The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, May 01, 1897, Page 4, Image 4

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THE COURIER.
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BRUSH, COLORADO.
This bit of information is printed for convenience about
answering the numerous inquiries now cominif in concerning-
.Brush, Colorado, and surrounding- country.
r BRUSH bus about 'wo bundiel inbabitantp.
2 A splendid, commodious school building, with ajl "high school" facilities.
3 Located in the Plat'e nnd Heaver valley, eight? miles east of Denver, ia the
midst of h larce area or tine, arable 1 tod, covored by iriigitioa ditches, and
only waiting judicious farming to develop wealth.
4 Tne climate ia ac'ap'.oj to all sorts of crops gtox-n in the North Temperate
zone.
5 Excel' nt watrr can be had at depth varjing from .TO t) GO feet, the lower
strata furnishing the puiest mountain water at a'nable.
G Fine building Etorc adjacent to tlio town, can be ha J at from $175 to 81.00
per cord, thus making it clnaper to buil i of stone than lumber.
7-3hreecrop3o! alfalfa are grown in the season, ) 'elding a? a rule fix tone per
acre (.8 the p-oduct, while wild hay on the higher land grows well and alwajs
brinjjs a bi.j pric The rich yield of hay makes it pre-eminently a country in
which to raien cattle and hos to tho feeding stage when It is easy to drive
tberu to the cheap corn of Nebraska.
8 Small fruit land vegetalbesot all kinds can Le develop' d to any extent al
most the real conditions when told seem almost fabulous.
9 S'eim threshers in wrk of 183C show average of wheat in this vicinity n be
forty bushels per acre, oats tifty bushels.
10 Entire absence of contagious diseases of fco'.h nnn and beast; the atmos-
phera Is a regular da'ly life jsiver.
1 The county of Morgan, in which Brush is located, is free of debt and taxes
are low. -
SHADOWS ILLUMINATED.
There is now excellent opening" for a first class grist ' mill,
one hundred barrel capacit', one g-ood hardware store, one
good drug- store.
Get on. tlxe Burlington Cars
and look the situation over.
" To 'appreciate the beauties of this season's
milliner' 3ou should inspect the line shown by
MRS- R. E. LLr
12S So. lStlx Street
t . v.
Go to
For
Gill etoad at the foot of the loDg.
narrow stairr, surveying them critically
"Of course he's at the top," abe said;
'they always are-and no lift! Pcor
Van! I ought to have married him!"
She mounted thres flights with a brick
step that left her breathless at the end
of (he fourth. For a moment she leaned
against the balustrade, her heart beat
ing violently; then she knocked at the
studio door. There was no response,
and shobeat an inpatient tattoo with her
knuckles she was not in the habit of
being kept whitirg. She could hear
footsteps as cf a person crossing the
room, and the door was opened by a
swarthy man whose great shock of
black hair, and the dingy red jeisey he
wore gave him a certain gip3y pictur
esqueness. "Good morning," the girl said, with a
Jittle accent; "this is Mr. Drayton, I
believe?1
"Won't you come in?" the man re
plied, kicking aside some rubbish to
make way for her.
Gill entered, and stood in the middle
of the room tiking in its disorder with
a smile-lit critical eye. Ever thing had
the ragged, dusty appearance that be
tokened negligence rather than the
confusion that is picturesque. Slovenly
was the outward expression of it Had
Van come to that?
Drayton stood waiting for her to
open the conversation.
"If you are quite done staring at me,
she said, breaking the s'.lence, "perhaps
you will ask me to sit down!"
thought it would be such fun to drop in
like this, fo I looked you up in the di
re .tory this morning, and I climbed up
all those awful staira just to see see for
myself how you were getting on, and
really you've been abominible you
haven't any manners at all!'
"Gill! Gill! You do not know."
"Yes, I do know,"' she interrupted: "I
know that America does not agree with
you come back to Paris with me."
The man took a step toward her and
stopped. From tho adjoining rrozn
came a faint, peevish wail.
"Van," the girl said, facing him, "I
know why you got oat of Paris, and. I
wa3 sorry V9ry sorry, butl let you go.
There were so many others," she said
w?arily, "only you took it more tragi
cally than the rest. Sometimes it baB
worried me that I spoiled your' work
there. Often I have been tempted to
send for you, but you see" speaking
more lightly "I never did. I thought
I would wait until I just couldn't wait
any longer, and here I am! Van!" she
ci isdr merrily. "Isn't that a confession?"
From ths adjoining room the faint,
peevish wail deepened into a lus'y cry
that was broken by a woman's voice
droning monotonously. A startled look
came into the gill's eyes and she turned
to Drayton inquiringly.
lie strengthened himself with a visible
effort, and taking her hand in his drew
her to the other end of the studio. "I
can't go back to Paris with you, dear,
because of that," he faltered glancing
toward the door th-ough which a sing
song lullaby cow came in snatches.
'Van!' she cried, in a low, tsnse
Slippers, Bto.
1129 0 Street, ss' Lincola Neb
THE PALAGE BEAUTIFUL
Malcea a Specialty of
Hair pessing,
gbampooin .
fvlanicuring
"I beg your pardon," he ttimmered. whisper, then, with a half-articulate cry
dumping a pile of cardboard out of a BDe buried her raje in the cushions,
chair, and pulling it up.f or her; "I teem 'Gill, Gill!' he cried beseechingly
to have forgotten my manners." "look at me laufch at me, dear. Ses, I
- "And a lot of other things besides, eh, am not worth anything else only to be
Van?" She spoke without any accent laughed at You know you always
now, and lifted the closely dotted veil laughed at me."
that had partially concealed her face. She raised her head as if in obedience
"Gill!"' He gasped, with hie eyes riveted to his will, but her eyes went by his
on her; "it isn't possible!" face and rcsted'on the canvas. "How
"Everything is possible, she remarked old is he Van?" she asked quietly,
coolly; "even that I should run over from "Six months. May I tell you about
Paris to see you. Upon my word, you're it dear?"
not ve-y cordial you haven't even She nodded her head, and going over
shaken hands with me." to the window, pulled back the tape3try
"When did you come? he managed to that covered it and let her gaze go out
ask, though his tongue felt dry and over the roofs acd chimney 'pote. How
parched, and he made no movement dingy and sordid and commonplace it
toward her. all seemed! Beyond and above was the
"For pity's Eake, don't get trpgic, tki a vivid blue flecked with tiny
Van!" the girl said impatiently. "I can't cloudr, but she did cot see it-darken-
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And all Kinds of Masi
lose.
tilk while you stand devouring ms like
that! Come and sit down and be sensi
ble. I did succeed in surprising j ou,
didn't I?" and she Uughed delightedly.
"When did you come, Gill?" he repeat
ed, dropping on a divan, pushing a
rattle under the cushions out of sight.
icsceraay. oa tae at. Ijouis. Just a
icg shadows obscured her vision.
Drayton followed her, and rested one
knee en a chair behind her, leaning
hevvily on the back while he talked. The
lullaby had ceased, and' the silence
about them was oppressive. M married
her, Gil', six months at tjr I left you. J
thought I was a fool ever to have
sudden freak t i have a look at my coun- dreameJ of jou I, poor devil of a
try and you. We're staying at the painter, to homjoawer kind, and you
Moreland, Tommie and I its to deadly
respectable! You remember Tommie,
don't you? She's the best of chums
always around when I want her and
never when I don't."
with all the world from which to
choose!"
"And if I did not chocsethe world?"
"Ah, Gill!"
"Perhaps, too, you think I made vou
"Why didn't you send me word, Gill?"' one of us out of pure kindness?" Bhe
"Van! Van!" she cried, pro'.estingly, askeJ, sinfully,
'you're worse than the witness stind. It "Dear I did not dare think how
has been nothing but 'why, why.' s'nee could I? And you Ianjhed when I came
I came in. As if I ever knew why! And away." He waited a moment hut .fc.
AFull line of Hair Goods and Cosmetics.
131 1. 1311
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I did not coxe all this distance to ba
cress examined!" She left her chair and
sat down teside him on the divac,
throwirgoff her furs with a graceful
movement. "Aren't you glad to see me, t worked Go J in hen eo, how. I worked
made no comment, and he went on
slowly. "1 he love of you was like a
fever that consumed me, but I did not
mean it should weaken me, so I
vacr ana men, as it do answer we.e
necessary, she sprang up and went over
to an easel, examining a canvas that w.s
wet. "Cheicbs!" she exclaimed, "and
exquisitely tender they are aie, to:!
How long have you been going in for
that sort of thing?"
"Some months," he answered, mechan
cally. She turned and looked at him.
Van, she said, "you're a rtupld old
tti.g I'm disappo'.n'.td in you. I
those first months! And I began to gain
recognition and make a place for my
self, and alwaja I said, 'it is Gill who is
doing'it' I saw very few people those
days, dear; no women but' my models."
"Ah!" she interjected.
'-She was a sweet, slender littla thing,
and one day, when, in spite of every
thing, I went to pieces, she numd me
and pulled me through. When I got
about again we were married. That m
about all of it, dear.''
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