THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : TIIUHSDAY , JULY 20 , 18M ) . JOE HALLIDAY'S COURT3IIIP. y IIEKIH'KT K. IIAMBLGN. ( Copyright , 18M , by Iterbert B. ITnmblcn. ) A strapping , square-shoufdorcd , brown- eyed young fellow , with traces of coal dust in his lashoa , rollcd-up overalls under his nrm and a railroad dinner pall In his hand , leaning against n gate. On the other side 01 bluo-eycd girl with sunny hair and apple- reel cheeks. Joe Halllday , just In with the night freight , surrendered to temptation. Ho dropped his overalls and dinner pall , reached acrosi nnd drawing the smiling face to his , pressed his lips to the crumpled twin rose leaves. With innocent fearlessness the blue eyes looked Into the brown ones , while their owner drank In the pleasant greeting of her lover. Suddenly her gar.o was deflected over his shoulder , the happy look was dis placed by ono of terror , and with the cry , "Oh , hero comes papal" she fled toward the house , ' Old Dave Spellman had forgotten his pipe , for once a brlerwood , burned to the water's cdgo arid strong enough to Jack up a de railed mogul and had como back after It. Ho caught a ellmpco of a blue gingham Bklrt as It , whipped around the rose bush and then bis surly gaze felt upon Joe. Hero was another one of "em. Joe -was conscious of a guilty blush , but he greeted Annie's father with a diplomatic "Oood morning , Dave ! " "What are you hangln' round hero for ? " growled Dave. ' 'Git along about ycr bust- ness ; I don't want yo hero ! Come clear out ! " ho nhoiltcd , as Joe drew himself up with flushed checks and eyes snapping nnd declined to move. "Who do you think you'ro talking to ? " nskcd Joe angrily , his diplomacy scattered to the four winds by old Dave's onslaught. ' "I'm tnlkin' to you. I won't hev ye runnln' after my gal. Thcso is my prem ises ; clt out ! " "This is the public highway , an' I'll get out when I get good an' ready. You ought to bo ashamed to tak ) , about your' daughter llko that ; I always know you was nn old " But Dave had kicked the' gate 'open add was rushlnu toward the house , calling , "Bendlfio ! " A moment later Joe heard an , urgent "Sick 'lm , boy ! " followed "by " n rushing , growling , gravel-scattering within the "promises , " which told him that Dave had sot the doc on him. But Joe wasn't one1 of the slow sort who court the daughter , qt an Irascible old railroader , without flrst get- oltl fogy notions has no charms for him. Ho began making changes at onco. Ho keyed ( KT up all round , took up lost motion alt oxcr'htr , started up ( ho feed on the oil cups , cianled Into the front end nnd did things to the dlphragm nnd nozzle nnd swedged open the meshes of the spark netting to let her breathe. Ho got the valves reset by promising to stand between the roundhouse foreman and cranky Dave. Ho familiarized himself with and mastered her pet vices , spread the light to the conductors , enthused the fireman , and went for a new record , Joe aald nothing to Annlo of the new methods ho was Inaugurating , but her father became well nigh unbearable ; however , she saw Joe every other day , so the law of com pensation more than evened matters up. Dave snorted about in futile rage for n week. Ho told his troubles to no ono ; would hardly admit of their existence himself. It was incomprehensible that "a kid just off of freight" should presume to maul about and overhaul his engine. But thcro was no let-up to the desecration , and at last It became unbearable ; so down ho came ono morning before Joe got away. Stepping up to him with the air of a man who was bound to do or die , he said : "Say , young man , If you can't git along with this cnglno the way she is you better look for another job ; I'm gtttln1 about sick o' this monkey business. I run 'cr quite n spell 'foro you got 'round an' she allus made out to git thar with 'cm. " Joe wouM- have liked to conciliate An nie's father , but ho knew the utter futility of attempting anything of the kind , so he just remembered that ho was a cantankerous old railroader , to bo effectually sat upon right now. He finished filling the rod cup , screwed the .cover on carefully and gave the end of the rod a shako to try Its fit on the pin. Then ho turned to the , enraged old engineer , and , looking him squarely In the eye. said , with n firmness Impossible to misunderstand : "We'll settle this matter right now , Dave. I own just as much stock In this cnglno as you do , nnd I'm going to fix things the way I want 'em ; if they don't suit you , you can change 'cm back again on your trip ; but don't you como round trying to boss mo , 'causo I won't stand It. " Completely flabbergasted , corked up , his gun effectually spiked , Old Dave withdrew In disorder , whlto an Irreverent young wiper shouted ; "Plash In the pan ! " from HE CHOPPED HIS OVERALLS AND DINNER PAIL , REACHED ACROSS , AND DRAWING THE SMILING PACE TO HIS ting solid with the doff. As popular re port credited Bendlgo with a collection of samples from the fair Annie's would-be ad mirers , Joe had been forewarned. When BendtKO. came tearing through the gate , his wrinkled muzzle , gleaming fangs and erect mane , eloquent of his intentions , ho found nobody there 'but his very good friend , Joe Ilalllday. Joa soothed his disappointment with scraps from his dinner pall , patted the great head affectionately and resumed his homeward course vowing to get square with pid Dave , it ho had to steal Annlo bodily. In the meantime , poor Annlo wont about her work with drooping head , her long lashes daintily brushing her flushed cheeks , accepting In allenco her lather's caustic vituperations. "So that's what all that ex- try whlstlln's for , down hero at the yard block , hey ? Thought 'twas for his mother to have ihts breakfast ready , " grunted Dave , who know a thing or two himself. It now became Impossible for tbo lovers to meet , except when Joe came in on Dave's day out ; tout when that combination 6c- currod , a strain was rut unon the gate Iilncos. and the blue eyes nnd the brown ones drank each other's moanlnc , while eavago Bondl&o lay contentedly nt their foot. 'Joe ploa'dcd his cause with the eloquence of desperation ; there were no llttlo brothers or Bisters to bo cared for ; nobody nt all but Old Davo. And ho pictured In glowing col- era the contrast between thU and the llfo nho would lead as his wife In the handsome cottage Just being completed near the church. But her unvarying answer , delivered lu that monotonous tone which sounded to Joe llko the wull of utter hopelessness , was ; "I can't ; O , Joe , I can't ! Not whllo father t lives. Who ibut mo could get along with lilmT .Plcaoo don't ask mo , dear. " And so two fond hearts mourned. Joe proposed tackling the old man himself , boldly demanding his daughter's hand ; but Annlo begged him not to Imperil what llttlo comfort she had In life. To his suggestion that she might bo able to talk her father over she replied that she had never known Ultra to recede from a position ho had once taken. So they wore obliged < o content thctn- eolves with Bucli clandestine meetings aa they could get , though they found thorn far from ( satisfactory. Old Dave had run one sldo of the steam boat express for years and ho lyranlzed over his partner , easy-going Harry Joyce , as ho did over everybody else. Dave owned the engine and everything pertaining to her ; there was no disputing that. In the big bliz zard of ' 88 poor Harry stayed with her in a enowdrlft for thirty-six hours and went homo and died of pneumonia a week later , Kverybody said It was a happy release. Joe Halllday , being the senior freight en gineer , was promoted to the vacancy , Hero was a combination with n vengeance ) Joe would much have referred that It had been eomebody else's turn for a passenger train. Annie was thrown Into a state of mind and nil hands on the road kept their eara meta phorically Inclined for the explosion. Dave aid nothing and nobody had the temerity teak * ak lila opinion. There was one enormous gain , anyway ; Joe and Dave were never nt home on the same day ; consequently the proverbially rocky road of true love Immediately as- eumod o smoothness most delightful. With Dave 150 mile * up the road , the young couple felt safe In deserting the gate In favor of the parlor. The ateamboat train was always late. On this end the steamers delayed it anywbcro from , ten to thirty inlnutre , and , of course , lota of things can happen to lay out n fast eoBtbound train between Chicago and tide water. Dave had always opposed tearing the onglno to pieces and burning coal to make up an extra flve minutes. So poor Harry for ( he take of peace bad always run just as told Win to. But Joe > vaa ambitious ; under the engine. That marked a new era. It- was the last time that Dave tried to run both sides of her. Ill feeling Increased between the two engineers until Joe's love for Annlo was hardly sufficient to prevent him cordially hating her father. Communi cation between them ceased at once , but they heard from each other dally. Brother engineers , hoatlers and wipers saw to it that they were kept posted. Joe made up all the time ho could and Dave wouldn't bo beaten. The train came to bo known ns "Tho Flyer , " and freight men quit speculating as to how much ot her tlmo they could safely steal. AN hands took sides. The young runners hinted sagely at "now blood , " while the fossils said they'd soon "smartlcs" before and predicted a dull and sickening thud. Neither had any advantage. Scientific run ning , the ability to get moro work out of an cnglnu than she was built to do was the only 'thing ' that counted In this contest. Green flags and slow-boards received scant courtesy and both men were had upon the carpet and cautioned against reckkless run ning. But competition was sharp , the train was making a name for Itself and nothing hod happened yet ; so the "super" winked the other eye and the race went merrily on. On the Fourth of July Joe made up seven teen minutes on the west bound trip beatIng - Ing tlio record. Next day Dave left twenty minutes lalo nnd made up sixteen according to the train sheet. ( Ho had a row over It In the office , claiming seventeen , but had to accept the official figures. Ho said he would have made up the whole twenty only for old Flannlgan holding tbo semaphore against him at Nowtown , causing him to shut off , lese his way and crawl all the way up the tnllo and a half grade to the station. Joe laughed when ho heard that nnd said ho guessed the old man was losing his norvo. "Losln1 my nerve , bo I ? " Dave roared , when this was repeated to him. "Say , If I don't make that kid lese his nerve 'fore he's follered mo round the division another thirty days I'll take a 'hog' on extra freight. Losln' my nerve ! Well , blast him ! " and ho dlyod under her with an armful of wrenchw , swearing to himself and splut tering tobacco juice In all directions. When ho left that trip eighteen minutes late ho told his flreman he could pick him self out of a 'hog when ho got back if be failed < o keep a hundred and forty on her every inlnuto. "Git 'em there , Davol" the station master called after him as ho pulled out. 'U'll register 'O T * at Franklin today , or this mill will go to the shop on a flat car tomorrow , " Dave shouted back. When through the tunnel and clear of the freight yard ho dropped hU bat in the seat box and tied a rod bandanna around his head , Ho was out for 'business. Then was se n a bit of slick running , The old engineer brought Into play nil the fine points he bad learned In twenty years at the throttle. He cut her back , or dropped her down a notch as eho approached sags and knolls so slight aa to bo ImpercopUblo except to his finely- trained sense of feeling. He fed the cold water to her with the'precision of a physi cian guiding a patient through a crisis and babied and coaxed her like a spoiled child. And nobly she responded ; she seemed to lay her oars back , take tbo bit In her teeth and > The flreman mindful of his chief's ad monition and that a modicum of the credit of succctu as well as all the odium ot failure would be his tolled llko a galley slave. Be tween them she carried the white feather at her safety valve mile after mile and the steamboat train was wheeled aa It never had been wheeled before. It was an Ideal day. An early morning ehower had laid the dust and freshened the dark , midsummer green of trees and grass until they sparkled gaily in the brlcht eun- shlno. Even crabbed old Dave felt the | soothing influence of the perfect day ns ho tore along counting mlle posts and noting time. He congratulated himself on tbo squareness with which she chopped it off and the lively manner in which she picked up her heels , until lie remembered that the kid had had the valves reset ; then ho re sumed the mental stunt known to engineers as "flggerln1 ahead. " In nlaccg ho could make UD fractions ot a minute , in others ho would be thankful to hold his own. He must have enough water In her so ho could shut off his Injec tor and lace the llfo out ot her going into Newtown. It old Flannlcan should hold the semaphore on him today ho would feel llko murdering him. And so the old fellow mused as ho rode along , ficttlnz better na ture J every mlnuto as ho saw that ho was "elttln * 'em thero. " The approach to Nowtown was "pokey. " There was a mile and a half of stiff grade right up to the station that was where ho would need to have them going. Half-way up this grade the road was spanned by nn overhead railroad bridge of solid masonry. Fifty yards this sldo of the bridge there was a freight yard switch , the track branching off on Dave's side. The yard was concealed from approaching1 trains by nn Immense coal shed , which , nt that tlmo of day , threw a dense black shadow on the switch. When the switch was open , Its round , red target blazed a warning lo approaching engineers. When closed , the thin cdgo of the sheet- Iron target was Invisible. To render It ab solutely safe , It was interlocked with a semaphore 1,500 feet down the line. The rules required that the semaphore bo pulled down to safety only when In view of the approaching engineer. It could only bo pulled down when the switch was closed , because a hole In the switch rod would then be In a position that would al low the semaphore locking bar to pass through It , locking the switch. When the switch was open the solid rod waa pre sented to the point of the locking bar , pre venting the semaphore being pulled down. I With the semaphore at "stop" the locking bar would bo withdrawn from the holb and the switch could bo thrown either way , which was all right , as no train would pass the semaphore when In that position. Surly old ( Mike Flannlgan had been on the day shift at the switch for years. Ho rig orously enforced the rule , everything must be clear nnd the switch closed ten minutes be fore a first-class train was due. Strong In his Integrity , he showed but eaant courtesy , oven to the rpadmaster , and ho was respected for duty as heartily as ho was detested for his arrogance. While disconnecting to put In n new set of head blocks ths section gang broke the bolt connecting the semaphore locking bare o Its crank ; hence , for a night and a part of two days the vital connection between semaphore and switch was broken. Mike , of course , know this , but during the contro versy , when , with unnecessary Insolence , ho Irovo the way freight engine back Into the yard , It slipped from his memory. Dave nearly pulled the whistle off the dome when 10 whipped around the curve and Mike , the nfalllblo , pulled the semaphore down , with the switch open to the freight yard. When Dave saw the semaphore como down promptly In response to his whistle , his faith n that Incomparable combination , old Flan- nigan and the interlocking system , assured lim that hero was the safest spot on the whole division. She was going llko a fright ened deer , but he dropped , her down a notch. The sharp , distinct rhythm of the exhaust Blended In a continuous roar , and eho fled , rolling v.lldly , toward the open archway un der the bridge. The longer point of cutoff relieved the boiler pressure , allowing the safety valve to seat. Without taking his eye from the track Dave reached It and shut off the Injector. Again that plume of feathery white steam , ndlcatlng the 140-pound limit appeared at : h summit of th'o dome. As/Davo .peered nto the shadow -of the coal otied , the , red target suddenly glared at him llko the eye of a basilisk and ho experienced the sen sation railroad men know when their tlmo las come. With her throttle wide open , and roarIng - Ing llko the Incarnate flend of destruction , Ebe entered the switch at a 70-mlle-an-hour gait. gait.Sho She heeled her head , whipped around , and , rolling over , she plowed through ties and rails into the yard. The ripping up of track was drowned in the clash of rend ing iron and hissing steam when she bit the way freight engine. The baggage car , deflected from its course before the Janney coupler broke , leaped over her stripped the way freight engine to its boiler , killing the engineer and fireman. Four coaches Jammed - mod themselves Into a chaotic mass of splin tered wood and twisted Iron against the railroad bridge. The rear one upended Itself on the pile accentuated the horror beneath and stood at an unstable angle , demon strating ' 'What happened when an irresist ible force meets an immovable body. " Whllo rula and death were rampart nt the Nowtown switch , Joe and Annie se cured In Dave's absence were snugly en- bconsed In a ehady corner of the back pi azza. A bobolink fluttered from the top most twigof the great elm Into the tall grass , filling the sllenco with Its joyful notes. A locust donned its sleepy chant at their feet. All the voices of nature sang of peace , and they were lost in the semi-obliv ion of love's grand , sweet dream. A railroad contrast ! Although Davy plowed up considerable grayel , nnd knocked against the company's property in a good many places , ho was one of the flrst to assist the Imprisoned passen gers and superintend ho loading of his engine on a flat car. Ho laid off for thir ty days , complaining of his back ; but In ono of the rare interlowvs they wore now able to get , Annlo told Joe that ehe feared her father's nerve was gone , and that bo would never run again , Joe would not venture to call nobody did but he nodded cheerily to the sour visage whenever ho saw It at the window ns ho passed. Dave came out ot his shell and tried it again , but it was no use. Ho made three trips , but ho would shut off at Newtown switch In spite of himself , and was no gooc for the rest of the trip. Finding himself unable to make the time , he submitted to the inevitable and applied for a switch en gine. The old man could have given him a nice job in the passenger yard , but there are always old ecores to be paid oft on a railroad. Dave had been "sassy" when he was boss ot the twenty-seven and had the superintendent at his back , so now he got an old worn-out hog , In the freight yard and he made no kick. His nerve was , in deed , pretty well gonel He took a preliminary sweat under her from habit and was halt tired and wholly heartsick and discouraged when ho atartei in on the twelve-hour day. We felt a ter rible eense ot disgrace. I ( was a come down he had never expected , and he was aware that there was a general sense o satisfaction at his downfall. Not a man hac spoken a word of sympathy and he was the oldest engineer on the road , Not that he cared , tout The unfamiliar work , the continual hand ling of'the reverse lever and stretching out ot the window watching for signals I wrenched him and made every bone In him ache. He was conscious of the sneering flippancy of the yardmen , but ho toughed I out. out.Along Along toward evening he took advantage of a momentary lull In the work to sit down and. lean his aching back against the alda of the cab. His old train had come in a few minutes before , and be was indulging in bitter thoughts. Somebody climbed u ; in the tender and Joe Halllday stood before him. Joe laid a band lightly on hla shoulder , and as their eyes met , be aald : "Dave , ol' man , I'm awfully sorry ; am , by gum ) It's too bad ! " Dave gave him an , ugly look at first , bu the honest sympathy in tbo brown eye was too much , even for him. They shook hands , slowly , the hard look melted out of the old man's face , and he said : "Danged If I don't believe you'ro the best feller on the whole road , after all , " which was the biggest concession ho had ever been known to mako. Ho got a signal to go and ( is Joe Jumped off ho called after him , "Como 'round to the house this ovcnlnV When the minister congratulated Dave on his sturdy son-in-law , the old man re plied with such a smlto ns no ono remem bered ever to have seen on his face before : "Yes , pa'son , he's n fine young feller. I was a pigheaded ol' fool , 'but ' I got a llttlo penso knocked Into mo at last ; pooty near killed me , though. " And Joe tells Anna that her father Is all right "If you only understood him. " oinnsT OK lavirsa TONGUES. Sonic of tlio Dllllctittlcn of I.enriiltiK < < Six-ilk Good Cliliiono. The oldest spoken language now existent upon the earth , reports Youth's Companion. is ( ho Chinese. It has an enormous list of words the estimate of the number ot liaractcra ranges from 5,000 to 60,000. 'ho language has no alphabet. Each char- cter represents a complete idea , and cor- esponds , practically , to the English word. t Is written In columns from top to bot- om ot the page and from right to left. A hlneso book ends where an English book icglns. Writing Is done with a fine camel's lair brush nnd India Ink. The lack of an alphabet nnd the number t characters make learning to read Chinese mrdensomo. Each character must bo earned by Itself , When the student has lastorcd 5,000 characters the succeeding liousands must bo learned In the same way. 'hoso which ho has mastered furnish no solstanco to learning the others , save as ractlco may have given him a certain utckncss In perceiving the peculiar form which distinguishes each character from Its cllowa. The grammar of the language is so simple s to bo almost non-existent. The same ord serves Indifferently ns a noun.verb , dverb or adjective. "Moods , tenses , per- ons , gender and number < uo lacking ; there re neither , conjugations , nor declensions nor auxiliary verbs. The few Chinese who mve attempted to master the English tongue egard Its grammatical construction as lunisy and full of plttfalls. The Chinese characters glvo no clew to ha pronunciation , and no amount of book tudy will enable a foreigner to epcak The anguage. That ability must bo acquired by months of drill , a qujck ear and great exiblllty of the vocal organs. Even the most faithful effort falls to enable many orelgners to speak Chinese correctly. Chester Holcombe , for many years Inter- ) roter to the United States legation at 'ekln , from whose Interesting book , "Tho Real Chinaman , " wo have copied , relates everal anecdotes Illustrative of a foreigner's Imost Inevitable blunders in speaking Chi nese. nese.Mr. Mr. Holcombe once heard a venerable mls- lonary address the Deity in prayer , before a crowded Chinese audience , as "O Thou Omnivorous God. " Ho meant to say "om niscient , " ibut used an aspirated Instead of n unasplrated ch. Another missionary saw with astonishment the aUdlence hurriedly eave his chapel. In response to what ho bought iwaa an invitation from his lips to bo seated. lAn aspirated "t" had turned the upposed speech of welcome Into the In- ormatlon that they had made a mistake In entering the chapel. In Chinese the tone in which a word is spoken determines Its meaning as much as ho sound does. For Instance : In Chinese a man ceases to bo a Inani If you change he tone of the voice In uttering the word and may become a disease , a nightingale era a carrot. Ono" torie , and -only one , expresses man. There are foufr6f'vtheso ' tones in standard or'.Jnandarltt' jBfittoct a hlgh-cUrv- ns inflection and a falling inflection. The sound "mafl , " If uttered in the flrst tone , mean's brazen-faced ; In'the second , to hide ; In the third'fullvond In the fourth , slow. These four tones are the occasions of absurd blunders. A missionary once informed his audience iat the Savior , when on earth , "went about eating cake. " Ho Intended to say "healing the sick , " .but an aspirate wrongly placed changed the healing Into eating , whllo an error dn tone made cake out of sick. On ono occasion , when Mr. Holcombe was ; he host of a large dinner party , ho ordered ils Chinese butler to supply some small article that was not on the table. The man seemed puzzled , then went out and returned with the kitchen upon 'a tray. The host aad placed an aspirate where it did not Belong. At another tlmo the cook was told to buy a hundred "ladles' fingers" for an evening party. Two hours later he entered the courtyard of the American legation riding upon the shaft of a Chinese cart and ro- lorted that ha had been able to buy in Pekln only sixteen "ladles' Oncers. " "Why did you hire a cart ? " he was asked. "To bring them home they weigh five or six pounds each. " Instead of tiny strips of sponge cake to bo served with ice cream ho had bought , sixteen [ resh ox tongues. A wrong tone ot hla master's voice had done tbo mischief. Ilucklcn'B Arnlcn 5mvc. The best salvo in the world for cuts , jrulscs , sores , ulcers , salt rheum , fever sores , tetter , chapped bands , chilblains , corns , nnd all skin eruptions , and positively cures pitas , or no pay required. It Is guaranteed" to ; lvo perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price , 25 cents per box. TTor sale by Kuhn & Co. WRATH OF A PRAIRIE BELLE Pretty AHoa McDonald Slays Hei Indian Husband at Tahleqnah , MINGLING OF ROMANCE AND TRAGEDY TiirlllltiR Story of n. AVlillc Woninn'n I.lfc AinoiiK Hie ClieroUocn VeiiKomicc n ( n Uc- trnjctl llrlilo. Alllo 'McDonald , the white wife of Jim Mc Donald , n quarter-blood Cherokee , shot her husband dead in the street nt Tahlequah , I. T. , Juno 19 , 'but she has not been arrested nnd It Is not likely she will bo brought to trial. Although the net would bo murder In the view of the courts , relates a correspond ent of the Philadelphia Times , the circum stances that led to It are so peculiar that It Is looked upon In the community where It occurred by people who know the woman's provocation OR not only justifiable but com mendable homlcldo. The officers of the law- share In the feelings of the community , and so Instead of being regarded as a criminal Alllo ( McDonald. Is today the heroins rf Talilcquah. The killing was the swift vengeance of the Cherokee's bride , and Instead of being con demned It Is applauded. Alllo McDonald was the only child of a wcalth'y stock raiser at Chccotah , In the In dian Territory. She was n daughter of the pralrlo and when she budded Into womanhood It was to bloom with the rich , luxuriant beauty of a wild flowor. Lltho na a panther , she was as fascinating In form as In feature , nnd she -was as amiable as eho was beautiful. She was accomplished , too , and among her attractions not the least Important In the eyes of some of the young men who met her at her father's ranch was the fact that she was an heiress. SMany came to woo , but fern n long time none to wed , for while Alllo Madarls' black eyes sent a shaft if love Into many a heart , no returning arrow found a lodgement In her own. Tenderfoot and cowboy wooed In vain , but -when "Cherokee , Jim" came T > ack to Checotah the maiden sur rendered anH became the 'bride ' of the hand some Indian. Jim McDonald , quarter Indian as ho was , had Inherited with his Cherokee blood only the graceful movement and picturesque speech of the children of the woods. In face and feature ho was a white man , with only faint traces of the tawny strength and Im mobility that bespoke his kinship to the primeval race. An Indian Gciiilcmnn. He had been educated In the cast and came back to the territory with all the ap parent roflnement of a ccntlcman and the outward graces of a man of the world. As soon as his eyes fell upon the ranchman's daughter he resolved to woo and win her. The task proved an easy one. The ccntle Desdemona listened not more greedily to the thrilling words of the dusky Moor than Alllo iMadarls to the eloquent pleadings of the handsome Cherokee. There were no ob structions to the smooth current of their lovo. Allie's father .made no objection to the match and after a brief courtship they were married at his house. The wedding was the great eoclnl event of that section and the festivities were marked by many auguries of a brilliant future for the happy pair. The father was proud of his Indian son-in-law. The Cherokee seemed devoted to his fair 'bride. ' The young wife put un questioned trust In her Cherokee husband. Even Jealous rivals acknowledged that hand some Jim McDonald was a fit mate for beau tiful Allle Madarls. Thus the wedding feast was eaten and the wedding guests departed. Scarcely were the nuptial rejoicings over when Allle McDonald discovered that the husband she had mar ried was a fiend. ( Her cup of rejoicing after a few short weeks was filled with blood. Her Father A * nimlnateil. Ono day the young bride's father was found dead In the woods , killed by an un known assassin. That he had been shot down by an enemy was unlikely , for it was not known that ho had an enemy In the territory. That he had been murdered for the money In his purse was even more un likely , for his pockcte wore unrlfled. This was o , deed for which It was necessary to seek a. subtler motive than either of theee. Suspicion pointed to handsome Jim Mc Donald , but as'there was no proof , no man dared say openly that he suspected the Cher okee. As to the unhappy wife and bereaved daughter , she never thought of looking for her father's murderer in the man whom she had trusted above all others , and with whom she had shared her couch with her father's blessing. But Handsome Jim was the as sassin. Ho had shot down Madnrls as the first step toward securing Madarls' estate. Even had ho left no iwlll , her father's prop erty would have gone to Mrs. McDonald , but Mr. Madarls left a , will , by which his property was bequeathed to his daughter and her children only in case of her death with out IFSUO was it to go to McDonald , If he survived her. The murderer had failed to achieve his end by his first crime , and it soon became appar ent that his wife had a will of her own and that lie would fall to nchlovo It whllo she lived , especially while there was a possibility of offspring. To become a father with handsome Jim McDonald was to disinherit himself. To commit a second murder whllo the blood of the first was still fresh was toehazardous. . To live with the woman \\hom he now baled , to cnre. s nnd fondle her whoso very ' endcvxrmcnts had become n reproach to him , to have children by her who would deprive him of the fruits of his crlrao had besonio Impossible to him , Something , he thought , must be done and dona quickly. To wait was , intolerable. There must bo an entanglement at oneo and of a kind that would render his wife friendless In her grief and unsought In her apparent unworthlness. Jim .McDonald had the craft to conceive a plot that would servo his ends nnd the "nervo" to carry It Into execution. There was n temlerfoot at Checotoh , aNew Now York artist , who had come to the tcrrl- , tory to make sketches of the Cherokees nt | home. This nrtlst had made the acquaintance - anco of Mr. Madarls nnd was n welcome ' visitor nt the ranch. He was one of the i guests nt the Madarls-McDonald wedding. As Miss Madarls , Mrs. McDonald had admired - | mired his sketches. At her request ho made I a picture of the scene of the murder nnd her ] father lying dead In the woods. In Itself I this simple net was calculated to drive the guilty husband Into n frenzy , but Jim Mc Donald was not n man to slvo way to his real emotions. Ho deliberately chose to mis interpret an act of simple devotion to her father's memory ns n sign of his wife's guilty love for the artist. ITn Upbraided the womau. He menaced the man. Ho tuado no secret of what ho pretended to bellovo was an intrigue between his wlfo nnd the stranger. The murderer was guilty of a second end crlmo even moro heinous than murder ho robbed an Innocent woman of her reputa tion for chastity In the eyes of her neigh bors , and that woman hU wife. | Fearing for his life the artist ran nwoy. Then Mrs. McDonald disappeared. When tbo artist was gone and McDonald's homo was empty tiandsomo Jim gave It out there had been nn elopement. The New York man , ho said , had stolen his wife from him. Ho offered a reward of $10,000 for her re turn. Ho pretended to bo the worst nbuscvl nnd the meet forgiving of husbands. If ho could only have Ills wife back , every- thlug should bo forgiven. The community was mystified. Some of the men suspected ; but nearly all the women pitied him. As tlio wronged husband , no cuckold ever turned his wrongs to such good account. In n. few days , handsome Jim McDonald was a Cherokee angel In thu eyes of nearly everybody. Ho did not remain In the Cherokee na tion after that , but went to New York , giv ing it out that iio was going in search of hla wife. The impression ho left behind I was that tlioro would bo a bloody studio I somewhere on ( Manhattan If the heartbroken j Cherokee succeeded In finding the wicked artist among his sketches of "Tho Cherokee at Home. " In the MctrfipollN. In New York handsome Jim McDonald had a very good tlmo Indeed. Ho had plenty of money with him and ho used it with the I profusion of a good Indian. Ho traced the I ballet girls to their lalre and corraled them j on the roof gardens. Ho made the ncqualnt- ! anco of tlio sports about town and some- i times treated with profuse hospitality. Ho | showed an Interest in Indian traditions by j making friends at the wigwams of St. Tam many. Doing a lover of horse flesh , he sometimes "played the races. " But ho did . not altogether forget the pretended purpose ' of his visit to New York. He caused long articles to bo printed In the "yellow" Jour- i.als about Jala unending search for his lost bride. The Red Men and the "yellow" journals made a good thing of it. The story of the faithful Cherokee and his fickle bride made good reading for the ad mirers of Steve Brodlo and "Buffalo Bill ; " but it is a noteworthy fact that handsome Jim McDonald never called upon the pollco to aid Ihlm In his search for the wicked artist. In time the ballet clrls. the sports , the Tammany braves and the races began to pall upon the Cherokee , nnd ho besan to think of returning to the Indian Territory. Ono man. Dotectlvo Dunkln , who had heard McDonald's stories about ibis stolen bride , had promptly act them down as lies , and was waiting for his return. Last month McDonald came back. Dunkln got on his trail and succeeded In tracing him to Tahle- quah. Fifteen miles southeast of Tahlequah in the deep woods is the hut of a noted Indian outlaw , who is called by the expressive name of "Six Killer. " The big Indian Is always open to any Job that will pay , oven If ho has to justify Ihls name over and over again in earning tilt ] money , but Detective Dunkln did not know that "Six Killer" maintained business relations with Jim McDonald. Duuktn had not long been watching his quarry when McDonald started on a trip Into the woods In the direction or "Six Killer's" hut. The detective followed , and saw the Cherokee enter the ( hut. After McDonald had spent a couple of hours with "Six ' Killer" ho went awny. Then Dunkln went to the house nnd placed "Six Killer" under arrest. The arrest was only a bluff , but It served Its purposo. When "Six Killer" had been sufficiently scared to consent to talk to secure immunity from arrest ho said that McDonald had como to see his wife , who was locked in a cave under the bouse. A I'ul'N CoiifeHHlon , According to "Six Killer's" story , ho had been paid $500 a year by McDonald to keep the woman a prisoner tiatll she died. The dotectlve at once bought Mrs. McDonald In Amateur Golfer Yes , I'd enjoy the game better if I could be perfectly sure that blamed caddie isn'r .at me all the tkn 4 " the itlaco Indicated and found her asleep In one corner of the .nve. Her surprise nnd Joy nt her rescue were very great. Sometimes , she said , she < \as allowed to v\alk over the hill * , Rtmrdol by "Fix Killer , " but most of the UL-IC sue n s kept a close prisoner in the cave. She was often brutally treated nnd wouM not have ll\c l many yenrn If her Imprisonment In her close and unwholesome cell bad crntlmtetl. She had lost all reckoning o. tlmo and had abandoned hope nt ever being rescued. To her the months of her Imprisonment had scorned years. Her health had suffcrc 1 ns much through her hopclessm-a and despair as through conllnemont , unwholesome foo.d , bad treatment and her damp prison. It was with the utmost dimcufty that she was able to make her way bark to Tahloquah with the detective , but freedom Rave her renewed courngo and nerved her for the effort. After she reached Tahlequah , Mrs. Mc Donald was kept In her room for several days , so that she might be able to rccuporato nnd recover her stiength of body ami mind Ono day she escaped. She had not gone fai' when Hho met her husband on the street , nnd , without a moment's hesitation , shot him dead. It was the vengeance of the brldo of the Cherokee. It is scarcely surprising under nil these circumstances that the people of Tnhleqtwh and Chccotah are her friends , and will not consent th.it this much-Injured woman sh.iil jj tried for her life. Auion.Ivr foremost champions Is the brother of handsome Jim McDonald. This story reads like n romance. 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