THE HESPERIAN avr ,,. PM i 58K day be lay upon the floor of the coll, suffering as though ovory muscle were boingi idivid ually -wrenched from his arms. Ho had not been out of the bare cell for four days. All the ventilation came through some little au gur holes in the door and the heat and odor were becoming unbearable. Ho had thought on the first night that the pain would kill him before morning, but ho had endured over eighty-four hours of it and when the guard came in with his bread and water he found him lying with his eyes closed and his teeth set on his lip. He roused him with a kick and held the bread and water out to him, but Serge took only the water. ''Rope too tight?" growled the guard. Serge said nothing. He was almost dead now and he wanted to finish for he could not hoop barrels. "Gittin so stuck up you can't speak, are you? "Well, we'll just stretch you up a bit tighter." And he gave the stick in the rope another vicious twist that almost tore the arms from their sockets and sent a thrill of agony through tho man's whole frame. Then Serge was left alone. The fever raged in his veins and about midnight his thirst was intolerable. He lay with his mouth open and his- tongue hanging out. The pain in his arms made his whole body tremble like a man with a chill. Ho could no longer keep his arms up and the ropes were beginning to strangle him. He did not call for help. He had heard poor devils shriek for help all night loug and get no relief. He suffered, as the people of his mother's nation, in hope less silence. The blood of tho serf vas in him, blood that has cowered beneath the knout for centuries and uttered no complaint. Then tho State would surely come soon, she would net let them kill him. His mother, the State! He fell into a half stupor. He dreamed about what the laba used to tell about the bargemen in their bearskin coats coming down the Yolga in the spring when tho ice had broken up and gone out; about how the wolves used to howl and follow the sledges across tho snow in the starlight. That cold, white snow, that lay in ridges and banks! Ho thought he. felt it in his mouth and he awoke and found himself licking the stone floor. He thought how lovely the plains would look in tho morning when the sun was up; hqw tho sunflowers would shake them selves in the wind, how the corn leaves would shine and how the cob-webs would sparkle all over tho grass and the air would be clear and blue, the birds would begin to sing, the colts would run and jump in the pasture and tho black bull would begin to bellow for his corn. The rope grew tighter and tighter. The State must come soon now. He thought he felt the dog's cold nose against his throat. He tried to call its name, but the sound only came in an inarticulate gurgle. He drew his knees up to his chin and died. And so it was that his great mother, the State, took this willful, restless child of her's and put him to sleep in her' bosom. "W. OATnEB. THE OUTLOOK IN FOOT BALL I foresee at the outset that my remarks might tend to discourage, but I believe there is considerable interest, though slumbering at present, in foot-ball in Nebraska, aud I feel sure that there is a great desire for vic tory, and therefore, what I shall say I be lieve will have a tendency to encourage and stimulate a new and greater interest I confoss I was greatly disappointed. at the material that presents itself. I had ex pected to find plenty of large, strong men, and on the other hand, I find tho youngest and lightest crowd I ever saw on a foot-ball field. Nearly every high school in the East has more strong and heavy men, and this is more peculiar because as you walk about the campus you see plenty of heavy men, but somehow or other they eschew tho foot-ball field, and resign its honors to their younger and weaker brothers. Of course nobody knows what tho future has in store for us, but it is our right and fl -. (i