T A 1 'THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER W. W. SAN DICKS, PnblUher. iNEMAHA, NEBRASKA. PERSEVERE. You nrc hlsh and higher almlnc (Earnest effort needs no shaming), With enthusiasm claiming A career; You would scale the heights of learning i For deep erudition yearning Slothful enso and byways spurning Persevere. Covet wealth? Then work and win It. And persist when you begin It, There la satisfaction In It, Nevor fear; Or you long for martial story "Want your name In song and story. Never heed the gashes gory. Persevere Pleasure pleads, be wise, eschew It, If you waver you will ruo It, Choooe your path and then pursue It, Year by year; 'Fickle hearts are happy never, Nothing, gnlncd vlthout endeavor, 'Loyal to your purpose ever, Persevere. On the heights the crown Is gleaming, Where success Is softly beaming, Dlfllculties, mighty seeming, Disappear, ' If you faco them Arm and fearless, Though the path Is cold and cheerless. Ahl the prize Is precious, peerloss, Persevere. Anno II. Woodruff, In Good Housekeep ing. '! .-..-.....i ; The World Against flim Rv WIT I. N. HARRPN. ' ' Copyright, 1500. by 4 A. N. Kollofiu Nowspnpor Company. B""" '' "'"''' "T1 CHAPTER VI. Continued. Cnpt. Winkle pnled nnd interfaced his fingers tightly on the smooth top of ' the mahogany table. For one second he glared like a condemned man nt the speaker and then the fierce stare of her eyes bore his own to the ground. "Ferhnps," spoke up Mr. Hardy, whose jests were rare nnd often too jpcrsonal, and who did not admire the captain, "perhaps Cnpt. Vinkl u'l not tell us all the story after nil. I noticed that he was not wearing hi" togs to--day." Cnpt. Winkle seemed to have loH his .speech. And the colonel, fearing that liis daughter had inadvertently made u -disagreeable comparison, frowned tip at 'her. ' "What are you talking about, Eve lyn?" he asked sharply. N "Oh, only a little story I hnve rend," she said, coldly. "I shnll try to look it nip. It had a beautiful moral." With that parting shot nt the cower ing victim of his own folly, she dr Mrs. Lancaster again out on the ve randn. "Why, denr, you have almost fright ened me," said Mrs. Lancaster, under her breath. "What did you mean by what you said?" "1 meant to cut the very soul of that little coward, if he has one," the girl said, fiercely. "I almost feel as if I ought to have exposed him to the otherf 'before whom he was posing as a bravo man when he is no more than " Evelyn had been speaking so rapid ly that her words ran upon one another and became a jumbled, unintelligible mnss. Mrs. Lancaster turned Evelyn' white, impassioned face towards the light of the moon and grasped her rigid Hiands. "You almost frighten me, dar ling," she repeated; "what has wrought .you up to such a pitch of excitement?' "I think I ought to tell you all about it," answered Evelyn, nfter a moment's -deliberation, "but it must be in confl denee." "You can trust me, dear," the sweet old lady assured her. -4 They sat down in a hammock and V'velyn kept it in motion with her slip percd feet as they rested lightly on the .iloor. "Do you remember the young man 1 showed you ut church that day?" 'The one," questioned Mrs. Lan your caster, "who you said had saved UfV9" "Yes; do you remember him?" "Quite well; his face made a wonder ful impression on me, tnnd I have -thought of him a hundred times nfter -nil you told me of his struggle to bet ter his condition and educate himself. I don't think 1 ever saw a finer speci men of physical manhood; he had a su perb face. Were j'ou alluding to him?" Then in a low voice full of agitation Evelyn explained. For several minutes after the girl )had finished the old lady remained silent, then she asked gen.tly, cautious- 'ly, as if she were treading on ground upon which she had not been invited: "Do you realize what all this means, .dear Evelyn?" "I realize that Mr. Fnnshaw is n -friend of mine, and that Capt. Winkle hai tried to humiliate him in public." "I did not mean exactly that," the widow corrected, quickly. "It is your fjwn danger that I am thinking about." "My danger?" Evelyn emphasized the -first word. "Yes, you see it is difficult for a young igirl to be wholly in sympathy with such a noble, suffering character as this "ifr. Faushaw without running u risk of becoming dangerously interested. Young girls lire prone to care for what is withheld from them, and you may not be an exception to the rule. You ought to keep the 'fact nlwnys before you that nothing but disaster could come from an alliance with one so far beneath you, at least in point of birth; you see what I mean." Evelyn drew herself up stiffly,. "You need have no fears in that di rection," she averred. "We have ncltl -er of us thought of that." "Hut," gently persisted the old lady, "you may not even now know your own heart. I am afraid you eould not have been so fierce just now had the captain been talking about any other man." "I don't like to think for a moment, Mrs. Lancaster, that Mr. Fnnshaw is beneath us in any respect." "Ah," interrupted the older woman, "that is still another proof of your peril; you even want to feel that he is your equal, when, my poor child, all thnt you may know him to be mentnlly, morally of otherwise cannot mukbhim so. Itcmcmber your fnther's pridethe high standing of your family. It would break his heart, Evelyn." "What would break his heart?" burst petulantly from the girl's lips. "It would break his heart to refuse you anything, and yet he could not consent to your marrying into such a family as Mr. Fanshaw's." Evelyn's face was very white, and in the. moonlight, it looked ghastly. "I hnve never dreamt of such a thing," she said, quite truthfully. "I have thought only of his happiness I have only prayed that he might tri umph over nil the obstacles in his wny to h'.icees and happiness." The negvo quarter, consisting- of a villuge of about thirty log cabins, lay on the left of the mansion, and from its intricate, lanelike streets came three mulatto musicians, carrying a guitar, a mandolin and a mouth organ. They paused nt the steps and began plny ing. This caused the card players, who were evidently tired of their game, to rise and come out on the veranda, the colonel last of all, clapping his fat hands in unison with the music. Mrs. Lnncastcr spoke quickly, ns if she feared the others might come down to where she nnd Evelyn sat. "I fondly hope Jr. Fnnshaw will suc ceed. He may become a great man in time, but he ought not to be hampered by anything, nnd 1 know of no greater hindrance to a young man than for him to love some one above his station. Therefore, dear, you must be very care ful; you must not allow him to fall in love with you." "In lovo with me?" the words were spoken scarcely louder than a whisper, and then Mrs. Lancaster felt a shudder pass through the figure in her arms. Evelyn was thinking of a look she hnd seen in Itonald Fanshaw's eyes as they sat alone that morning. At this juncture the couple snw Cnpt. Winkle sauntering down the veranda towards them. "He is looking for you," said the widow; "shall 1 leave you alone with him?" Evelyn's voice sounded harsh when she replied: "I presume you might as well; it is plain that he wants to have it out with me. I think I can manage him." Mrs. Lancaster rose ns the officer drew near. "I think I shall ask the musicians to play my favorite," she said, speaking at Winkle, to whom she had nodded. As she moved away the captain stnrt ed to sit in the hammock beside its oc cupant, but Evelyn promptly stood up and leaned against the balustrade. Her action was greeted with a grunt of dis approval on the part of the young man. "It is just a little cool at this end," she said, half apologetically. "You make me feel that it is decidedly so," he retorted. "Hut I hope you will benr "he temperature a moment longer." "You wish to speak to me, sir?" He was evidently under great agita tion and he seemed to reduce his voice to calmness only by extra effort. "I have for sonic time suspected that you were allowing yourself to become interested in that country bumpkin,'' he said, almost brutally; "but I did not dream till to-night that you were in correspondence with him." "Most of your dreams occur at night, do they not, captain?" Evelyn had lifted her eyebrows and was smiling coldly, defiantly. "I guess there is no dream about your corresponding with him at least that he has written you to-day," returned Winkle, in a white hent. "You have been in the house all the afternoon, and besides no one but him could have could have "" Winkle found himself sliding into a pitfall of his own making, and the startled vacuity of his s.-nall face caused Evelyn to laugh out immoderately. "Oh!" she exclaimed, "you think he wrote me nbout the shearing process." For a moment the captain could only stare stupidly, 'then a lame defense came to his lips. "I could not think of anyone else who could report bitch a lie to you," he sr.id. "I enn't believe that Mr. Fnnshaw would write mo a deliberate false hood," she returned, still smiling tan tallzlngly. "Ho is quite truthful and honorable." Winkle's Up curled and quivered im-potently. "Do you consider it arc'1 honorable thing to writo a lie about a mana a rival? I presume 1 may cnll him that, since you have encouraged him to that extent." "Ho has never thought of you as n a rival," mocked Evelyn, with a pro nounced sneer. Sho moved toward the others, but ho grasped her arm nnd detained her. Ills fury was How unbridled. "I shall report this to your fnthcr," lui threatened. "You intend to tell my father that correspond with Mr. Fnnshaw?" she asked, sternly, coldly. "I shall feel It my duty as his friend, knowing that he would disapprove of It, and that you are doing a most fool ish thing." "Then you will tell him a false hood," she said, with a white smile, and eyes which flashed lxko diamonds in the moonlight. "You do not correspond with him? He has not written to you to-day?" "Ho has never written mc a lhuj in his life. I happened to be a listener to his challenge nnd a witness to your cowardice. As for his unique hu miliation of you, I actually quivered with delight when he cut oft your brazen Vadges of bravery. He repent ed of having done it like a bravo man would when ho saw that 1 had seen it all, nnd he gave me the things to sew bnck on your coat, but you are light ing with a woman now, nnd 1 shall retain them. I may need them in the future." He shrank from her as if she had struck him in the face. And with a little taunting laugh, Evelyn left him. Sho was so agitated that she avoided tho others who were listening to the negroes n& they sang a spirited ballad. If Konald Fnnshaw could have wit nessed what passed at Carnleigh that evening, it might have softened his sharp self-censure for whnt he had done in the heat of passion. He had always looked upon duelling as radi cally wrong, and he now told himself he had gone too far in further humili ating a man after ho had tacitly thrown himself on his mercy. lleforo he had quitted the colonel's wood that morning ho was brought face to face with n product of his example that added a fresh sting to his general dis content. He had almost reached the boundary fence when he came upon his shaggy- "I SHALL REPORT THIS TO YOUR. FA THER.," HE THREATENED. haired, barefooted brother, standing up to his ankles In the wet loam of a swampy spot. Dave was leaning on n rifle as tall and sturdy-looking as him self, an old-fnshloned treasure which he brought out only on special occa sions, such as prize shooting matches at which he was a champion shot and when there was a threatened "black upuising." "Why, Dave, what urc you doing here?" Jtonald asked, in astonish ment. "Huh! I ain't a-doiu nothln'. but what I would a-donc, ef I'd a-been needed, would n-bcen a plenty." His brother stared at him. "You mean you thought of tnking a hand, Dave?" "I was a-goln to give you yore chance fust," baid the fellow; "but, you bet, 1 was a-goln' to sec which one was able to keep on his feet after the scrap, an ef it had a-been him, he'd a-been my meat. I blowed this tube out witJi a prayer" (Dave patted his gun caressingly and smiled). "I kissed my patehin', blessed my powder, an' rammed my lead home with the arm of justice to all men." "Dave, that would have been mur der." "Murder a dog's hind foot! Ef that little cymlin'-headed puppy had killed you, Hon, I'd a settled his hash ef I'd n-had to do it with my bare fists." Dave broke into an impulsive laugh. "I5y hunkey, Hon, you give me the fthlvcrs awhile ago. I wasn't nigh enough to hear what was passin' twixt you an' him, but when I seed you draw yore knife an' ketch Mm by the collar, 1 thought you was goin' to dig out liis heart, an' that he was a-goin' to stand still while you was at it. What in the name o' common senso was you do in'?" Itonald gave him tho benefit of an explanation, and Davo laughed incred ulously. "An you didn't even ship his jaws?" "No, I was satisfied." "Well," was the philosophical re mark, ns the speaker drew one of his feet out of the mire and prepare! to wills on, "ef satisfaction was good t' eat, an growed on vines, I wouldn't send you out to pick none fur my iVn-ner." CIIAPTIIU VI. Ono morning in lc month of July, when Honnld returned from his to bacco field, he found a score or more uioiintninecrs in the front ynrd. They were discussing nn awful crime Mint had been commlttced about dawn that tiny. Mrs. Telplay, n widow who lived alone In a cottage at the foot of tho mountain, was found brutnlly mur dered. It hnd been generally known thnt she kept quite a sum of money In nn old hair trunk under her bed, having nlwnys refused to take tho ad vice of her friends to put her snvlngs in a more sccuro place. The trunk was found to have been BpHt open by Hie bloody nx vhlch had killed tho owner, nnd tho money wns gone. Sydney Hurt, a tail, raw-boned young man, with sharp black eyes and a big mustache dyed to match, sat astride his fine horse ami told what ho knew of tho affair. Ah ho talked he fanned his aquiline face with his sombrero. "As soon ns Jeff, that's her nigger house boy, came in to make the fires," ho was saying ns Ilonnld approached, "he seed what hnd happened, nn' run out to, give the ulnrm." "Didn't nobody suspicion Jeff?" queried old Fanshnw, who sat on tho steps in his stockings. "Don't be so blamed fast," snarled Ihe narrator, with n frown. He r.ould not abide interruption. He wns a sort of leader of moonshiners, though It had never been proven ngninst him, and he was accustomed to more re spect than ho deserved. "Well, go on," grunted Fnnshaw, "you aro about as good ut tellln' a thing ns a one-legged man is at a klckln' bee. You no sooner make a start than you kick tho end o' yore spine up in tho ground an' thar you nre." The crowd laughed impulsively, but the Jlerco glare of Syd Hart's eyes soon put nn end to the merriment. "You must n-hnd rnzor soup fur breakfast," he grunted, letting IiIb eyes lest on Fnnshaw, and then ho began to smile. "Thar wasn't no uho a bus plclonln' Jeff," he proceeded; "fur as soon ns tho news got out Thad Wil liams straddled his marc an' notified the bheriff. HatcliiT Is quick on trig ger, an lie tuck Thnd's mure nir made fur thj spot nrmed to tho teeth." "Well, did he ketch the one that did it?" broke in Dave Fanshaw, Im patiently, nnd nnyone could have seen from his face that he was not one of Hart's followers. Syd bent his eyes on Dnve's face and sneered. "You are like yore daddy," he observed, "you want yore hog 'fore it's barbecued. Yes, you bet ho kctched Mm; that's what he was out atter. About half a mile from the widow's house he run across a young stranger n-hldln In a bam nigh the talc mines. He was too good a thing to be missed, so IlatclllI arrested Mm then an' thar an' made Mm turn Ms pockcl3 wrong bide out. He had lift' dollars in hard cash, an', more over, his hands was red in streaks, nn' he hnd blood on his handkerchief an' ahirt-slceves. He was a young fellow, an 'cried like a baby; he said ho hadn't killed nobody, nur stole nobody'tj money, but lint cliff tuck Mm in tow He was seek a little fellow that Hat elllt Mowed folks ud got the laugh on Mm if he roped or handcuffed Mm, so he started on with Mm jest so. MMiey made it nil right till they got back heer a piece to the beginnin' o Col. Husbrooke's swamp. Thar, at SwIIT'h cabin, Jtatcliff stopped' to git a light fur his cigar. Nobody ever hecrd tell o' him tnkin' a prisoner to jnll with out he hnd a cigar stuck in his J-tw. He don' spend u dollnr n. yeer fur ci gars, but he has to smoke one when lie jugs u man. It makes him look im portant. He had jest called fur a chunk o' fire, an' Mlz Swiff was fetehin' it out to 'im, when lo an' behold, the little stranger bhowed he was up to snuff. Ho dodged off behind a hay-, stack before HatcliiT could draw his gun an' was off into the swamp like n skeered rabbit. A boss ain't wiith a tinker's dam In swampy land nn' cane brakes, nn' Ilalcliff ain't ns limber as he wuz twenty yeer back. And," the speaker broke off with a laugh, "the little skunk's in the swamp yit. Me an' these- fellows is to watch this road, an' Katcliff's gone round t'other side to stir up tho peo ple. They'll drive Mm this wny he'oro long, nn' then the fun will begin." "What do you mean by the fun?" broke in llomild sharply. MMie gaunt giant on the horse shrugged his shoulders and bent n critical, half-aggressive glance on the questioner. "Oh, I reckon the boys won't want to wait fur them blamed thievish law yers in town to get a whack at Mm an' finally git Mm turned loose. We hain't got much book l'lu-nlii', but we know when a man's guilty, an' we knov? whut lawyers is." To Re Continued An liiMal ttiroil l.lkiMiCNu. Critic I must congratulate you on the villain of your play. He leaven the Impression of having been drawn.frOm the life. Author He was. J may say to you that he is nn exact portrait of inyscli us my wife depicts mc in our hours of ease. Urooklyn Life, Free If Yon Write nt Uiiuv. An Illustrated Catalogue of 201 pages nnd 8,500 engraving has just been issued which must interest nil who rend this notice. It it iuued by the Merinod & Jaccnrd Jewelry Co., Urondway, corner Locust street, St, Louis, and is lull of new nnd desirable ar ticles suitable for Christmas gifts, ranging in price from '25 cents to $1,000. It is so complete that one cannot buy Christina goods to advantage without consulting it, especially as the house is known by tho well-earned title of "The Lowest Priced IJouie in America for Fine Goods." All thnt is new nnd dcslrnble in Diamonds, Watches, Silverware, Cut Glass, Clocks. Chlnawnre, Umbrellas, Art Wares, Optical Woods, I ine Stationery, etc., arc con tained in this great Catalogue, and St. Louis is brought right to your doors, as th arm sells nt St. Louis prices nnd pnys ex press charges to nny part of the United States. To each of the first 10,000 who send in their names nnd addresses, n copy of thij Catalogue will he mailed, postage paid. When in St. Louis Mcrmod A. Jaccnrd'i cordially invite all visitors to call nnd in spect their grand collection of mnrblc stat uary nnd art wnrcs. It is well worth n visit. Write nt once to insure receiving Catalogue. Snndy nn nn Art Critic. One day, while Millnls was paintinp; h! famous picture, "Chill October' among tho reeds nnd rushes on the hanks of the 1'ay, n. man came up behind him and stood look ing ai mo picture, then at the surroundinjr landscape. Finally he asked in a broad Scotch dialect: "Man, did ye never try pho tography?" "No, never," replied Millais, painting slowly. A pause, ''it's n hnntle nattt. Ymr Poor Ilaolc Aches and aches and aches. Every move ment hurts. Stunding, lying, sitting, walk ing, alwnys aches. You may linvo relief if you will. f Science knows why your back aches. Science has given the world Dodd's Kidney Pills. They never fail. Thousand who have doubted just as you do now have tried and proven them. Their evidence you have. They say they have been cured. Many hnd tried everything else and given up hope. Many had been given up by tho doctors. They say that they have been completely cured by the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills. You, too. may be cured. Do not suffer a moment longer, lie sure you get tho ucn uino Dodd's Kidney Pills. The bootblack begins at the foot. N. Y. Press. The llcut Prescription for CIiIIih nnd Fever Is a uoltln of Guovr.'s Tartri.im Ciiim. Tonic. His Hlmplyironnudniiltiluolii utiistolossrorin. Novum- no pay. Prlco.WX:. Abuse is doubly painful when wit Is used as n conveyance. Chicago Dally Ncwb. Excursion Sleeper Vln M., K. & T. Itjr. Weekly Excursion Sleepers leave St. Loub via Katy Flyer (M. K. & T. Ky.) every Tues day at 8:10 p. in. for Snn Antonio, Los An geles nnd San Francisco. Weekly Excursion Sleepers leave Kansas City via the M. K. &, T. lly. every Saturday at 0:05 p. in. for San Antonio, Los Angcks and San Francisco. A smile is the reflection of a light heart. Chicago Daily News. Carter' Ink in used by millions, which is a sure proof of Itsmiality. Send for frco booklet, "Inklings." Address Carter's Ink Co., Boston, Mnss. $$$X"::K$5ft4 ? COME AND GO In many forms Rheumatism Neuralgia Lumbago Sciatica makeup a large part of human RiifTcrltiK. 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