mm 12 THE COURIER. K DUAL HOMESICKNESS. Whikt I in old-world capitals sojourned, In storied dties, rich with Time's acquest, A pilgrim from our wide, uastoricd west, Forever homeward I in spirit turned: For me through each Atlantic suntef burned My homeland dawn in braver splendor dressed. The bird divine that sang from bosky nest, Beside my brown thrush scanty tribute earned. But now when I once more sit down at home, What fond perversity my soul pursues 1 She roves afar, beyond her native pale, And slips Manhattan Isle to pace through Rome; Or leaves the brown thrush for the winged Muse For moonlit Cadenabbia's nightingale. Edith M. Thomas in June Century. THE SHADOW OF ROMANCE. The little old farmhouse stood close to the poet road. Its weather-beaten sides were covered with the same rounded shingles they wore in the days when the stages passed this way between New York and Boston. Vines and climbing roses twisted caressingly over the low second story and clung to the broken edges of the ancient shingles. In sum mer with the roses in bloom the house was a thing of beauty, at all times it was the delight of artists. The low porch admitted to dark, uneven rooms, whose timbers were rotten and sunken. For fifty years the farmer had lived there and when he came the house was old. In those long years no band had marred its pictureequenees or hindered the slow decay which brought to the occupants a heritage of ill-health and , malaria. All else had changed. Trains now sped through the farm's length in the meadows past the brook, and the velvet lawns and tennis grounds of the summer homes of city folks, touched the boundaries cf its pasture lands. In a region of wealth aud luxury this one home kept the traditions and primitive methods of an earlier ags. The stern old man who had forced the rocky soil to yield its increase, had no pity or tender ness for his daughter's isolation. The nearest house, long vacant, had been bought by a New York family. The farmhouse door opened and down the winding dusty road, bordered by un even stone fences half-hidden beneath clinging vines and luxuriant under brush, came a little brown figure. Fast the curve where the great wil lows stretched their long arms protect ingly across the road, inviting the way farer to the ehelter of their shade, she paused with a nervous pull at her lisle thread gloves and a glance at the house just seen in the distance. She attempted to brush the duet from her ill-fitting shoes, which disguised a pair of tiny feet If pretty, she would have been dainty; bat sallow and plain with a dress colorless as the dust -itself, she was sim ' J SulpliO'Sallne All Kinds of Baths Shaving- Hairdressing-. ply insignificant. At the window two bright girls watched the slight form move slowly up the long driveway. "Our neighbor, the farmer's daughter, is coming to call," said Lucy, "we have not yet met." Both girls endeavored to put at ease the shy, little creature, who had nothing to say and was too nervous to leave. Youth she seemed never to have known, yet from her short dreee, clearing her boot tops, she might have been a child. In reality she was about thirty. "Where can we find thistles? " asked Lucy. "We want them to make fluffy balls, and also for fortune telling." A gleam of inter est arose in the brown eye?.. The girl continued: "You take four thistles, cut off the red tops and name them! three as men you know, and the fourth call a stranger. Put the stems in water, and in the morning the one of the four whom you are to marry will have bloomed forth with new red petals, while the others are brown and dead. You might try it too." The visitor took her departure. Later came a basket of tine thistles with an ill-spelled little note. The girls prepared for their fortunes and commisserated the lonely life of the neighbor up the road. In the dusk of the evening in the quaint shingled farmhouse, a slight fig ure crept up the old stairs with her hand hidden beneath b.6r brown calico apron. In the quiet of her chamber four thistles were surreptitiously prepared with paper slips about their stems. Once her mother passsd the door the jar with its shorn blossoms was slipped under the bed. Then her father's heavy tread was heard and she was safe from interrup tion. Dreams of romance troubled hr sleep. At the first break of dawn, as the light glimmered through the vines across the window, she sprang to look at her thistles. They were all dead. One more disappointment to a life destitute Patronize Home Industry. Made in Nebraska. JieW Lincoln Steel RANGE Best on earth. Made on honor. Sold 00 merit Guaranteed a good baker and economical of fuel. All styles and sizes. Some people claim they will SAVE THEIR COST IN FUEL inside of two years over any cast iron stove made. 4 Hole Ring a. Above 4O00 6 Hole Raage as Above 45X0 With enamel reservoir. Delivered at any railroad station within 300 miles of Lincoln, Bcckstatf Bros. Mfg. Co. Maker. Lincoln, Neb Sanitarium, Cor. I-irttn and M Scientific Masseurs. A Deep Sea Pool, 50x142 feet. DrSjEverett, Managing- Physicians. 4MB TYttS S0t is fine soles, .41111111 111 IT bHHHIIIiIA. V . -m-mrmmmrr&T Judge Dallas in the United States circuit court for the Eastern Dis trict of Pennsylvania has granted injunctions further sustaining WEbGHBACH RAWSON PATENT. We take this means of cautioning the public against the pur chase of any incandescent mantle other than that made and sold by the Welchbach companies. CTJLTRA & UNDERWOOD, Solo Agents. PLUMBING, GAS FITTING and SBWERAGp. immimhumimio o'f hope or pleasures; it seemed but an omen of future monotony. The little mouth had relaxed, in its eagerness, the little feet trembled on the floor. Pas sionately through the open window she flnig afar the dead blossoms, the sym bols of a different life not love and marriage, but ideal happiness in any form. The fates had been questioned, o ! the answer. The girls on the hill still slept, uncon scious and careless of life's future blos soms, but silent and uncomplaining the farmer's daughter lighted the kitchen fire. "You are up early, Eliza !" ee, mother, there is so much to do." Annie L. Miller. ! 9 H. W. BROWN Druggist and Bookseller. 9 WhtHng'S) J Fine Stationery and Calling Cards ' 127 S. Eleventh Street. PHONE 08 y (Klr(i Me a one of the wisest men that ever lived. What is his greatest accomplishment? He can tell if a woman's hat is on straight. vici kid, vesting-top, turned new tan 5 BROWN OR BLACK t $4.00. I THE FOOT FORM STORE! m " ' 134 Sou-rn Twelfth Stbeet. Telephone 31o. 1 hmmumiioimmmuioommmiiiimi 1 SPBCIAM PRICES 03t BBVRUGE COOKBR8 No. o. Former rice &.00, now $1.2S No. 1. Former price $2.75, now 1.7C No. 2. Former price $12Vow 2.00! Original Pexuiaylvanla MOWERS BYCICLB8 MAJESTIC RAiSfGEJS the only Mailable Iron and Steel Range in Lincoln. MOXARCH - GASOLINE BTOVS8 HALL BROS. CO. I308 O SI. ' Tftb Cocbiek has redueetf its sube criatioo price to tl a year- 6ce till msp- , m ? y