The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 16, 1911, Image 6

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/CHAPTER VIII.—Cent -ued.)
T'ra-g—the king*" cried the old
•an rlstcfatsg the knot of bit cane
atth both hands. "She has gone!"
“Cot- eacla-swd Nathaniel. For
•a instant bi* heart bounded with de
ls. • Manat was on her way to tie
try-**! He sprang hark to the door.
-When* When did »L* gor
The tcatt had come forward, her
bands trembling, ter bps quivering
Struetbiag »n the terror of her face
•eat the hot loud from Nathaniels
Cheeks
They amt for her aa boar ago."
•be said The king wet Obadiah
Frier tor ter* O. my God!" she
•hr.-bed suddenly, clutching at her
breast Tell me—what are they doing
•Sth Mar.ua—'
-chert up!" snarled the old man
"Tnafs is Strang's business. She ha*
gone to Wrung" With aa effort be
straight* ia-4 himself until his tower
tag form roue bail a bead above Na
than.- 1 "She has gone to the king."
be repeated. "Tell Strahg that she
will wive tin tonight, as abe has
promised'"
la spate at tls effort to control him
a*-JS a tern! w cry trim from Na
than.*-!'* !lpa He Sung open the door
and Mead for as instant with bis
white (ace turned back.
"She went to the castle—an hour
ago”" he crW.
‘Tea. to (he castle—with Obadiah
The ias* word* followed him as be
sped oat Into the night As swiftly
as s watt he rsnd across the rtearing
to the trail that led dow n to Si James
Sown fMag teemed to hare hurst la
Ms ‘*ralfc. something that was not
blood, hat are. seemed to burn it bis
veins—« mod desire to reach «tr=ng
to grip him by the throat, to mete out
to ta the vengeance of a Bend ia
stead of that of a man He was too
tale to save Kim*' His brala reeled
w stlt the thought T»i late—too late—
too late He panted the words. They
came with every gasp for breath Too
late! Too late! His heart pumped
I S* t-t, os he sprained to keep
«p bis speed He passed s njo and
a boy hurrying with their riSet to
St James and made no answer to
t!e*r shoot; a galloping hors* forged
ahead of him and he tiled to keep up
with H. and then, at the top of the
kmc hill that sloped down to the
mrunghold of the Mormon kingdom
.ag seemed to sweep his l<-g*
from ceder him. and he fell pu'ing
on the ground. Far a few moments
he lay there looking down upon the
rtty Tt» great bell at the temple
was now silent. He saw huge fires
burs isg for a mile along the coast,
hundreds of lights were twinkling is
the harbor, theta cam* up to him
aofUy. subdued by distance, the sound
<: rnssoiMS and excitement far be
low
His eye* mated on the beacon above
th> prophet's home, burairg tike a ball
, of fire over the black canopy of tree
lops Marlon was there! lie suae U>
hia fact again and west as reason and
t; . gn.en. returning to him—telling
him that he was about to play against
{odds; that his work was to be one
• f strength and g neralsbip and not
of madness. As he picked his way
' n.cr r low ly arid cautiously down the
slope a new hope flashed upon him.
Was it possible that the discovery of
the ij'i roach of the uiainlardors had
•erred to save Marion? ia the ex
'eri.er.t that follow-d the calling of
the Mormons to arms and the prep
are'u :.s for the defense would h'trang
the master of the kingdom, the bul
wark of his people, waste priceless
time in carrying out the purpose for
which he had seat for Marion? Hardly
did hope burn anew in his breast
w hen there came another thought to
tpuer h It. Why had the king scut
for Marion on this particular night
and at this late hour? Why. unless at
'he approach of bis enemies he had
feared tLat he m.gtit lose his beauti
ful victim, and in bis overmastering
passion tad called her to him even
as Lis p*-..ple assembled in defense of
; his kingdom.
There was desperate coolness in Xa
approach now. Whatever had
Lapj^ened he m .Id do what Neil had
threatened to do—kill Strung. And
whatever had happened he would take
Marion away with him if it was only
her dead body that he carried in his
anus To do these things he needed
strength He advanced more slowly
and drew deeper and deeper drafts of
air into his exhausted lungs. At the
edj- of the grove surrounding the
castle he paused to listen. For the
first time it occurred to Nathaniel
tnat the prophet might have assem
bled some ot his lighters to the de
fense of his harem, which he knew
would be one of the first places to 1
le<-l the vengeance of the outraged j
m*-n of the mainland. IJut he heard
no voices ahead of him. There were \
no fires to betray the approach of
the enemy. Not even the barking of
a d<g gave warning of his stealthy
advance. Soon he could make out a
light in the king's house. A few steps
more and he saw that the door was
open, as it tad been on his first visit
to the castle. He dodged swiftly from
bush to bush, darted under the win
dow through wpich he bad seen Ma
rion. leaped lightly up the broad steps
and sprang into the great room, his
pistol cocked in his hand.
The room was empty. He listened,
but not a sound came to his ears ex
cept the rustling of a curtain in the
breeze The huge lamp over the ta
bic was burning dimly. The five doors
hading from the room were tightly
; cloved. Nathaniel held his breath,
tried to still the tumultuous pounding
’ of his heart as he waited for a sound
<A life—a step beyond those doors, a
woman's voice, a child's cry. But
none came. The stillness of desertion
hovered about him. He went to one
of the five doors It was not locked.
He opened it silently, with the cau
tion of a thief, and there loomed be
fore him a chaos of gloom.
“Hello:" he called gently. "Hello
Hello—"
Th* re mas no answer. He struck
a march and advanced step by step,
holding the yellow bit of flhme above
j h<> i »-ad It disclosed the narrow
malls of a hall and an ppen door lead
ing into another Voom. The match
sputtered and went out and he lighted
another. On a little table ju3t outside
the < <>or was a half burned candle and
he r< placed his match with this. Then
I he w ent in.
At a glance he knew that he had
<-ntt red a woman's rocen. redolent
with the perfume of flowers. On one
| t ie mas a bed and close beside it a
cradle with a child's toys scattered
j about it. The tumbled coverlets
showed that both had been recently
j Ml About the room were thrown ar
u<-i.» of wearing apparel; a trunk had
b*-en dragged from a closet and was
'half packed; everywhere was the dis
order >f hurried flight For a few
feiotnents the depth of his despair held
f Thaaiel motionless. The castle was
d« rt* d—Marion was gonel He ran
btek into the gr»at room, no longer
Irving to still the sound of his foot
s’. -ps. and opened a second door. The
same silence greeted him. the same
I disorder, the same evidence that the
wives and children of the Mormon
king had fled. He went into a third
room—and then a fourth.
For an instant he paused at the
threshold of this fourth chamber. A
light was burning in the room at the
end of the hall. The door was closed
with the exception of an inch or two.
“Marion!" he called soUly, and lia
tened intently.
He went on when there was no re
ply. and pushed open the door.
A candle was burning on a stand
in front of a mirror. The room was
as empty as the others. Hut there was
no disorder here. The bed was un
used, the garments in the open closet
had not been disarranged. On the
floor beside the bed was a pair of
shoes and as Nathaniel saw them hia
heart seemed to leap to his throat
and stifled the cry that was on his
lips. He took one of them in his
hand. his whole being throbbing with
excitment. It was Marion's shoe—
incrusted with mud and torn as he
had seen it in the forest. With hei
name falling from his lips in a plead
ing cry he now searched the room anc
on the stand in front of the mirroi
he found a lilac colored ribbon, soiled
and crumpled. It was Marion’s rib
bon—the one he had seen last in her
hair, and he crushed It to his lips as
he ran back into the great room, call
ing out her name again and again in
the torture of helplessness that now
possessed him.
Mechanically, rather than with rea
son, he went to the fifth and last door.
His candle had become extinguished
in his haste and after he had opened
the door he stopped at the threshold
of the black hall to light it again.
There was a moment's pause as he
searched his pockets for a match, a
silence in which he listened as he
searched, and suddenly as he was
about to strike the sulphur "tipped
splint there came to his ears a sound
that held him chained to the spot
It was the sobbing of a woman; or
was it . child? In a moment he knew
that it was a woman; and then the
sobbing ceased.
There was nothing but darkness
ahead of him; no ray of light shone
under the door; the chamber itsell
was in utter gloom. As quietly as
possible he relighted his candle. A
glance assured him that this hall was
different from the others; it was
deeper, and there were two doors at
the end instead of one. Through which
of these doors had come the sound o!
sobbing he had heard?
He approached and listened. Each
moment added to his excitement, his
fears, his hopes, but at last he
opened the door on the left. The
room was empty; there was the same
disorder as before; the same signs of
hurried flight. It was the room on
the right! His heart almost stopped
its beating as he placed his hand on
the latch, lifted it, and pulled the
door in. Kneeling beside the bed he
saw a woman. She had turned
toward the light and in the dim il
lumination of the room Nathaniel rec
ogr.iz^d the beautiful face he had seen
at the king's castle the preceding day
—the face of the woman who had
sent him to find the prophet, who had
placed her gentle hand on Marion's
head as he had looked through tht
window. There was no fear in het
eyes as she saw Nathaniel. Some
thing more terrible than that shone
in their glorious depths as she rose
to her feet and stood before him, het
face lined with grief, her mouth
twitching in agony. She stood with
clenched hands, her bosom rising and
failing in the passion of the storm
within her; and she sobbed even as
Nathaniel paused there, unmanned in
this sudden presence of a distress
greater than his own; sobbed in a
choking, tearless way, waiting for him
to speak.
"Forgive me," he spoke gently. "1
have come—for—Marion.” He felt
that he had no reason to lie to this
woman. His face betrayed his own
anguish as he came nearer to her
"I want Marion," he repeated. "Mj
God, won't you tell me—?”
She struggled to calm herself as ht
spoke the girl's name.
"Marion is not here," she said. She
crushed his hands against her bosom
and a softer look came into her eyes;
her voice was low and sweet, as it
had been the morning he asked foi
Strang. As she saw the despair deep
ening iu the man’s face a great pity
swept over her and she stretched out
her arms to him with an aching cry,
“Marion is gone—gone—gone," she
moaned, “and you must go, too! O,
I know you love her—she told me
that yon loved her, as I love Strang,
my king! We have both lost—lost—
and you must go—as—I—shall—go!”
She turned away from him with a cry
so heart-breaking in its pain that Na
thaniel felt himself trembling to the
soul. In another instant she had
faced him again, fighting back a
strange calm into her face.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Do Birds Return to Old Nests?
Whether birds, especially migratory
ones, return to the same nests year
after year is a question of much in
terest to the naturalist. Swallows that
summer In England do not winter
north of Africa, but an observer at
High Halden, Kent, England, has re
corded that one returned on April 12
to a nest it occupied last year. It
was recognized by a ring that had
been placed on its leg. To gain a
better knowledge of bird habits, more
than 2.000 British birds were last year
marked with inscribed aluminum
rings, and twice as many more will
be similarly tagged this year.
—
Canada Needs Rat-Traps.
According to Consul General Jones
at Winnipeg, Canada is in great need
of rat traps. Farmers in the grain
belt are becoming anxious over the
invasion of rodents and are willing
and able to pay a good price for a
trap thlkt will combine durability and
efficiency.
Logical.
Green Purchaser (in automobile
ware rooms)—My friend sent me here
to get a rheumatic tire.
Clerk—Rheumatic? You mean pneu
matic, don't you?
Green Purchaser—Perhaps It is
pneumatic. I thought it was called
rheum atlo because it’s swelled.
GUN PRACTICE AT ONE OF OUR COAST DEFENSES
\Y\^\H<b N --
THK question of coast defense is just now being given much attention by the military authorities, it is averred that,
for some reason or other, this "line of defense" has not received that consideration in the past to which its
mportanee entitles it. During this year, however, the matter will be taken up in earnest at Washington, and it is
safe to say that many points on our coast that are now unprotected will ia due season be equipped with forts of the
ype represented in the picture above. This photograph was taken during target practice and at the moment of the
iring of one of the 12 inch disappearing guns with which Fort Wadsworth is armed. The roar and concussion of the
explosion of these pieces of ordnance are alike tremendous To counteract their effects on the body, the soldiers are
nstructed to raise themselves on their toes and open their mouths. In some instances the men reinforce these
instructions by covering their ears with their hands.
I
Great Britain on Still Hunt for
Good Animals.
Sum cf $250,000 to Be Set Aside for,
Developing Equine—Choice Ones
Go Abroad Because Foreigner
Pays More.
London.—A sort of government stud,
of which the purpose is to establish a
: new breed of horse, is not unlikely to
be presently endowed by the commis
sioners of the development grant.
They have promised, as recently an
aouneed, $250,000 for the eficcurage
ment of horse breeding; but the more
any definite scheme is inquired into
the more clearly it appears that the
cardinal point, so far as the army is
concerned, is money. The best horses
go abroad simply because the foreign
at a meeting of the City of London
Territorial Force association, in which
the secretary of state for war wrote
that progress was being made with
the scheme for the supply of horses
on mobilizalion. and before long^ def
inite instructions would be issued. In
the meantime Mr. Haldane did not see
any reason for a conference with the
association on the subject.
FAYING CHICAGO FIRE DEBT
Last of $50,000 Bonds Issued by City
of Buffalo Will Not Be Retired
Until 1917.
Chicago.—The city of Buffalo Is still
retiring bonds issued for the relief of
Chicago at the time of the fire. It
issued $50,000 worth of 7 per cent,
bonds OcL 10, 1S71. and this indebted
er pays more: and to supply a govern
ment department with extra doles is
no business of the commissioners.
What they do should be done princi
pally on behalf of the breed itself.
This being so, it is preposed as a
3rst step to try to convert the hunter
from a mongrel to an aristocrat. The
hunter is the horse of horses for util
ity. The cavalry and the territorials
want nothing but the hunter. At pres
ent the breeding of hunters is a jan
3om business, as it always is in cross
bred stocks.
Thoroughbred sires are sent to the
several centers by the royal eommis
i slon on horse breeding, but the breed
ing of hunters would be on a very dif
ferent footing if the hunter type could
be. as It were, stereotyped in a distinc
tive pure breed. In many parts even
af Ireland, the paradise of hunters, the
type is depreciating and nowhere is it
J improving.
It is argued that a really scientific
and practical body, with the grant of
several thousand dollars a year, could
evolve a pure bred hunter of just the
sort required, just as the pigeon or dog
fanciers have evolved birds and dogs
3f every sort of "pattern.” Similar ex
periments recently made in Hertford
shire in regard to polo ponies are very
promising; and these have been under
taken on no very scientific method.
The evolving of such a horse would
make horse breeding for the army a
steady, lucrative business instead of
a lottery, and would be a constant
source of wealth to the country. It
is to be hoped that a small part of the
$250,000, vaguely and conditionally of
fered, will be spent on such a progres
sive experiment as this.
There are scores of men who would
co-operate. Hackney enthusiasts be
lieve that hackney blood should ap
pear in such a breed and would, as
recent ofTers prove, lend mares as oth
ers would lend stallions. It Is not oft
' en that the opportunity is offered of
organizing so useful an experiment so
cheaply.
A letter from Mr. Haldane w-as read
ness will not be wiped out until 1917,
according to the date of expiration of
the latest refunding of the original
issue.
Information on this subject was ob
tained by the county architect, Edwin
Bice Baker. Seeing in the last annual
report of the comptroller of Buffalo,
William G. Justice, an Item of a $20.
000 bond issue, marked "Chicago fire
relief bonds.” he wrote to the comp
troller of that city for enlightenment
on the subject through curiosity and
as a matter of general public interest.
Play Ball on Ice.
Sandusky, Ohio.—The novel experi
ence of witnessing a baseball game
! on the frozen surface of Lake Erie,
oft the south shore of Kelly's island,
was the pleasure of nearly two thou
; sand islanders.
A regulation diamond was marked
! off on the ice and the rules of the
national game were followed.
The teams playing were dubbed the
Elfers and the Porters. The Eliers
wen by the score of 22 to 20.
TOY HOUSE TO BE RETAINED
even Though Girl for Whom It Was
Constructed Has Since Married
and Moved Away.
Chicago.—The bijou toyhouse for
children, which for many years has
gladdened the hearts and excited the
interest of children passing the home
of Thomas Lynch, Dearborn avenue, is
; to be kept in repair and renovated.
The wedding recently of Miss Leila
Lynch, for whom the model house
was constructed, when she was a small
I girl, revived a desire of Mr. Lynch
j to keep intact the miniature dwelling
which had brought as much jov to
members of the family. Miss Lynch
is now Mrs. J. F. Stevens and her
home for the present is at Washing
] ton. D. C.
The little home, about ten feet long
and eight feet wide, situated in the
yard adjoining the Dearborn avenue
address, is or was complete in its
i appointments.. It is a replica of a
. modern house, but now sadly in need
of repair and fresh paint. A veranda
which formerly made a pleasant loung
ing place for the small residents of i
the house has fallen away in ruins.
; Electric light and the connections are
broken, and the inside of the dwelling
• is one of chaos. Much of the ap
pointments of the apartment, howe\er,
remain to demonstrate its former
j glory and completeness.
II Three rooms comprise the lower
floor, with stairs leading to a tower,
from which a view of the neighbor- ■
hood can be obtained. A bedroom con- j
tains a bureau and mirror with a
closet and chairs. There Is a small
sewing machine and piano in the liv
ing room, with a table and couch. A •
i gas burning grate formerly provided
heat for the apartment, while electric
fixtures testify to modern lighting ef- 1
fecta. Real windows with shades, an
electric dcor boll, small dinner dishes
and other accompaniments of a per
fectly ordered household were enjoy
ed by the small owner and guests. A
3agstaff surmounts the tower top and
a small yard surrounds the house en
circled by an iron fence.
"It sure was some house, wasn't
*t7" commented the coachman of the
household to a visitor as he crawled
out of the door and fastened it with a
string. “It's a shame to see it* go
to pieces." It is to be repaired, how
ever. and kept in shape.
PARROT CHEWS UP HER TAG
Express Employes Had Lively Time
Caring for Bird—Death Follows
Delivery to Owner.
St. Paul. Minn.—A parrot, sent to
SL Paul from Chicago, chewed up her
address tag and made things lively for
the last ten days In the office of the
Wells-Fargo Express company. She
perished after reaching her rightful
owner.
"Why. that parrot was talking the
whole blessed day; we could hardly
get in a word edgewise," said one of
the clerks. “We took her out of the
box every day to feed her, and we al
ways had trouble catching her again.”'
Polly was shipped to a Mrs. Cook
by her son in Chicago. The bird man
aged to reach the label on the box
and destroyed It and there was a long
delay In getting a duplicate address.
Mrs. Cook called at the office of the
St. Paul Humane society and in
formed Miss Alice Niliard. secretary,
that the Wells-Fargo company had de
tained her parrot for ten days because
they had lost thd address and that
she did not believe the parrot had
been cared for all that time. The ex
press company officials say every at
tention was paid to the bird and that
it really got a good deal more than
was its due.
WAITERS MUST BE HEALTHY
--
i Big New York Hotels to Require Phy
sical Examinations Similar to
German Custom.
Xew York.—The German system of
supervising the health of hotel em
ployees for the protection of guests is
being put into force in the larger Xew
York hotels. A large Broadway hos
telry, employing 450 servants, put the
Bystem into operation lately.
The serving of food by infected wait
ers imperils the health of patrons, ac
cording to sanitarians. “The hotel
guest,” said one manager, in speak
ing of the Innovation, “is at the mercy
of the management of the hotel which
he patronizes in respect to the selec
tion of employees. A hotel ought to
protect its guests from diseases just
as any private householder would pro
tect himself and family.
“Only recently It was brought to
my attention that a man and his wife
and child who had been staying at a
hotel, whose name should have been
a guarantee for the utmost cleanli
ness. became infected with a horrible
skin disease. It was learned that a
scrubwoman who suffered from the
disease had used a drinking glass in
the guests' room. The disease had
been communicated to a cut on his
lip and thence to his wife and child."
The question of requiring similar
inspection of dining car waiters pre
sents more difficult aspects to the
health authorities attempting to solre
the problem. They point out that
congress should authorize a national
health bureau, as recommended in the
president's message, one of the pow
ers of which might be to supervise the
sanitation of interstate carriers. Of
the 450 employees in the first hotel
to initiate the German system only
12 refused to undergo the physical ex
amination. They were discharged.
To mingle our sorrows is to sweet
en them.
Law on Rctten Eggs.
Albany. X. Y.—The New York state
department of agriculture announces
that in its efforts to enforce the pure
food law it has been difficult to obtain
evidence to convict persons who seli
tad eggs for food.
“It is the practice.” says the depart
Kent in its circular, “to ship rotten
eggs to New York city from the four
corners of the earth marked ‘noUfor
food’ or 'for tanning purposes.’ ~
“This makes the shipment legff^
it is not until the shipment rea._J
the consignee that its purpose l"
changed.” -i
Dog Is Hero.
London.—Jess, the Irish terrier of
the paralyzed Islington watchmaker,
has been presented by Mrs. De Courcy
Laff&n with a collar admitting it to
the Brotherhood of Hero Bogs.
Known as the dog with the human
brain. Jess Is in the habit of answer
ing the door for her master, and helps
him by holding and fetching tools,
running errands and generally acting
as a domestic.
SAVED FROM DAM
TION—NEIGHBOR
TO DO FORBUC
I too wish to add irf
thousands you no doi
tell you what your gri
me.
Several months ago
sick with bladder tr
pains and suffered j
could net stand on r
chair and often was
with pain.
I consulted two do,
I different kinds of me<
no good. It seemed ’
j of their medicine I tj
came. The doctors 9
puzzled over my casej
consultation, I was ;
severe case of inflami J
and an operation was |
I was being prepan 9
hospital, when a nt 5
house and said, ‘W r
bottle of Dr. Kilmei j
was willing to try a S
from my suffering. 3 3
tie of your medicine
and soon noticed a <
I continued taking i|
j along, my appetite
aide to resume wer'
I have used sevei
Root and know that
I would have been
baps never reeovere
ray frierrls alout
1 Reot as I know it
from suffering and
j case, a dangerous o] '
Yours gratef |
S3
State of Minnesota
County of Hennepii
Personally appeari
day of Sept., 19 9.
city of Minneapolis
sot a, who subscrilx
oath says that sam
and in fact,
M.
Commission expin
letlrr to
Dr. k.la-r &. fo.
Biart W. Y.
Prove What Swamp-?
Send to Hr. Kil
! ton, N. Y., for a s.
j convince anyone,
a booklet of valua!..
all about tbe kidney
writinc. be sure an.
For sale at all drt~
cents and one-dolkU:
WiSI<
“I suppose yo
paring for her w
"Yes, she is u
stroying all her
Sirrsplicitj
A story was i
nev at the Cap*
tiers' dinner b3
of Leominster:
ney was seen a1;
j one of the corric
I heard these
! him?' 'No,' sal*
write a thing wlr
never talk whe»*
head."—Boston lis
-4
With a smoof1
; Starch, you cand
waist just as r
| steam laundry c,
proper stiffness
be less wear an.
; and it will be
use a Starch tf1
the iron.
-ir*
Duty makes tbt
love makes us fet
Phillips Brooks.m
-U<
Take Garfield TJ e
pure, pleasant ai r,
An undertake '
ones that he i ,-r
Garfield Tea h
thousands! L'ne -ti
as
What can't
! doctor. .
.— 5*