" - TO PROLOGUE. : A young man and a beautiful young woman, lost and alone in a wilderness for months, half starved and in daily peril of death from wild beasts and still more savage Indians this is the central theme of the most fasci nating romance thai has come from Emerson Hough's pen. Head and you will learn how love came to them; how they conducted themselves in this try ing, unconventional situation; how the man's chivalry and the woman's purity held them stead 'fast to the ideals of civilization, and how the strange episode brought tragedies, estrangements and happiness. CHAPTER XVIII. The Yoke. WHEN we started to the south on the following morning T rode far at the rear under guard. I recall little of our journey toward Laramie save that aft er a day or two we swung out from the foothills Into a short grass country jind so finally struck the steady up ward sweep of a valley along which lay the great transcontinental trail. I Io not know whether we traveled two days or three or four, since all the days seemed night to me and all the nights were uniform in torture. Finally we drove down Into a dusty plain and so came to the old frontier fort Here, then, was civilization the stagecoach, the new telegraph wire, men and wo men, weekly or daily touch with the world, that prying curiosity regarding the affairs of others which we call news. To me it seemed tawdry, sor did, worthless, after that which I bad left The noise seemed insupportable, the food distasteful. I could tolerate no roof and in my own ragged robes slept on the ground within the old stockade. t was still guarded as a prisoner. I was approached by none and had con versation with none until evening of the day after my arrival. When I ate it was at no gentleman's table, but In the barracks. I resented Judgment sentence and punishment, thus exe cuted in one. Evening gun had sound ed, and the flag had been furled on my second day at Laramie, when finally Colonel Meriwether sent for me to come to his office quarters. "Mr. Cowles," said he. "it is time now that you and I had a talk. Pres ently you will be leaving Laramie. I cannot try you by court martini, for you are a civilian. In short, all I can say to you is to go, with the hope that jou may ""never again crosi our 'flvesT' I looked nt htm a time silently, hat ing not him personally as much as I bated all the world. But presently I asked him, "Have you no word for me tnm her?" "Miss Meriwether has no word for you," be answered sternly, "nor ever will have. Tou are no longer neces sary in ber plans." "Ah. then." said I. "you have chang ed your own mind mightily." lie set his lips together in bis grim fashion. "Yes." said he. "1 have changed my mind absolutely. I have just come from a very trying inter Tiew. It Is not necessary for me to explain to you the full nature of It" "Then she has sent for me?" "She will never send for you. I have said." "But listen. At least I have brought her back to you snfo and sound. Set ting aside all my own acts in other matters, why can you not remember at least so much as that? Yet you treat me like n dog. I tell you I shall not leave without word from her, and when I leave I shall make no prom ises as to when I shall or shall not come back. So long as one chance re mains" "I tell you that there is no longer any chnnce, no longer the ghngt of a chance. It Is my duty to Inform you, sir, that a proper suitor long ago ap plied for my daughter's hand, that he has renewed his suit and that now she hs". accented. bmV. THE WAY OF A MAN By Emerson Hough Copyright, IVQ7, by the Outinf- Publishing Company FoFifTfiTu- T s:it staring stupidly at him. "You need speak nothing but the truth with inc." I said at Inst. "Colonel Meriwether. I have never given bonds to be gentle when abused." "I u.ii telllnc you the truth." he said. "My daughter. .Miss Meriwether, is en gnxed to I.iciitennut Lawrence Bel knap of the Ninth dragoons! You feel your honor too deeply touched? Fer haps nt n later time Llouteuant Bel knap will do himself the disgrace of accommodating you." "If I killed him." snld I Anally, "how would It better her case? Moreover, before I could take nuy more risk I must no back to Virginia. My mother needs me there most sadly." "Yes, and Miss Grace Sheraton needs you there sadly as well." he retorted. "tJo back. then, and mend your prom ises and do some of those duties which you now begin to remember. You have proved yourself a man of no honor. I stigmatize you now as o coward." "You speak freely to your prisoner, Colonel Meriwether," I said slowly nt length. "There is time yet for many risks chances for many things. But now I think you owe it to me to tei! ine how this matter was arranged." "Very well, then. Belknap iisl.c! i for permission to try his chan c : ago before I came west to L;:;-.- ! assigned him to bring her t!.r i i me. Ho was distracted nt In- to do ho. He has been out with : 1 nil the summer searching for yon n.i. i aud has not been buck at 1-iu-.-: more than ten days. Oh. we all Ur.:- why you did not come back to the se; tlemeuts. When we came In be guess ed nil that you know. He knew that all the world would talk. And. like u man, he asked the right to silence all that talk forever." "And she agreed? Ellen Meriwether accepted him on such terms?" "It is arranged," said he, not an swering me directly, "and It removes at once all necessity for any other ur rahgemeht. As for you. you disappear. It will be announced all through tin army that she and Lieutenant Belknap were married at Leavenworth before they started west and that it was they two and not you and my daughter who were lost." , "And Belknnp was content to d this?" I mused. "He would do thl after Ellen told him that she loved me." 4 "Stop!" thundered Colonel Meriweth er. "I have told you all that is neccs sary. I will add that he snld to me. like the gentleman he Is, that in case my daughter asked it be would marry her and leave her at once, nntll she of ber own free will asked him to re turn. There is abundant opportunity for swift changes in the army. What seems to you absurd will work out in perfectly practical fashion." "Yes," suld I. "in fashion perfectly practical for the ruin of her life. You may leave mine out of the question." "I do, sir," was his icy reply. "She told you to your face, and in my hear ing, that you had deceived ber, that you must go." "Yes." 1 said, dully. "I did deceive ber. and there is no punishment on earth great enough to give me for that eicept to have no word from ber!" "You are to go at once. 1 put it beyond you to understand Belknap's conduct In this matter." "He is a gentleman," I said, "and fit to love her. I think none of us needs praise or blame for that." He choked up. "She's my girl," he aid. "Yes, all my boys in the army love her there isn't one of them that wouldn't be proud to marry ber on any terms she would lay down. And there Isn't a man In the army, married or single, that wouldn't challenge you if you breathed a word of what has gone between you and ber." It seemed to me so unspeakably aad, so incredible, that one should be so unbelievably underestimated. "Now, finally," resumed Colonel Meri wether, after a time, ceasing bis walk ing up and down, "I must close up what remains between you and me. My daughter said to me that you want ed to see me on some business matter. Of course you bad some reason for coming out here." "That was my only reason for com ing," I rejoined. "I wanted to see you upon an important business matter. I was sent here by the last message my father gave any one by the last words he spoke in his life. He told me I ' should come to you." "Well, well, if you have any favor to ask of me out with it and let us end It all at one sitting." "Sir," I Bald, "I would see you damned forever before I would ask a crust or a cup of water of yon, though I were starving and burning. I have beard enough." - "Order!;-!" he called out. "Show this wan To tCe gate." It was at last borne in upon me that . must leave without any word from Ellen. She was hedged about by all the stern and cold machinery of nn army post, out of whose calculations I was left as much ns though I belonged to a different world. I cannot express what this meant for me. For weeks now, for months, indeed, we two hud been together each hour of the day. I had come to expect her greeting in the morning, to turn to her a thousand ! times in the day with some query or answer. I had made no plan from which she was absent. I hud come to accept myself with her as fit part of an appointed and happy scheme. Now, j in a twinkling, ull that hud been sub verted. "' It was thus that I, dulled, bereft; 1, having lived, now dead; I, late free, now bound again, turned away sullen ly and began my Journey back to the life I had known before 1 met her. As 1 passed east by the Denver stage I met hurrying throngs always coming westward. 11 wavelike' migration of population now even denser than It had been the preceding spring. They came on. n vast, continuous stream of hope, confidence and youth. I, who stemmed that current, alone was un like it in all ways. One thing only quickened my lag gard heart, and that was the all preva lent talk of war. At last, nfter weeks of travel across a disturbed country. I finally reached the angry hive of political dissension nt Washington. Here I was near home, but did not tarry, and passed thence by stage to Leesburg, in Virginia, and so finally came back into our little val ley and the quiet town of Wnllingford. 1 hud gone away the victim of misfor tune; 1 returned home with a broken word nnd an unfinished promise und n shaken heort. That was my return. I got mo n horse nt Wnllingford burns nnd rode out to Cowles' Farms. At the gate I halted nnd looked iu over the wide lawns. It seemed to me 1 noted n change in them ns in myself. The grass was unkempt, the flower beds showed little nttentlon. I opened the gate for myself, rode up to the old stoop and dismounted for the first time in my life there without a boy to take my horse. I walked slowly up tho slops to the great front door of the old house. No servant en me to meet mo grinning. I, grandson of the man who built that house, my father's home and mine, lifted the brazen knocker of the door und heard no footstep anticipate my knock. The place sounded empty. Finally there eunie a shuttling footfall nnd the door was 6pened, but there stood before me no one that I recog Idxed. It was a smallish, oldish, gray ish man who opened the door and smiled in query at me. "I am .lohu Cowles, sir," I snld, hesi tating. "Yourself I do not seem to knoW- "My name Is Halllday. Mr. Cowles," be replied. A flush of humiliation came to my face. "I should kuow you. You were my father's creditor." "Yes, sir. my firm was the bolder of certain obligations at the time of your fathers death. You have been gone very long without word to us. Mennttnie. pending any action" "You have moved In!" "I have ventured to tnke possession. Mr. Cowles. That wua as your mother wished. She waived all her rights and surrendered everything, snld all the debts must be paid" "Of course" - "And all we could prevail upon ber to do wns to take up her quurters there In one of the little bouses." He pointed wits this euphemism to ward our old servants' quarters. So there was my mother, a woman gently reared, tenderly cared for all ber life, living in a cabin where once slaves bud lived. And I bnd come back to ber, to tell a story such as mine! "1 hope." said he. hesitating, "that all these matters may presently be adjusted. But first I ask you to in fluence your mother to come back into the place and take up ber residence." I smiled slowly. "You hardly under stand her." I said. "I doubt if my in fluence will suffice for that But I shall meet you again." I was turning away. "Your mother, I bellve. is not hero she went over to Walllngford. I think it is the day when she goes to the little church"- "Yes, I know. If you will excuse me I shall ride over to see If 1 can And her." ne bowed. I was hurrying down the road again. It seemed to me that I conld never tolerate the sight of a stranger as master at Cowles' Farms. I found her at the churchyard of the old meeting house. She was Just turn ing toward tho gate In the low sand stone wall which surrounded the bury ing ground and separated it from the space Immediately about the little stone church. I knew what It was that she looked upon as she turned back toward that spot it was one more low mound, simple, unpretentious, added to the many which bad been placed there this last century and a half; one more little gray sandstone headmark, cut simply with the name and dates of him who rested there, last In a long roll of our others. The slight figure In the dove colored gown looked back tin gerlngly. It gave a new ache to my heart to see ber there. She did not notice me as t slipped down from my saddle and fastened my horse at the long rack. But when 1 called she turned uul came 10 me with open arms. "Jack!" she cried. "My son, how I have missed tbeel Now thee baa come back to thy mother." She put her forehead on my shoulder, but present ly took up a mother's scrutiny. Iler hand stroked mjjbajr, my unshaven beuKI, liHikTui "eachHuc "iuyTiIcT. "Thee has a button from thy coat," she suld reprovingly. "And what Is this scar on thy neck; thee did not tell ine when thee wrote. Jack, what alls thee?" She looked nt ine closely. "Thee is changed. Thee Is older. What has come to thee, my son?" "Come." I said to her nt length nud led her toward the steps of the little church. Then I broke out bitterly and railed ngnlnst our 111 fortune nnd cursed at the man who would allow her to live In servants' quarters Indeed, railed nt all of life. "Thee must learn to subdue thyself, my sou," she said. "It is only so that strength comes to us, when we bend the buck to the furrow God sets for us. I nm quite content in my little rooms. I have made them very clean. nnd I have with a ine a few things of my own a few, not many." "But your neighbors, mother, the Sheratons" "Oh, certainly, they asked me to live with them. But I wns not moved to do thnt. You see, I know each rose bush and apple tree on our old place. I did not like to lenvo them. "Besides, ns to the Sheratons. Jack." she begun again "I do not wish to sny The is old. What has come to thee, my on?" one word to hurt thy feelings, but Miss Grace"- "Wbut about Miss Grace?" "Mr. Orme, the gentleman who once stopped with us a few days" "Oh, Orme! Is he here again? He was all through the west with me. I met him everywhere there. Now I meet him here." "He returned last summer and for most of his time has been living at the Sheratons'. He and Colonel Sheraton agree very well. And be and Miss Grace I do not like to say these things to thee, my son. but they also seem to agree." "Go on," I demanded bitterly. "Whether Miss Grace's fancy has changed I do not know, but thy moth er ought to tell thee this, so that If she should Jilt thee-why. then"- "Yes." I said slowly, "It would be bnnl for me to speak the first word as to. a release." "But If she does not love thee surely she will speak tbnt word. So then say goodby to ber and set about tby busi ness." We rose and walked down to the street of the little town, and at the tavern bar I secured a conveyance which took us both back to what bad once been our borne. It was my moth er's hands which at a blackened old fireplace In a former slavo's cabin pre pared what we ate that evening. Then as the sun sank In a warm glow beyond the old Blue Ridge and our little valley lay there warm and peaceful as of old I drew her to the rude porch of the whitewashed cabin, and we looked out and talked of things which must be mentioned. I told her told her all my sad and bitter story from end to end. "This, then." I concluded, more than an hour after I had begun, "is what 1 have brought back to you-fallure, fail ure, nothing but failure." We sat in silence, looking out Into the starry night bow long I do not know. Then I beard ber pray, openly, as was not the custom of her people. "Lord, this is not my will. Is this Thy wllir After a time she put ber band upon mine. "My son. now let us reason what Is the law. From the law no man may escape. Let us see who is tho criminal. And If that be thee, then let my son have his punishment "But one thing I know." she con cluded, "thee Is John Cowles. the son of my husband, John; and thee at the last will do what is right, what tby heart says to thee is right" (To He Continued.) G,W, CIIRISWISSER THE Live Stock Dealer Nchawka, Nebraska is ready to make you the most liberal offer on anything you have for sale in the stock line. Get His Prices Before Selling CARPENTERS START FIGHT Begin Contest on Iowa Fair for Failure to Hire Union Men. OVER BUILDING OF BLEACHERS Bill to Increase Power of Cities to Deal With Social Evil to Be Urged Before the Next Legislature Paint ers Meet Nnxt at Sioux City. IVs Moines, July 27. Union car penters have started a big fight against the ctate fair because some carpenters are employed in building work oil the grounds who do not be long to the union. Tho superintend ent of the groiynls employed a number of men on the building of additional bleachers and It was discovyed they do not belong to the union." A com mittee got no satisfaction from the fair officials. Painters to Sioux City. T. M. Buck of Des Moines was elect ed president of tho Iowa State Master House Painters' and Decorators' asso ciation. Sioux City was chosen ns the place for holding the third annual con vention In 1913, and all legislative questions will be referred to a com mittee appointed for that purpose. Paul Presley of Dubuque wns mimed vice president, A. H. Van rr of Sioux City, secretary, and N. 1'. .'ilant of Cedar Rapids, treasurer. Dealing With Social Evil. A hill to Increase the power of cit ies In dealing with tho social evil will be presented to the legislature next winter. It Is being framed now by the inter-church council. Secretary Craves called at tho municipal building- to confer with councllmen on tho proposed taxlcnh ordinance. TO FIGHT COAL BARONS Fort Dodge Worklngmen Incorporate to Operate Mine. IVs Moines, July 27. laboring men of Fort Hodge are the Incorporators nnd directors of a new Iowa corpora tion formed to fight the recent edict of the coal barons, that the price of coal must go up. Articles of Incorpor ation were filed here. The working men are handing together to furnish coal to themselves at coet of produc tion. The capital stock Is only $5,000 and the shares are only $5 each. The plan Is to go into the coal mining busi ness on a co-operative basis and the articles also provide for the establish ment of a company store to be oper ated In connection with the co-operative mine. This is the first time la boring men of Iowa have joined In a cooperative scheme to fight the state organization of mine owners. Organ izers of the Incorporation, which la known as th Fort Dodge Laboring Men's association, are well known la bor leaders there. Fort Dodge Dim Prejuct. Webster City, la., July 27. The low est bidders on the proposed big $80,000 Cam proJctd by th- city of Pr Dodge are the firm of Sullivan & terell of this city. The matter of construction of this Immense mun pal project will be submitted to the voters of Fort Dodge, July 31, at which time th proposition to levy $80,000 In bonds will be voted upon. Boy Loses Both Feet, Clinton, la., July 27. Herbert Carle ton, sixteen-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Cnrleton of Wheatland, had both his fet cut off when he fell under a Northwestern train near his home. He was trying to climb onto a refrlg erator car with Ice tongs In his hands. They caught and threw him under thai moving train. He may recover. Family SMcken With Typhoid. Crlnnll, la , July 27. Mr. and Mrs William McDowell and ten chlldres compos.) the family at Oak Orove, five miles south of this city, where ty phoid fever has already stricken seven members. A daughter, aged about six teen years, died and before noon tha mother also passed away. Reinert Chokes to Death. Diagonal, la., July 27. H, H. Rein ert, local druggist and one of the best known business men of Ringgold coun ty, choked to death at this home here on a piece of beefsteak. Th meat lodged In his throat while he was eat ing supper. Efforts to dislodge the obstacle were futile. Nlles Will Run for Congress. Odar Rapids, la., July 27. Fred A. Nlles, a local business man, announced his candidacy for congress from the Fifth district on the Roosevelt ticket The announcement Is "subject to a statement by Representative Good ol his attitude on the new progressive movement." Indian Finds Perfect Pearl. Marshnlltown, la., July 27. A local dealer pnld to Little Big Bear, an In dian of the Moskwakl reservation, near Tama, $G0 for a pink pear shaped perfect pearl, weighing 33 grains. The Indian found the pearl in the Iowa river near Fowa City. Carpenter Fatally Hurt Sheffield, la., July 27. Lou Rlggln, a carpenter, was fatally Injured when he fell eighteen feet from the roof of a barn he was working on and alighted on a ptl of lumber. DlixIneH caused ur the heat made htm fall. MC'fiEAIS FIN AL WITNESS Railroad President Asks Arbitrators to Prepare Full Statement. New York, July 27. James McCrea, president of the Pennsylvania, rail road, was called as a final witness be fore the hoard of arbitration at Man hattan Beach by the counsel for ths fitty-lwo railroads east of Chicago which are opposing the demands ol their locomotive engineers for an ad vance of 17 per cent in wages. Mr. M'-Crea made a strong plea fat 11 carefully prepared opinion by mem bers of the board, setting forth thelf reasons for whatever award thej nuke. He said the entire country 11 expecting the commission to treal very f nil v the situation as a whole. TROOPHOlUGT IS CRITICISED Soldiers ol Blue Army CkargeJ With Insulting Women. ACCUSED OF ATTACKING GIRL Officials of War Department in Chi cago Order an Investigation of Charge That Drunken Orgy Occurred at Camp Douglas, Wis. Chicago, July 27. Moved by charge that United States regular troops and other state troops encamped at Cauin Douglas, Wis., for army maneuvers had insulted and attacked women and had Indulged In a drunken orgy, offi cials of the war department in ChJr cngo ordered nn investigation at Camp Douglas and other Wisconsin points where the soldiers have been mobil ized. Ono girl Is said to have been at tacked by a dozen soldiers. General Potts, commander of the) central division, telegraphed Major Relchnian, chief umpire In charge of the maneuvers, to Inquire Into tha chargps and the extent to which tha regular troops were involved. Investigation Is also said to be planned to ascertain the conduct of Wisconsin and Illinois militiamen who, with regular troops from Lcst enworth. Kan., and Fort Sheridan formed the "Blue" army, against which, the charges were made. RED ARMY IS ON DEFENSIVE Change of Tactics Forced by Raplo) ! Advance of Blues. Camp Douglas, Wis., July 27. Thet red army changed Its tactics from of fensive to defensive, forced Into tb. change by the steady advance of Uua blues. In order to protect its retreat and make the advance of the blue more difficult the reds destroyed thre towns and a railroad, thereby cuttl off the enemy's rail communication tea ward the west, where the reds are ap eratlng. The proximity -of the two force now indicates that unless the reds treat more rapidly than the blues aoV vance many skirmishes will occur, re suiting In losses and captures on botlk sides. United States umpires ar busy on all work, closely watching the maneuvers and seeing that all' rules are compiled with by the forcesv DUN FINDS TRADE NORMAL Weekly Review Most Optimistic of Any Report Received In Many Months. New York, July 27. R. Q. Dun Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade saya: Statistics of trade movements tell ol a volume of business quite up to noe mal. Thnt Industrial lines are well employed Is Indicated by the advance In products of Iron and steel and the better demand and higher prloat this week for copper. Generally excellent crop prospect, promise a large traffic over the ralV roads and increased purchasing equina ment Is noted as a result. During the past week orders for about 10,000 car and 300 locomotives were placed while the buying movement is expect ed to gain momentum at an early data STEALING A RAILROAD. Not In a Financial Way, but by Carry ing It Off Bodily. No stranger theft was ever commtfr ted than the "lifting" of an entire railroad, twelve and one-half miles l length, which once connected Birr and Portumno, In Ireland. The line bad cost $150,000. and for years it did service for the Great Southern and Western Railway com pany until the year 1878. when tha company, which had been running It at a loss, washed Its hands of It Tha line was derelict Nobody wanted It For a few years it stretched Its use less length through north Tlpperary. Then its neighbors began to turn co etous eyes on it Bolts and screws and other portable trifles began to vanish. A few prose cutions were Instituted, but th charges were withdrawn. Nobody seemed to care. The thieves, thus e couraged.' grew bolder. Farmers brought their carts and horses tnd loaded them with spoils of rails, sleep ers, switches and semaphores. On goodly station vanished, to its last brick and door, n a single night They were great times for Uppaf ary. Boatloads of booty, hundreds of tons of rails, were sent away from Portumna by unlicensed "contractor,"' and the work of spoliation went ou until not as much as a turntable wa left Argonaut