THE COURIER. 12 PESSIMISTIC & f j M .-&,. I i t I. Jf a Under the sod, on a bare hillside, The house is fashioned where I must bide; It is only to open a door ol mouid, Then seck it close from the winter's cold; And that is the cnil ah, well-away! So getteth min's cloudy, or cloudless day. -IDYLA. HIS FAREWELL SERMON. Austin Winthorp came out ot the sem inary parly in Juno and almost imtupdi ately found two calls awaiting him. Ozo was from the Hon. Charles Dutton Col ton or Topo'f a, Kansas, who offered to put fifteen thousand dollars into a church at his home city and hava youn? Winthorp me out and build up its membership. The other offer was from a little town in western Nebraiki and had catuo through tho efforts ot Win thorp's old university school-mate, Henry Hartzall, who had gone into tho cattle business there a j"ear or two be- . - Spiilplio-Saliiie Sanitarium, Coir. Irtlx and M All Kinds of Baths Scientific Masseurs. A Deep Sea Pool, 50x142 feet. Shavinw Hairdressinj?. Drs- Everett, Managing Physicians. tended on Sunday morning. During tion trickling down their tnm Th Tnii-lta call was a very tsmnt- hia ntav he pained ouita a hold on the their heads to the wind ing one. but to Winthorp it smacked too ranch cf ths "boom" which that city was then going through. So he almost im mediately accepted tho Nebraska pas tor 'e. Active work was not to begin in his field until Auguit and Winthorp cheeks, bent at tho cross little colony of Chicago fashionables stieets and hurried on. In tho seams ol from Hyde Park. His large, splendid their eyes were bhek specks of dirt, and frame, his strong, sympathetic face with the lids were tight drawn, and wrinkles txinkliu; blue eyes and high forehead ran from tho ends to the temples, a3 crowned by light, thin hair, made him from the eyes of him who looks too long attractive to every ono. He possessed a or toointently at the sun. now atraizhtway took boat to Port Mills on tho Wisconsin shore of 'Lake Michigan. He went there for other reasons than rest o.-hiehoillh. Miss Margaret Do land was spending the summer at the Port with her pirents ono partof tho little colony which had moved up from the Hyde Park corner ot Chicago and taken possession ot the Wisconsin re- T - w - VJrT -'ii ' . - 4rr-fev"fci- ready grace which, combined delicate imagery groat I II I IM II I' I i i 5flWIKPK c s -immmiAmmkmdmitkti. with a earnestne33 and natural eloquence, mads him even at his age and experience a powerful and at tractive spcakor. He 'preached ia tho little churih at Port Mills those two sermons which pivei a rapid path for future success, lingered a week longer with his sweetheart, and then after all tho good-byes and one farawell, turned bis face westward, to-tae little lonely a t tM-prairie town in Nebraska. "" 'And hers Margaretr'DtUnd'Roes out hu college course had riponed into love. Tkero he told her of his passion and at the same time of his intention ot enter wft the ministry. Her lite he knew well enough had bem more or less one ot gayety and society, and he felt that he could not ask her to became his wife. So ho simply told her ot his love and asked nothing in return. Margaret Deland knowing her own love for him was woman enough to attune her lifo to his. and eo had come out bold If and an aoanced their ongajement. All of which explains why young Winthorp turned so hastily northward toward Port Mill?. He spent fiva weeks at the res irt and during this time preached twice at the little frame church which the summer boarders and country folk around at- takatory. aacCarrie78taatencome3 against the l9 w "atrjjg& assfT When Winthorp reached the town where ho was to begin his work it seemed to him as if he had ridden into an immense furnace, The hot August wind blew a gale from tho south. The white fiery ball of the sun beat down until the air on the long level Drairia quivered as it does over the sands of the desert. The leaves of the few little cot tonwoods were dry and curled and the blades ot grass crackled underfoot. Dust swept by in clouds, enveloping dwell ings, whole streets, at time3 the entire town. When the wind calmed a mo ment there wero added ridges ot whitish brown on the window ledges and in the fence corners little mounds rose higher. Women remained unseen within doors. Men with powdered hair, dusty wilted collars, and little channels o penpira- All that day and many more the wind from the southern furnace blew unceas ingly. The trees turned brown and bare, the earth grew parched and seamed with huge cracks. And the prairie glowed and glistened and quivered under the desert sun. Men saw the work of months perish in a day. Business died in a week. Movers' .wagons crept slowly eastward, the horses' heads bent close to the ground a limping dog following wearily behind, with swinging tongue, the blackened canvass fluttering and napping noisily little band full that sat before him and it touched his heart sorely as he looked into their eye?. There were old men bent and infirm with suffering, young men with gray on their temples. There wero women whose lips were palo and thin and drawn, whose eyes were bard ?.nd dull. There were children from whose faces bad faded all expression of childish joy and happiness. Winthorp knew them all, knew their story, knew what they had suffered. And as he looked into their faces that twil ght hour of his farewell, he threw aside the formal sermon be had prepar ed and talked to them out of bis heart's experience of the year. 'We read of heroiBm of war which is lha heroism ot the movement. We read of the heroism of tho ancients the Greek and the Roman. And a feeling of awe and reverence comes over us. But I want to say and 'God knows that there is no greater heroism than you h ve displayed during this past year the heroism of bearing privation and right in the end. "And no I corns to the hardest part of my task" bo said, "to say good-bye." Though my prospects are bright for the future, you will never know how it wrings my heart to eav farewell. Tn. Bides. Cattle were aban doned. Dwellings left empty, business houses-vacated and in the eyes of all. fear and despair and desperation. And yet Winthorp stayed out the yeara year that tried his soul to its suffering and sorrow silently and uobly. very depths and aged him as five years Such is tho greatest heroism in the had not done before. He made bis world and such you have shown." Then fight spending his meagre salary on the ne wnt on to cheer them up and to tell starving, comforting the despairing, vis- them that they must not give up to des- iting the sick, watching at the bedside P""'r ad everything would come out of the dying. He was game to the last and only gave up when forc;d by tho inevitable. uno willing helper Winthorp had iouna. Almost immediately on his arrival be had been drawn to Carrie Stanton by her sweet tender fapp hpr cether we have witncnri c.ni0 ,, retiring modesty and her quiet, earnest noDe can describe, scenes which aie devotion. Throughout all that terrible burned into my memory as by red hct winter she bad been hie helpmate and iron- Together we have gone thiough they had come to know each other as slar ration and suffering and death. And only tho3e can who walk together amid have come to know you as if you were scenes of suffering and death. my family my brother or my sister. Cirrio Stanton' friendship and help Ad froin all of you I have I bave in his woik cheered Winthorp's loaely known nothing but kindness and court life and he came more and more to rely esy and good will. You bave aided me upon her and value her friendship. But cheerfully and willingly, to Carrie Stanton herself this friendship Hia vico broke at the end and he had come to mean more. To her Win- Bank down into the pulpit chair. The thorp was the man of all men in tho twilight shadows had been creeping in world. Her heart had trnnn nt in i,:. from th wpat until tv,-. i:i ..i , r, iu uuu --" mo , iino tuurcn was at the very first, and in the knowledge almost in darknesi. Without a word, Into buying a Cheap Kanjre, when vou can buv. with a litrlo ' ana ,D "e r constant com- ,u Y:,,7 . re,8 ,a? cno"ng thro its M 1 1 , w rytninnQhin aha fnnnd 4-U. . a .r ii" LADIES BdMft lb Mmffltagedl? more monev, a Nebraska-made article The rLmcoInStecl Plate Range made on honor from the best Rocky Mountain Cold Rolled Steel and Silver Grey Wrought Iron and ? StceL V ith proper care it will lasta life-tim?. It is the most econo-1 mical Range on the market in the consumption of fuel. Some peo-f , pie using the Lincoln Steel Plate Range claim it will save if s costin? the savisp of coal in two vk nvr nil im ,. w , . in all ityks and sues. We warrant them in every respeCtand our 4 Euaranice is eooo. sk your dealer lorthrm nnrf t-fc -at. ir does not keep them write us and wc will quote you price delivered at ' your depot. We will be glad to , hear from you. Mcntionthis : i. iuuimion wc pay inc iragm. RETAIL STORE IC28 O STREET, Buchstaff Bros.. MH. ! makers. panionship she found the greatest hap piness of all her life. Never for a mo ment ata she' dream that fate step in and Enatch him from her. might Tno little handful lft th k.u .i went slowly through tne summer even ing to their homes. Then Winthrop took up the Bible bis mother had civen bira and left tho church. It was almost dark then and he did not sea the slender form of a girl m,.; I l luo PP3o side ot tho church from him. Her head was bowrd low on tho rail in fmnt a 1 -. I "- auu UUt3 IlilUlt er breast. a i.ne evening ruir. .v.:u ,t., vacancy occurcd it required little urging ? o take whistled far in the western oathepartoftheDelands to have tho d'9,a.DC0 aQd then faraway to the east call extended. Winthorp, realizing that S .iLI 88?- But the girl hishhtwaRiiror;nt,i 1..1:..,". . 1V-- ,"""-" "cau si 0 ""-"uucij muspririo cnurcn Bobbin At the end of his year Winthorn r. ceived a call to a paEtorato in Hvdo Park ?hurca from him. ru: it. J i"', 1,,. nn thn nil ' vuicuko. nis two sermons at Pnrr 1 , v. i 1 ;" uui a Mills had hppn u!, .,iFrt cl"'chei1 dcspa.ringlv at he .v.uvulul,lcu auu wuen a ADe town, accepted. It was just a year Tram his iirEt Sun day in the place when he preached bis farewell sermon. It was acorn locking sat in the little bin,; i.-i In and Eobbine aDd b bine while night Eclt!cd down over tho prune and nil sounds died awav e-nt tt.aR .f XP eouta wind which Diew on unveiSicgly. Harry G. Shedo.