THE COU I -i. -. worn bare by bis grandchildren's knuckles. The sunshine flickered down through the leaves, lighted up his silky hair and careesed his withered cheek. For the sun was old himself and had been young, to he understood why it was that the old man jingled the bag of marbles and jingled them again and smiled. Two girls satin the cloakroom. One of them had a sentimental look on h face, She absorbed the other girl with her eyes. The other girl sat quite still and read a lettar. It was a thick letter and it must have been very interesting, for leaf after leaf of it was laid aside and the reader did not raise her eyes. The watcher was elated. "Why," she thought, "it must be a let ter from her best young man." She counted the leaves. Her eyes sparkled Four five b"ix. It must be a love let. ter. How nice. She felt a sincere over whelming friendship for the other girl. She went over and sat down near her. "Is it a letter from him?" sho asked, insidiously. The other raised her eyes filled with tsars. Her cheekB were white. "No," she answered sharply, "it is from home and my little aousin is dead. I am to go home to the funeral." And she walked away. JERRY'S KICKAPOO GIRL. Jerry stood on the outside of the crowd around the Kickapoo medicine show when he saw her first. The show had been In town two nights be lore.but this was Jerry's first-night He was glad he had come if only for the novelty of the thing. The rude platform, the flickering lights, the wicked looking man upon the platform flourishing a bottle of Sagwa in each hand, the loud voice strident above the mutter of the crowd, the people moving back and forth restless ly, impatient for the auction to stop and for the acting to begin all these things fascinated Jerry. But there was one other thing he saw after awhile that fascinated him more than ever. He was nineteen and did not find in the flour and hay that he handled daily anything to sat isfy his nineteen-year-old desire for romance. But the pretty girl face up on the platform made him think of all the heroines in the stories he had read. She wasn'tan Indian of course. The Indians didn't come on until the acting began. But he called her after wards his "Kickapoo girl." She was so pretty and the black dress she wore s0SoJerry couldn't express it very well; he said the dress was like the girl. She stood up there by the side of the wicked looking man. When anybody wanted to buy a bottle of Sagwa she was the one to give it out to him with her own slender white lianas. Jerry watched her. She smiled sometimes when she handed the bottles down. Her smile took Jerry's breath away. Such red lips; such bright eyes; such white skin. Her throat looked like marble rising from the soft, black lace around her neck. And sometimes she spoke laughingly to the wicked looking man. Then the man's voice would die down a moment while he answered her, to rise the next moment louder and harsher than ever, enumerating a long list of the incurable diseases that Sagwa and Kickapoo salve would cure. Jerry's listening ears turned all the harshness and rasping of the man's voice to purest melody. His eyes were on the girl. There was nothing ih the wide world that could seem discord to him at that moment. He felt a dreamy delight in the siren's rythmical re frain. "Thank you, thank you; we thank everybody who buys our Kicka poo Indian Sagwa Sigwa Sagwa. Dollar a bottle or six for a five. Sag wa. Thank you; thank anybody who buys our Sagwa." Jerry's tongue kept repeating, "dol lar a bottle, six for a five. Thank you Sagwa thank you." But his eyes were always on the girl up in front. He found himself edging up towards her; he jingled a dollar with the shin gle nails in his pocket. He stood at last within two rods of her. He watched the slow succession of people pass in front of the platform, Somu were buying, some were thereout of curiosity and some were dragged along by the crowd. He was one of the curious ones or what would hap pen if he bought a bottle V He didn't need it. ho wasn't sick. But what might not happen if he went up close and bought the medicine. The girl might look at him and smile as sho had smiled at the others. That would be worth the dollar. He edged his way forward. He was within one rod three yards two yards. The man up in front was speaking his, '"Thank you, thank you; we thauk everybody." Somebody else was speaking, too, right close to Jerry's ear. Two men laughed coarsely. One said: "She's pretty but;" and the other answered "She's the old swindler wife. She goes up there to draw the suckers. As you say pretty but." They laughed again and Jerry shiv ered. He would have given his dollar now to get to the outside of the crowd again. But it was too late, ne had already held out his hand to the girl with the dollar shining in the p.ilm She reached to take it from him as he drew back and the dollar rang down upon the tioor at her feet. She laughed insolen'ly and in a second Jerry was wild with anger. She was laughing at him, his awkwardness. He seized tho bottle that she gave him and would have smashed it ag.iin on the platform, but the sound of the wicked looking man's voice came di rectly to him. The rytlim of it steadied him. "Thank you; thank you, we thank everybody that buys our Kickapoo In dian Sagwa". Jerry moved on with the crowd, ire felt the bottle in his hand a bottle of Sagwa! What did he want with Sagwa? He suddenly laughed. Tilings did not seem quite the same as they had fifteen minutes before, the crowd was there the same, but hecouldsee their faces plainer.And the girl, he looked at her; he could see face plainer too. She was pretty, but, He walked away sleepily. He was murmering sarcastically the wicked looking man's tune, "Thank you, thank you; we thank everybody Sag wa thank you, we thank everybody." ANNIE PKET. On Monday the Round Table met with Mrs. M. D. Welch. About eighteen were present. THE OMAHA MEET. All railroads will sell, within 153 mites from Omaha, round trip tnksts to Oma ha on Juno 8th to lltb, inclusive, for one fare. The trotting races occur on June 3, 9, 10 and 11. The field of horses, an unusually large one, includes many known trotters, as well as several new ones, which give promise of many surprises and a lively and interesting meeting is assured. The great pacing horse, Johnny, rec ord 2:12, will each day attempt t) lower his own record, goinj without driver or harness. The horseless carriage is another novelty. It will race each day with the fastest horse on the grounds, carrying four occupants, and will afford visitors the opportunity of eeeing the first horse less vehicle in the west. The events include free for all trotting and free for all pacing races t t ?' The Courier's Great Offer to Subscribers. THE COURIER has arranged to offer free of charge to every one subscribing this month a year's subscription to the most popular magazine published in this country. To every one sending us two dollars to pay for one year's subscription to THE COURIER we will give a one year's subscription to OPlxree dollars for trwo dollar's. Do not miss this chance. We cannot afford to con tinue the offer indefinitely. Our object in making it now is to secure an immediate response which a less liberal offer might fail to attract. ' ' ltiftm Mr. Sticker I always pay as I go. Mies Ticker Well, you dont owe m3 anything, do you? Tha German Emperor Mldrea, How the German emperor will bring up his only daughter is no subject of wonderment to the Berllners. They know that, princess as she is, she will be taught to be a good housewife, to sew, to cook perhaps, and to order din ner certainly. For the sovereign's ideal woman Is a strictly domestic person, as his ideal man Is a stout soldier. His little boys haven't much fun in their daily lives. Concerning these lives the Sketch .says: In the Spartan upbring ing of his children the kaiser rivals hi3 ancestor, Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia. According to Klausmann's "Leben in Deutschen Kalserhaus," the life of the royal children of Berlin is not sweet ened by hours of inactivity. In their years of infancy the kaiserin ministers to almost all their wants, spends a good part of the day with them and enters into all their amusements. When the princes arrive at the age of 9 things are all changed and it is all work. They are then allowed about an hour and half out of their waking hours to themselves; all the rest of their day is spent in study and physical training. Even In holiday time their tutors ac company them to superintend their tudiss. Philadelphia Ledger iur ucre campaign outions oi mm with eyes to 'em, so that ef the demand la smaller than the supply I kin tell 'em to some overhauls factory or some thing of that kind."; Itfiian.! Journal Or (toad Tktm to Blind Aiylam. "I think," said the statesman who dldm't have any great hopes, anyway, "hat it woujd be a good plan to rsake Sfo Wcnidrr It'a a Cmzr. The silver question, a it Is under stood In some parts of Kentucky, is graphically Illustrated by a letter which one of the statesmen at the cap Itol received from a correspondent in that state. It appears from this epis tolary evidence that a controversy was being waged between a sound-money man and a silver champion. The gold man thought he had the best of the argument. He asked his adversary why he thought that the free coinage of sil ver would make times better. "Simply because it would put mora money in circulation," said the white metal crank. "But how will It put more money in circulation? " demanded the gold man. "How?" asked the silver man. with a smile of contempt at his opponent. "How? Why, you blamed fool, if you can take one gold dollar to the treas ury and getsixtee'n dollars for it, won't that Increase the circulation?" Pitt, burg Dispi .-