa mous by a Logond. Once It Wixh n Urcnt I'lncc, Ilut Km Present Importance IlcNtn on the DoIiikh of Itn Pled IMper. Special Berlin (Germany) Letter. One of the chief charms of traveling in Germany, I take It, is this coming unawnres across all sorts of out-of-the-way, quaint little towns and beauti ful landscapes; places where one may make discoveries and see hidden sights hardly anybody seems to have had an Idea of. Provided, alwnys, you do not tie yourself to n cnst-lron route, but meander out of the wny whenever the humor seizes you. I distinctly reineni- RAT CATCHER'S HOUSE AT UAME LIN. ber with what horror a veteran trav eler, a man who knew the length and breadth of Teutonlnnd as he did the Inside of his pocket, regarded me on n smull Moselle steumer, ns in rummag ing my knapsack I inadvertently let drop one of those red-backed "guides." He stared at me for a moment with an odd mixture of disdain and apprehen sion, and then he said: "Surely, I hope you do not travel by one of those books Baedeker or Murray do you? For they're an invention of the devil, gotten up to destroy what little pleasure and benefit is left to-day in traveling. I hastened to nssure him that I did not "travel by" my book; hnd it only with me as an aid to memory, in fact. He gave a sigh of relief, but I noticed after wards that he no longer implicitly trusted me as an intelligent traveling companion he half looked upon me ns a victim to the scarlet-backed vade mecum. Alas, the man Is right. These traveling guides, even the best of them, have knocked the poetry and romance of traveling about 50 per cent, of which is uncertainty into a cocked hat. Well, it wns by dint of one of those fits of sudden resolve that I got out of a fast train which was speeding be tween Hlldesheim and Pnderborn on its way to Cologne, nnd made a trip to Hameln. Who knows it not by repute, that legend-saturated, quaint old town by the Weser! Every schoolboy in an American school, forsooth, knows it by rote, that queerly-snvored poem of Browning's,"The Pied Piper of Hnmelln Town," with its rodent rhythm and sibilant rhymes. But how many hnve ever seen the Hnmeln (for that is the way the nnme of the town is spelled to day) of 1897? For it lies off from the tourist's broad highway, and nothing almost but old associations mny bring the wayfarer to Its gates now. It Is PILLAR HOUSE AT HAMELN. one of the many towns in northwestern Germany which have sunk from their once high estate, from their wealth and civic independence, and deteriorated into places of third-rate importance. Yet to the lover of the quaint and ro mantic und ancient there clings nn in describable charm to this old town even to-day, and from the mere point of sight-seeing there is much there to in terest. The broad Weser river rolls its swift, greenish waters along. Steep, verdure-clad hills rise along its shores, and the darkling mountain into whose clefts the vengeful "rat-catcher" is said to have taken the little ones by the Bound of his ravishing pipe, is still there unchanged. A fine suspension bridge spans the river, and on the other side burghers hnve built their pretty cot tages, all nestling in roses nnd honey suckles. Freight bouts nnd smull pleas ure steamers, in spnrse numbers, ply the wuterB. nnd a few sputtering chim lTOKt? neys show the sites of ns many fac tories. The town, then, is not dead. By ad means. There, is electric light by night In the streets and in the windows, and its single hotel even bonsts an electric plant of its own. But you go into tho center of Hnmeln and you find your self suddenly in the days of medieval ism. What's more, the inhabitants hero still swear by the old "rat-catcher" legend. The lads und lasses hear of It in school and they, too, firmly believe it. The narrow, dark streets of tall, crooked houses are redolent with it. And here, right in the middle of it all, n stone's throw from the ancient market square, with its rough cobble stones and its dingy, reeking nlleys of approach, is the "Bat-Catcher's House" the nattenfnengerhaus or, ns its proper title is to-day, the "Hoehzeits hnus." or Wedding house, the old cit'v hall of Hameln, where, many centuries ago, the Pled Piper Is said to have struck a bargain with the grave nnd reverend seigniors who then represented the city's government, by which they be und themselves to pny a goodly price In exchange for his clearing the streets and houses of that nibbling pest, the rms, and which bargain they subse quently repudiated so much the worse for them. This edifice of his toric, or legendary, interest is, besides, one of the choicest and most perfect specimens of German renaissance. Tho building material is a soft sandstone, and it lent itself admirably to those pretty sculptured effects the Germans of the middle nges were so fond of re producing on the fronts of their build ings. The outlines are a little worn, now nnd become indistinct in spots, but that rather heightens than de tracts from the total effect, A big wine dealer occupies the lower part of this house now, and upstairs, in the large wide hall nil the weddings nnd merry mnkings of the town ure celebrated to this day. Even while 1 gazed there was the sound of revelry by night not a spook, mind you, though the silver light of the moon lent it nil a fairy, airy air, but real flutes and fiddles, played by flesh-and-blood musicians and the sound of dancing and of clapping of hands stole through the open windows. So, you C&ZT HAMELN CATHEDRAL. see, Hnmeln folks are happy once more,, and lively, and they have minded the concluding lines of Browning's poem: "So, Willy, let you and mo be wipers Of scores out with all men especially pipers; And, whether they pipe us free, from rats or from mice, If we've promised them aught, let u keep our promise." But beside this famous old house there are a score or two of other very beuutilul old houses and palaces la the town, fronts still thick with carved escutcheons of noble and mighty fam ilies; extinct, lo! these 200 or 300 yeurs; mottoes in atone tracing and heavily gilt over running the length of a whole Uoor; curious figures and faces lu dingy wrought iron, and coats-of-arni3 blazon forth on worm-eaten oaken, panelings. There's a wealth of motif and designs for the painter and the fcculptor und the artisan to be had here, und the spirit of long ugo still stalks about unmolested. One of the most original and interesting of these old houses is the Pillar house, so called be cause of its stone pillars, the first ones used for the support of the upper struc ture of any house In this part of Ger many, and I daresay the wonder of many days in Hameln town 500 yeurs ago. Another very fine old structure Is the Dom, or cathedral, one of the oldest, if not the oldest there, for it is purely Bomanesque in style and at least 750 years old. Jews, too, there are many in this ancient place, theii names purely old testamentary as are their shrewd features, some of whom nre said to be the offspring of men who were here be fore the crusndes. And one of them, a rich banker, lives nnd does business in u large palace which looks as old as the flood. It impressed me strnngely to. see, in the midst of all those evidences of a moldy past the signs of the most modern of modern civilization incandescent and arc lights, and Prussian infantry with the gun of newest type stalking the streets. And when my hotel bill was presented to me next morning at breakfast, the last remaining doubts us to the chnnces of Hnmeln Town to adapt itself to our times vanished that bill was thoroughly modern. WOLF VON SCHIERBRAND. Glass was early known. Glass bend were found on the bodies of inumraie over 3,000 years old. I I fFrr3s ? NJ I ' k n A A x.