y ' iiii i i in.i i i id , , M nmiimmm , ! , , , , , , iii lllii mnniiroilii , , , ii - , , P'JiH , . Hi ; I | | | [ r < llHli < r ltlHIW | "W m K | ; * @ liir BY R ° B RT LOUIS STEVENSON. . H % INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION : HgP CHAPTER VI ( Continued. ) Hfl § ' But the boy could never be brought BjE dto see that he had done anything wrong k kmffi * when he stole. Nor , Indeed , did the VjfjtfDoctor think he bad ; but that gentle- Hf\ man was never very scrupulous when * ln want of a retort : fj " 'And now , " he concluded , "do you , ieSin to understand ? My only friends EWWWWW < i\\ fjfc ? were those who ruined me. Gretz has " "been my academy , my sanatorium , my flf * heaven of innocent pleasures. If mll- U lions are offered me , I wave them bock : BjL 'Retro , Sathanas ! Evil one , begone ! f Pis your mind on my example ; despise flriches , avoid the debasing influence of k kWfv cities. Hygiene hygiene and medioc- W rity of fortune these be your watch- B'iV words during life ! " Jr H Tlle Doctor's system of hygiene strik- t tWl * V ingly coincided with his tastes ; and B > . bis picture of the perfect life was a HA ' faithful description of the one he was BP leading at the time. But it is easy to B/ convince a boy , whom you supply with H/'f all the facts for the discussion. And leides , there was one tiling admirable / • Hrw in the philosophy , and that was the flV' enthusiasm of the philosopher. There | i was never anyone more vigorously de- if/ termined to be pleased ; and if he was y ot a great logician , and so had no \ right to convince the intellect , he was k m i certainly something of a poet , and had .J a fascination to seduce the heart. What ' , V be could not achieve in his customary H if humor of a radiant admiration of him- B'M\ ' self and his circumstances , he some- 1& times effected in his fits of gloom. & > H * ' "Boy , " he would say , "avoid me to- fi\\ day. If I were superstitious , I should K f " even beg for an interest in your pray- yf'V ' ers. I am in the black fit ; the evil H ) ! spirit of King Saul , the hag of the Hl-0 merchant Abudah , the personal devil fl | W > cf the mediaeval monk , is with me H f ' is in me/ ' tapping on his breast "The Ww tJ vices of my nature are now uppermost ; mWf Jr innocent Pleasures woo me in vain ; I A long for Paris , for my wallowing in < t _ JKthe mire. See , " he would continue , VTproducing a handful of silver , "I de- wv nude myself , I am not to "oe trusted IS with the price of a fare. Take it , keep I m it for me , squander it on deleterious f X ? candy , throw it in the deepest of the I ' , , river I will homologate your action. I * M- Save me from that part of myself mtWf which I disown. If you see me falter , BL do not hesitate ; if necessary , wreck the tWLtrain. . I speak , of course , by a parable. Iflff Any extremity were better than for f me to reach Paris alive. " S& Doubtless the Doctor enjoyed" these JK ' 'little scenes , as a variation on his part ; W he represented the Byronic element • k jn the somewhat artificial poetry of JRm his existence ; but to the boy , though -8T lie was dimly aware of their theatric- w ality , they represented more. The K Doctor made perhaps too little , the boy wh possibly too much , of the reality and mf gravity of these temptations. \k One day a great light shone for Jean- m Marie. "Could not riches "be used Ms well ? " he asked. ii "In theory , yes , " replied the Doctor. 3 \ -"But it is found in experience that noW W\ \ -one does so. All the world imagine Hm ' they will be exceptional when they ' ffl grow wealthy ; but possession is de- K "basing , new desires spring up ; and the m .silly taste lor ostentation cats out the R ncart of pleasure. " K. "Then you might be better if you B- had less , ' ' saia the boy. "Certainly not , " replied the Doctor ; but his voice quavered as , he spoke. "Why ? " demanded pitiless inno cence. CHAPTER VII. OCTOR DESPREZ saw all the colors of the rainbow in a moment ; the staJ ble universe ap peared to be about capsizing with h i m , "Because , " said he affecting deliberation after an obvious pause "because I have formed my life for my present income. It is not good for men of my years to • be violently dissevered from their hab its. " That was a sharp brush. The Doctor breathed hard , and fell into taciturnity for the afternoon. As for the boy , he was delighted with the resolution of his doubts ; even wondered that he had not foreseen the obvious and conclu sive answer. His faith in the Doctor was a stout piece of goods. Desprez was inclined to be a sheet in the wind's eye after dinner , especially after Rhone wine , his favorite weakness. He would then remark upon the warmth of his feeling for Anastasle , and with inflamed cheeks and a loose , flustered smile , debate upon all sorts of topics , and be feebly and indiscreetly witty. But the adopted stable-boy would not permit himself to entertain a doubt that savored of ingratitude. It is quite true that a man may be a second father to you , and yet take too much to drink : but the best natures are ever slow to accept such truths. The Doctor thoroughly possessed his heart , but perhaps he exaggerated his influence over his mind. Certainly Jean-Marie adopted some of his mas ter's opinions , but I have yet to learn * "TAKE IT , KEEP IT. " that he ever surrendered one of his . own. Convictions existed in him by divine right ; they were virgin , un- wrought. the brute metal of decision. He could add others , indeed , but he could not put away ; neither did he care if they were perfectly agreed among themselves ; and his spiritual pleasures had nothing to do with turning them over or justifying them in words. Words were with him a mere accom plishment , like dancing. When he was by himself , his pleasures were almost vegetable. He would slip into the woods toward Acheres. and sit in the mouth of a cave among gray birches. So while the Doctor made himr.clf drunk with words , the adopted stabia- boy bemused himself with silence. CHAPTER Till. Doctor's car riage was a two- wheeled gig with a hood ; a kind of vehicle in much fHE among coun try doctors.v On how many roads has one not seen it. a great way off be- f . tween the poplars ! in how many village streets , tied to a gate-post ! this sort of chariot is affected partiality at the trot by a kind of pitching i MwmMmi urn \M\mmmmmamKmnHmnm3mmrpMmm \ \ * * t movement to and fro across the axle. . which well entitles it to the style of a I Noddy. The hood describes a consid erable arc against the landscape , with a solemnly absurd effect on the con templative pedestrian. To ride in such a carriage cannot be numbered among the things that appertain to glory ; but I have no doubt it may be useful in liver complaint. Thence , perhaps , its wide popularity among physicians. One morning early , Jean-Marie led forth the Doctor's noddy , opened the gate , and mounted to the driving-seat The Doctor followed , arrayed from top to toe in spotless linen , armed with an immense flesh-colored umbrella , and girt with a botanical case on a baldric ; and the equipage drove -smartly in a breeze of its own provocation. They were bound for Franchard , to collect plants , with an eye to the "Compara tive Pharmacopoeia. " A little rattling on the open roads , and they came to the borders of the forest and struck into an unfrequented track ; the noddy yawed softly over the sand , with an accompaniment of snap ping twigs. There was a great , green , softly murmuring cloud of congregated foliage overhead. In the arcades of the forest the air retained the freshness of the night The athletic bearing of the trees , each carrying Its leafy mountain , pleased the mind like so many statues and the lines of the trunk led the eye admiringly upward' to where the ex treme leaves sparkled in a patch of azure. Squirrels leaped in mid air. It was a proper spot for a devotee of the goddess Hygeia. ( TO BECOSTIKaED. ) CURIOUS CLOCKS. How Some People of Foreign Xandt Reckon Time. Neither clock nor timepiece is to be found in Liberia. The reckoning of time is made entirely by the movement and position of the sun , which rises at 6 a. m. and sets at 6 p. m. , almost to the minute , all the year round , and at noon is vertically overhead , says Popu lar Science News. The islanders of the south Pacific have no clocks , but make an ingenious and reliable time-marker of their own. They take the kernel from the nuts of the candle tree and wash and string them on the rib of a palm leaf. The first or top kernel is then lighted. All of the kernefs are of the same size and substance , and each will burn a certain number of minutes and then set fire to the one next below. The natives tie pieces of black cloth at regular intervals along the string to mark the divisions of time. Among the natives of Singar , in the Malay archipelago , another peculiar device is used. Two bottles are placed neck and neck , and sand is put in one of them , which pours itself into the other every half hour , when the bottles tles are reversed. There is a line near by , also , on which are hung twelve rods with notches from one to twelve. Internal Heat of the Earth. It is found from observations made in very deep borings that the aver age increase of temperature for a long way down towards the center of the earth is about one degree for every 54 feet of descent. This is not con stant , however , being less down to a certain depth and more beyond it The increase varies Jn amount , too , in different localities. These results are quite in agreement with the sup position that the center of the earth consists of matter in a state of fu sion ; the nearer we get to this molten matter the faster should the tempera ture rise , and the rate may also be ex pected to vary on account of the crust not being all of the same thickness , nor consisting of material equal in conducting power. n DEJIOCBAT DISUNION. ALL THE FACTIONS , HOWEVER B2RATING CLEVELAND. Rualnepa Increane * Protection Element in the South Clearly .Appurenf Feu- tares or the Turin 1J1H The World's Rapidly Increasing Supply of Gold. ( Washington Letter. ) A thousand pounds of dynamite ex ploded In the midst of a mining camp would not have been more effective in Its disintegration than was President Cleveland's opeech in the distribution of the remains of the once powerful Democracy. It has torn that ill-fated organization still further asunder. Editor Henry Watterson of the gold Democracy Is attacking it savagely. The organs of the silver Democrats and Mr. Bryan himself are hurling reeks at it ; Mr. Bailey is attacking it savagely and the Populists are jump ing on it with both feet , while the Re publican editors of the country are tearing it to tatters. Slcns of Prosperity. The calamity shriekers who have been insisting that the promised pros perity has not materialized are thrown into confusion by a recent announce ment from that reliable business 'ba rometer , the Weekly Review of R. G. Dun & Co. , which in its last weekly issue says : "Nearly all will be aston ished to learn that actual sales in April by leading houses in each line of busi ness in the principal cities east of the Rocky mountains average only about ten per cent less than in April , 1892 , the year of largest business hitherto , and were 6.1 per cent more than in the same month last year. Yet this is the summary of 357 reports , each covering actual sales of merchants in one of fourteen cities. They are especially encouraging in view of great fall of pricas within the last five years and floods and other retarding influences this year. " Southern Senators Protectionists , The growth of the protective senti ment in the south , which was clearly shown by the fact that over thirty southern votes were cast for the Dingely bill in the house , will be again emphasized when the votes for the Dill in the senate are counted. At least five southern votes will be in favor of the bill in the senate , one of them by a Democrat who announced before his election that he should vote for a pro tective tariff. When itis considered that every one of these five southern senators who will support the protec tive tariff bill succeeded men who voted for the free trade law now upon the statute books , the growth of the protective sentiment in that section will be recognized. A Year's Supply of Free "WooT. The wool growers of this country , while they are delighted with the pros pect that they are to get protection , must not expect to feel the effects im mediately. Latest investigations as to the supply of wool in stock in this country show that the amount of for eign wools now in the hands of the manufacturers is sufficient for at least seven months' supply and that if the present enormous importations con tinue , as seem probable , they will probably have a full year's supply on hand when the new law goes into ef fect. This is a deplorable fact , but it is one * of the numerous misfortunes attendant upon the existence of the free trade tariff law now upon the statute books , and until it can be got ten rid of there can be no getting rid of its depressing effect. Eight and nine cents a pound duty on first and second class wools , while it is not as much as the rate named by the Dingley bill when it passed the house , is just 8 and 9 cents more than the rates of the present Wilson law. It is also conceded to be more in proportion to the general value of wools than th rates established by the McKinley law , which was quite satisfactory to the wool growers. Hides to Be Protected. The reciprocity feature of the new tariff law is likely to be even more satisfactory than that of the McKinley law. The addition of tea and hides to the dutiable list increases the oppor tunity for obtaining favorable reciproc ity treaties and it is understood that the senate will put into the bill such provisions as to make it practicable to secure very advantageous reciprocal arrangements with many countries , all of which will be especially in the in terests of the agriculturists of the country. The duty on raw hides which is proposed by the tariff bill in the senate would probably add about 5 cents to the cost of the foreign hide used in making the leather which goes into a pair of shoes , but as only one- fifth of the hides used in this country are imported , the average increase in the price of shoes would only be one- fifth of that , or one cent per pair. As suming that the average man buys three pair of shoes in a year , his in creased "tax burden" would be three cents a year , while the advantage to the farmers will be millions of del lars. "Why Gold Goes. With the importations of foreign goods increasing enormously by reason of the prospective repeal of the Wilson law , it is not sur prising that the gold exports are in creasing. The foreign goods brought into the country must be paid for in gold and if foreign importations in crease ten to twenty millions a month , it goes without sayiag that the gold exportations must increase. The sil ver advocates are saying that the re cent exportations of gold are an evi dence that the supply of gold in the t * * " • " * " in n r l mil world is not sufllclent for Its require ments. Upon the same principle they night argue that the exportation of wheat and cam indicated that the world does not produce enough of these articles for its requirements. The mere fact that there is a monetary de mand for gol-1 in Europe and Japan be cause countries there desire to increase their stcck and because of war pos sibilities docs not argue a general in sufficiency of gold in the world. The quantity of gold money In the world in 1873 was $1,209,800,000 , while in 189C It was $3,698,700,000. The supply of gold money in the world is now 50 per cent greater than was the gold and sil ver cDmbined , in 1873. licet Sucar Factories. Parties who are preparing to estab lish beet sugar factories will be inter ested in a recent step taken by the secretary of agriculture in their be half. Having supplied over twenty thousand farmers of the United States with beet seed for trial crops , Secretary Wilson is now making a practical and intelligent investigation to determine the sections of country where beet sugar manufacture is most likely to be successful , the object being to assist those who desire to invest In beet sugar factories. G. H. WILLIAMS. ISryan's lad Break. " From the Chicago Tribune ; The is sue of the New York World published on its fourteenth anniversary contains a congratulatory , half fault finding letter from Mr. William J. Bryan to the editor , Mr. Pulitzer. He praises -what the world has done for "tariff reform , " etc. , but , "as it would not be fair to commend the good without condemning the bad , " he asserts that "the World's support of the gold standard , " which , he says , "is at this time doing more harm than any oth er one thing , is out of harmony with the newspaper's efforts in other direc tions. " The New York World criticises its critic quite freely. It tells Mr. Bryan that the country has had several peri ods of prosperity since the free coinage of silver was suspended in 1873. It challenges as untrue his assertion that "the financiers unmolested have looked after legislation on the money question , " and calls his attention to the Bland-Allison law and the Sher man law. which the "financiers" as suredly did not favor. The New York World simply tries to "smooth down" Mr. Bryan , whom it calls a "versatile and clever politi cian. " It should have called on that individual , whose versatility may be admitted , but whose cleverness is open to grave doubt for he has bepn a failure as a politician ever since he entered upon the avocation to answei a few simple questions. They are ques tions which have been put to him oft en , but which he always evades and never answers , though he has made more than 600 speeches within six months , and has compiled a big book on the currency question. These points have been made on him : 1. Silver free coined into 371U grains to the dollar will be worth only half as much as the existing gold del lar. Altgeld admits that fact and indorses it. And Bryan does not de ny it. Ke has admitted it by indi rection by his refusal to deny the as sertion. 2. Bryan demands that < he half value free coinage silver dollars be made by law retroactively equal for debt paying purposes to the gold stan dard dollars , which would be twice as valuable. If this were done by a re troactive free coinage law , then about eight billions of credits , notes and de posits based on the gold standard would shrivel to four billions. The existing credits , deposits , and money on hand would be reduced to half their value. The owners of these deposits and credits would be robbed by Bry an's scheme of half this property. Bryan has insisted and still insists on this retroactive robbery , and yet never attempts to justify it or show that it was right or honest. Like the members of the Illinois Legislature who voted for the infamous Humphrey bills , he has never assigned an honest motive for his dishonest propositions. But supposing Bryan were to aban don his demand for retroactive free silver legislation and ask for the adop tion of the half value silver standard to apply only to future transactions. Then the question for Bryan to answer to the American people is. What will be gained by using two pieces of sil ver , each worth 50 cents in purchasing power , to do the money work which one piece of gold standard money does now ? In what respect are two pieces of silver , each worth half a gold dollar , better than one gold dollar , or other currency maintained at the gold standard of value ? 3. Suppose a farmer of Nebiaska sells a horse for 100 silver dollars.each worth 50 cents , and then sells it for 50 gold dollars , does he receive more value for the former named animal than for the latter ? Bryan seems to argue that two free coined silver dollars lars , each worth 50 cents , is more money than one gold dollar or one dollar of any gold standard monej\ Bryan tries to convey the idea that the two half value silver dollars are worth double as much as the whole value gold dollar. His argument seems to be that 371 4 grains of silver under free coinage are of equal valua to 23 1-5 grains of goldbut he well knows that 23 1-5 grains of gold will buy 32 times its weight of silver bullion any where in the world , instead of 36 to 1. He knows that , and he also knows that under free coinage a silver dollar can only be worth the commercial value of the bullion it contains. 4. With a dollar under the gold standard worth 100 cents , a certain * " i " " " " " " " " " " " " " ' - " " } i i f" li mi ii r mi m i , fl number of exchanges of goods Is made Kf In a year. What will be gained by X | using two silver dollars , each woi'th. wj 50 cents , to make the same number 91 and amount of property exchanges ? 9j | Thirty-two time3 the weight of metal wj | are used , but the results accomplished aRI that is. the business work done la Jj the same. aj | V.in't Sueur Activity. < m\ \ There is already a movement on /jj | foot to establish a beet sugar nianu- * % 1 factory in Minneapolis , and it Is an- JJ nounccd that beet seed Is bein ob- II tained in various portions of the state 'll and many farmers are planting It ex- 11 pcrimentally. The legislative appro- 41 priation and the efforts of the agricul- % | I turn ! department at Washington avIH | jl no doubt enable farmers to hcure an * h1 ample supply of seed , and it is to be * 1B doped that the result of this year's ] experiments will be such as to justify jfl them in engaging to furnish , nexc II year , any quantltv that a beotery here Jl or elsewhere may be desirou ? of con- „ fM tracting for. | fl Two things 3re essential to the sue- jfl cess of the beet sugar industry in * ! fl this state. First , a modern manufae- fl turing plant , with experienced men to # run it ; and second , an ample supply fH ; o Leets containing a profitable percentage - H centage of saccharine ma'tsr. The H first they had at Menominee , Wisconsin - H sin , but failed , temporarily , for the H iack cf the cecond essential. The M panic mistake ou ht not to be made. M and probably will not be mane , in m Minnesota. If capitalists put in a M beet sugar factory at Minneapolis they M will no doubt take pains to assure M themselves in advance , of ample sup- fl ply of beets of good quality. A dispatch - M patch from Albert Lea says that about M one hundred farmers in that vicinity fl have agreed to plant more or less H beet sugar seed. This is a movement H in the right direction. Let the farmers - H ers in Hennepin and other counties H follow their example. H It is estimated that the first factory j fl established in this state will employ j H 400 to 700 men , and will be able to H consume the product of several thouflfl sand acres of land. This .will be a flfl notable addition to Minnesota's industries - _ U dustries and we are justified in pre- | dieting that it will be only the beginning - H ning of an important development. k k\ \ Minneapolis Tribune. k k\ Sugar Imports mid Duties. | New York Tribune : The imports t t\ \ of sugar are usually large at this season - H son , but have been increased remarkably - H ably by the expectation of new duties. fl The treasury department has made H up the record for April , showing that fl 757,799,527 pounds were imported in H that one month , and in May and June H the quantity is usually larger than in H the preceding months , as the follow- j H ing figures for three years will show : j H 1897. 1S9C. 189.1. H Mar. .485,525,990 425,501,882 296,020.254 H Apr. . 757,799,527 388,381.830 377.937.23S H May 544.106,452 538.664.91'J fl June 472,637,376 28S,80S.64S H Entire H year 3.669.314.S3S 3.289.605,400 j H In the four months , March-June in- fl elusive , the imports in both the preceding - H ceding years were more than half the H imports for those entire years , but | this year they have been 1,243,000,000 H in two months , against 824,000,000 last H year. The known heavy movements | in May thus far warrants the expectation - H tion that fully two-thirds of a year's H supply may be in hand by the end of H the four months this year , including H what stock refiners held prior to | March , and on this quantity the difference - | ference in price , if as much as the- H proposed increase in duty under the | senate bill , would be about eight- | tenths of a cent , or $20,000,000 , a handsome - | some profit for the owners , namely : H the Sugar Refining company. The pay- fl ment of duties at the present rate on H about two-thirds of a year's consump- fl tion will deprive the treasury of about fl as much revenue for the coming year fl which it would have derived from the | increase of rate on .92 degree raw su- fl increase of rate. Under the Dingley fl bill the increase in rate on .92 degree fl raw sugar would be a little less , about H seven-tenths of a cent , but the imports fl after April 1 would be subject to the | higher duty , which would make a dif- fl ference of nearly $5,000,000 for the fl month of April alone. j H The President Favors Prompt Action. fl A dispatch from Washington says fl " that President McKinley is tr3'ing to fl impress upon the senators the neces- fl sity of speedy action on the tariff bill. H Mr. McKinley is not accused of mak- fl ing threats or of trying to improperly H influence legislation. He simply calls H attention to the enormous increase in | imports , and shows how the government - H ment may be deprived of much revenue - | enue to which it ought to be entitled H if the passage of the tariff bill is unnecessarily - | necessarily delayed. | It should not be necessary for l he | president to make such an appeal to | the senators. The members of the upper - | per branch of congress should under- H -tand the need of haste without iiPin. H told. Last week thirteen steamers H loaded to th rails with foreign goods | discharged their cargoes at the port H of Boston , and more are coming. "Hie | importers and the free trader ? art- | overjoyed because of such a coniition | cl affairs , and they may be trustel to | do their utmost to prolong the debate | the tariff bill and ' H on delay 'ts pao- sage as much as possible. Every day | that is wasted in talk in the United H States senate will cost the United H States government a large sum of fl money. Cleveland Leader. ' H A Paris doctor has discovered the microbe - > H crobe of baldness and has exhibited it at the St. Louis hospital , together with Hfl a sheep innoculated with it which had | lost its wool. He is now hunting for | | the means of destroying the microbe or H rendering it innocuous. H