ir V r SV t i K 1 i 15 he Sccmrge ofDssLmQcscus Copyrighted 1891 by Robert Bonners Sons CHAPTER III Love In Danger A bright beautiful mornlag with r gentle breeze sweeping down the frag rance of flower and shrub from the mountain slope Ulin had eaten her breakfast and with Albia by her side sat upon an open window gazing out upon the park of fountains As she thus sat the slave woman Calypso en tered the apartment and announced that the robber wished to see the Lady UHn What robber asked the princess The same one that came yester day Ulin did not stop to think whether the visit would be pleasant or other wise The man had signified his pur pose and as he was master in the pal ace she had no idea of opposing him Calypso withdrew and presently af terwards the robber entered He came in with the same noble step and bear ing the same pleasant genial face and with the same look and salute of reverence and respect I truBt that the Lady Ulin has pass ed a quiet night he said in deep sin cerity I have rested well sir she re plied Good I am glad of that I feared you might have bad dreams Not many sir Ah and did you have any such Not not many You dreamt that Julian was a de mon eh No no sir my dreams were not -of him I hope sweet lady that you dream ed not darkly of me No sir It was of The maiden hesitated and seemed -troubled but her visitor came to her assistance Never mind lady I meant not to inquire Into the secret twinings of -your mind I only hoped that I had -not been unfortunate enough to ex alte the apprehension of your slumber ing fancies He smiled as he spoke at the same -time moving a step nearer and then adding I am glad you have not suffered -from our coming for I have the more courage to ask you if you will see -Julian You said you would accompany him sir Yes Then I may as well see him at on -time as another You may inform him -that the lady Ulin rests her safety and honor in his manhood He has been so informed fair lady Then let him come Gentle lady pardon me if I have led you upon a fanciful way of -thought I am Julian I am he whom -men call the Scourge of Damascus And now I crave your indulgence but -still I shall bow most humbly to your -commands At your word I leave this apartment yet I should like to speak a little further I should like to ex plain more fully why I am here Was Ulin frightened Not at all She was startled when she first knew that the man before her was the dread ful Scourge of whom she had heard so much but it was an emotion of as tonishment At first she could hardly Relieve that she had heard the truth You Julian she murmured gaz ling into his face Aye lady And then he added -with a smile I suppose you expected to find me black and ugly like the ioul genii whom Solomon imprisoned in the sea Am I right I did not think you were Julian -the maiden said after some hesitation As she spoke she seemed to gain new confidence and composure and pres ently she added r had heard so much -of your terrible deeds that I expected to find a A monster suggested Julian help ing her out Not exactly that returned Ulin -with a smile though I am free to confess that I should not have been eo much surprised as I have been if 1 had seen a worse looking man Thank you cried the robber laughing I shall take that as a com pliment and lay it up among the most -precious of my recollections I under stand you so upon this point I need only assure you that I am Julian and -that I must own the somewhat dubious -title which has been bestowed upon -me And now lady may I sit here for a few moments and speak with yor further The very thing Ulin had been upon -the point of suggesting She did not like to see him standing before her nor was she anxious that he should leave her She had a strong curiosity -to hear him speak further There was something in the appearance of the -youthful adventurer that deeply Inter ested her She bade him be seated and then without intending to be heard she murmured So young Aye lady he said catching the -whispered words I am young younger perhaps than I look Only three-and-twenty years have cast their shadows upon me At that age the youth of the city just breaking from the bonds of parental restraints as a child but with me it has been differ ent A parent I never knew A kind generous woman who was my nurss took the place of a mother durin my earliest childhood and a white haired A Story of the East By SYLVANUS COBB JR old man who lived apart from the world gave me my first lessons of life and led me up till I could protect myself A fathers fostering care I never knew A mothers love I never realized The cruel blow which shat tered the cup of my joys killed my poor mother ere my tongue could lisp her name As I grew to manhood I knew that I was an orphan and that my misfortune was the work of the King of Damascus O how the iron settled Into my soul I had grown strong and resolute as though heaven would enable me to work retribution upon the tyrant Do you ask me if I enjoy the life I have led I answer I have made enjoyments for myself I have felt a peculiar satisfaction in knowing that the king feared me When I have heard my name spoken by the rich and powerful with fear and trembling I have liked It and when I have known that Horam dread ed my approach I have felt that my labors were not without their result But these have not been my joys In Damascus the name of Julian is a ter ror but there are other places where that name is spoken with love and gratitude Upon the plains of Abilene and in the mountain passes of Leban on where the busy craftsmen prepare timber for Jerusalem there Julian is hailed as a friend and benefactor The grim satisfaction of torturing the cruel King of Damascus Is tempered and softened by the calmer atmos phere of these friendly regions Why did Ulin sit so still and listen with such rapt attention to the words of the speaker She bent her head as though soft music were stealing oer her senses and she gazed upon the man before her as though a grand in spiring picture had been unfolded to her vision His words carried truth in their very sound and all her sympa thies had been aroused She was a woman whose nature had not been warped by art and the avenues to her soul were guarded only by the pure instincts of virtue and humanity Not always the safest guard but still the happiest when surrounding influences are not evil And now lady pursued Julian I must tell you why I am here and in doing this I speak only those words necessary to the truth On my way from the plains I met a messenger who informed me that a fair maiden had been shut up In the Palace of the Valley I could not believe that a beau tiful young virgin had willingly given herself to the desires of Horam I thought she had been shut up thus against her own pleasure With this belief I resolved to release her The result you know I have heard your story from the lips of the black slave who attends upon you and she in forms me that you are affianced to the king by your own consent and without any desires on your part to the con trary Is it so The slave told you truly sir re plied Ulin bowing her head and speaking in a very low tone And you came here to this pace of your own free will Yes sir My period of mourning was not passed and the king brought me hither that I might be more re tired And but for the death of your mother you would have been the kings wife ere this Ulin replied in the affirmative but her voice trembled and she seemed to shudder at the thought thus presented Lady said Julian showing some emotion which he evidently did not mean to show for my seeming wrong I most humbly beg your pardon I had thought to wrest from the grasp of the king one who was an unwilling cap tive but since I find myself mistaken I will do all I can to make amends A And said the robber rising to his feet it is better that I should leave you at once He stopped and swept his hand across his brow and when he resumed his speech was very low and his voice tremulous This has been a most strange ad venture and as I now look upon it it SttCms as though some mischievous sprite nad planned It As I live I thought when I came hither but such as I have told you of I have met you lady and for the first time in my life I have felt my heart drawn warmly towards my native city Henceforth there will be something in Damascus towards which my thoughts will turn with other sentiments than those of bitterness Lady Ulin we may never meet again In this moment of our strange companionship may I not take you by the hand She could not have refused had she wished but that she had no wish so to do was evident from the free and friendly manner in which she arose to meet him She gave him her hand and suffered him to raise it to his lips Dear lady should we never meet again I trust that you will bear one kindly thought of Julian If you are forced to think of the wrongs he has done let a memory of the wrongs he has suffered be some extenuation Bless you lady All good spirits guard and protect you and peace be thine forevermore Farewell He turned and was gone Ulin felt a warm spot upon her hand a drop of moisture a tear She gazed upon it and knew that it came not from her eye It fell there -with the kiss- A w strange tribute from the Scourge of Damascus Albia I think I shall never flee that man again but I shall remember him with emotions far removed from fear or terror You will remember him as little as possible my mistress said the slave girl taking a seat close by Ulins side and resting her hand upon her arm What mean you Albia Why should my memory be narrowed or shortened Because you are to have a husband who will demand your every thought and feeling Horam Is deeply versed in all the secrets of the female heart and his eyes will not sleep while you have a thought which he does not understand Indeed Albia cried the princess with a look of amazement you mis understand me If such be the case replied the girl very quietly you will forgive me for what I have said and of Julian we will think no more Ah was it so Had Ulin been mis understood Had the keen eyed Albia been mistaken Would there be no more thought of Julian The day passed away and towards evening Aswad returned from the moun tains He said he had not fled from fear of the robbers but that when he saw that defeat was inevitable he had sought safety from capture so that he might communicate with Damascus Perhaps he old the truth At all events he resumed his command and once more posted his guards about the valley and then came to assure the princess that she was safe It was in the evening just as the last gleams of day were fading out and before the lamps had been lighted at that season when the thoughts are most apt to wander and strange fancies visit the mind e It was not to be that Ulin should spend the alloted time at the Palace of the Valley The king had heard of the attack of Julian and he came with a large army to bear the princess away from a place which was no longer safe He was somewhat sur prised when he found that the Scourge of Damascus had been within the pal ace and had withdrawn again and when he had heard the story from Calypso he ordered one half the pal ace guadsmen to be executed within the valley The maiden had heard from Calypso of the bloody deed which had been done by the kings order and when she knew that he was coming she declar ed her intention of refusing to see him But Albia persuaded her to a different course As you value your future welfare plead the bondmaiden so must you behave before the king If you would live in peace let him have no occasion to mistrust your real feelings He is coming Beware The warning was most seasonable and Ulin by obeying it so conducted herself that Horam thought she only suffered from the dreadful fright oc casioned by the appearance of the ter rible Julian He spoke to her words of cheer and assurance and announced his purpose of carrying her back to Damascus We will rest tonight sweet love he said and on the morrow you shall find a safer shelter Ulin gazed upon the wrinkled face and upon the quaking limbs and upon the sparse gray hairs and she could not repress a shudder She looked upon the thin hard hands of the mon arch and they seemed covered with blood She watched him as he depart ed with her father and when he had gone she sank down and leaned her head upon Albias bosom O she murmured I fear that I have undertaken more than I can ac complish I cannot be that mans wife I never knew him until now He will kill me Peace whispered the bondmaid en But she whispered in vain To be Continued ECCENTRIC WILLS Benjamin Franklin Left a Small Sam Which Is Now Available When Benjamin Franklin died in 1790 he left a small sum of money which was not to be used until the twentieth century His gift is at last available and the sum now amounts to 375000 having been invested at compound interest says the Pittsburg Press The trustees of the Franklin fund have decided to use the money for the erection of a Franklin insti tute in Franklin square Boston Curi ous provisions made by will are more common than one would suppose Within the last few months there have been several examples of eccentric dis posals of property To one young woman has been left 25000 by her brother under the express condition that she neither marries nor becomes a nun If the conditions are not ful filled the money is to be distributed among other relatives To his three daughters an Italian who recently died left 500 a year each if they remained single and 2500 each a year if they married A late member of the En glish parliament left by will to his two daughters 720000 with the provision that the money is only to be payable If they attain the age of 35 years without marrying either a citizen of the United States or a Hebrew A new claimant for the fortune left by the composer Verdi has appeared He is a farmer named Verdilivlng near Athens Greece He says that the Verdi family came originally from the east one branch establishing Itself at Athens and the other going on to Italy and that he is the closest surviv ing relative of the deceased composer NO TAKIEF KEYISION REPUBLICAN SENTIMENT STRONGLY AGAINST IT President MoKJnloy and tho Loadlos Senators and Congressmen Deprecate Any Attempt to Tinker frith the Duty Bchednle at Next Winters Seasloa In response to a request by The American Protective Tariff League for an expression regarding the reopening of the tariff question either by direct legislation or by the roundabout meth od of special trade treaties framed for the benefit of a few industries and at the expense of the general body of in dustries a number of letters have been received from conspicuous members of the Fifty seventh Congress All of those letters are identical in tone and tenor They are positively adverse to any soheme of meddling with the tariff schedules now or in the near future They tally exactly with the expres sions of Congressman Taylor of Ohio before the industrial commission and of Congressman Dalzell of Pennsyl vania in an Interview published after his return from an extended western tour A New England senator writes It Is the old story over again a Pro tective Tarlrt secured after long agita tion and effort resulting in business pros perity then a movement in the direction of free trade in which those who would have reaped the benefit of protection are foolishly tempted to join It is very dis couraging A Mississippi Valley congressman of marked prominence says Nine tenths of the sentiment in favor of the Babcock bill Is based upon ignorance misstatements of fact and prejudice growing out of recent consolidation of productive industries In a recent Interview at Cleveland Senator Hanna declared that he did not believe the President ever said to M Siegfried that he had ceased to be an ultra protectionist and that the ne cessity for protection tad largely dis appeared Senator Hanna said From all the talks I have had recently with President McKinley I am of the opinion that ho Is as great a believer in protection as ever This talk that the next Congress will tlnuer with the Ding ley tariff law at the suggestion of the resident is all nonsense The Dlngley f aw is a scientific measure and will last for years to come The president be lieves It Is as necessary as ever before and will not in my belief advocate any changes whatever He still believes in protecting American industries wherever It Is necessary The president however Is a strong advocate of reciprocity and would I think consider treaties along the line of mutual Interest between this country and another If another country Is willing to offer ua something without duty which we need badly we shall be Willing to reciprocate by opening tho tar iff wall a little and giving them some thing free of duty as long as it does not Interfere with the protection of our in dustries The French reciprocity treaties would have been accepted had it not been for some objectionable tariff features The treaties as they stood If ratified by the United States would have killed the knit goods industry In the New England States and the pottery business In Ohio That is the reason they failed As long as the United States is able to make reci procity treaties with foreign countries without injuring American industries they will be made and gladly The following vigorous and compre hensive presentment of the question of tariff tinkering is from the pen of Gen eral Grosvenor the Ohio congressman who has been said to be in a peculiar sense the reflector of the views of President McKinley on the floor of the house of representatives House of Representatives U S June 1 1901 Editor American Economist New York Dear Sir The great danger to the future welfare of the American people lies in tho shortness of thofc memory Two things have made this country pros perous and rich and are moving forward with enormous strides toward making us the richest country on earth Those two things are first the Dlngley tariff law and second the confidence which up to a recent period the American peo ple had that we were to have steadfast adherence to the status quo that it was to bo maintained and that disturbers of the peace and prosperity of the country were to be relegated to the rear The de mand for tariff reform tariff revision tariff anything whatever other than what we have now comes altogether from two classes of people First the free trader in all his forms semblances and phases and second the man who stampeded about trusts and combinations has been carried off his feet by the cry of the tariff reformer that we ought to repeal the tariff on certain products in order to break up the trusts It is a small matter to get up on an elevation where there is a reservoir of water and bore a gimlet hole through the structure and let a stream of water the size of a straw pro ject itself out upon the city below but when It is entirely apparent that there is that sort of a gimlet hole which will be come an auger hole and finally a breach in the wall and that the flood will come down on the town then the old Bible Illustration becomes forcible It is the beginning of strife Admitting that the repeal of the duties upon certain products ot American in dustry might injure and even destroy certain of the trusts agitation of the question of the modification of the pres ent tariff system would do more finan cial injury to the welfare of the country in one month than all the benefits that the most enthusiastic rainbow chaser of the suggestion has ever dreamed of Let a party with political power enough sol emnly decide that they will enter upon the reorganization of the schedules of the present tariff law and business will stop as quickly as human life will stop when the blood ceases to circulate Bv stop I do not mean to cease absolutely but the heart will beat more slowly and the blood will flow In paucity of amount and speed I do not believe that the placing of our products of iron and steel upon the free list would break up a single trust or im pair the value of the stock of the United States Steel Company or any other of the combinations I do believe that it would wipe out the small manufacturers and that the great combination would control absolutely the markets of the United States In company with and upon a basis of division of profits with the trusts now organized abroad I do not care to discuss this subject now I be lieve the whole matter to be an inspira tion of the devil of free trade and It has been seized upon because of the supposed anxiety of the people to break down trusts and combinations but my point Is that a present agitation of a serious character backed by force enough to make it effective of a general revision of the tariff laws would be absolutelv de structive of the present prosperity There is no trouble about the trusts Under our constitution as at present formed Con gress In co operation with the state leg islatures has ample power to do all that is necessary all that is just all that is fair in the regulation of combinations of money capital and labor Yours truly C H Grosvenor BabcocJcs False Move Congressman Babcock seems to think that catering to anti trust senti ment by removing the duty from trust made products is living up to tho Republican theory of Protec tion If he imagines the Republican majority in Congress can bo kept up by this kind of tactics ho Is doomed to disappointment When it comes to mere posing for popular applause Mr Bryan can win every time If the Re publicans are to keep their power at all they must rlso to the level of hon est and Intelligent Protection to Industrial Interests It is true that there are products upon which tho tariff may properly bo modified or even removed but that should not bo donq for any such foolish reason as tho formation of a so called trust Mr Babcock seems to be more Interested in the politics than the economics ot tho tariff Guntons Magazine for June At the Mercy of Enropo Furthermore our ocean borne com merce in the absence of American ships in which to transport it Is at tho mercy of Europe An outbreak of war the turning loose of a fleet of commerce destroyers by the enemies of Great Britain would put an instant stop to American exports because we are dependent upon British ships for the major part of our ocean transpor tation Sound considerations of pub lic policy not the pecuniary interests of any group of American capitalists are behind the proposed legislation to aid in building up American deep wat er shipping The interests of foreign ship owners are largely behind the op position to that measure Seattle Post Intelligencer A FLOURISHING GROWTH Make a Noto of This Thanks to the American Economist the press of the country is now inform ing its readers of the reciprocity plank that was in the last Republican plat form We voted for that platform in 1900 not the platform of other years President McKinley was elected on that platform and he may be relied upon to uphold it no matter what Jules Seigfried may think he said or may say he thinks William McKinley is for protection and for protective reciprocity not for free trade in any form or under any mask Our free trade friends may put this in their pipe and smoke It I et Well Enough Alone When we are well off it is a good time to quit experiments The results of the Wilson Gorman act are a little too fresh in the memory of the people The reduction in the average tariff by this act was comparatively small yet it was big enough to paralyze industry and inaugurate a financial panic that it has taken several years to recover from Let well enough alone Lincoln Neb Journal Overtime and Halftlmc It will be noted that in all strike settlements these days provisions are made for payment of overtime either at time-and-a-half or double rates The question of overtime does not concern wage earners during free trade tariffs Half the workmen are satisfied with full time and all the rest would be glad of half time Taking Ire In Turkey There is much excitement in one of the villages on the Bosporus because of the sudden disappearance of all the street dogs The matter Is likely to have serious consequences owing to the fact that a young French lady regarded some of these dogs as her special pets and guardians fron b bers at night A few doors off lives an English doctor whose house was overrun by rats and wild cats and to rid himself of these he gave his cook some poison to put in the kitchen one night The poison was highly success ful but unfortunately the remnants of the poisoned food were put out side the street door by the cook for the dustman to remove The street dogs came along and ate it and then went and laid down at the doof of their lady friend and died She is very indignant and has told her story to all the Turks in the neighborhood who are always horrified at the kill ing of dogs The doctors cook has been arrested by the police who are holding an inquiry into the matter It is curious to note that by the Ot toman code a dog is unclean and not allowed to enter a house yet for kill- ing one you are summoned for tak ing life December 29 1902 will complete two hundred years since Peter the Great sanctioned the appearance of the first Russian newspaper CAREER FOR YOUNG WOMEN Xach Shoatd Fit Horself for Somotlilnr as a Vocation The strenuous life of today demands that a young woman no less than a young man should havo definite ideas concerning a career and that her edu cational work and particularly her college training shall be along tho line of preparation for such career At least this is the opinion that is en tertained by the girl and her family and the number of young girls who are entering tho professions or fitting themselves for business life proves that the contingent of the com munity which believes In professional or business careers for women Is a largo one and steadily growing Thero Is one woman In town a prominent worker In clubs and philanthropic as sociations who has carved out a ca reer for herself in a literary way and is desirous and even anxious that her boys and girls shall have a deflnito life work Three of the children havo pretty well defined Ideas as to what they desiro to make their life work Including the elder girl who Is yet at college The remaining child the sec ond daughter has no settled opinions as to her career and her mother In discussing her childrens futures with a friend said recently in response to her visitors comment upon the prettl ness of this young girl Yes she is pretty but there It ends She Is just a dear pretty goose without any spe cial ability or inclinations and I sup pose shell have to marry Tho tone more than the words conveyed the Im pression that marriage was the opposito of a desirable career and the resort only of the girl with mediocre talent supplemented by considerable personal charm although the woman who made the observation was the happiest of wives and has never entirely recov ered from the effects of her husbands death some years ago Kansas City Journal DAN DALYS GOLF STORY no lilts Upon Staco Jokes Not Made to Order Stage jokes are rarely made to or der said Dan Daly to a writer in tho New York World Mine turn up in all sorts of queer ways In a barroom the other night I heard a fellow say he was going to open a saloon on Broadway Who did you ever whip asked the bartender The noxt night I worked it into The Girl From Up There and It gets a bigger laugh than auything else I say My most suc cessful stage joke the golf story came to me by accident too One after noon while lounging about the Casino stage I picked up a scrap of news paper that had evidently been used to wrap up something In glancing it over I found the golf story credited to Exchange I dont even know what paper it was as part of the page was torn off It looked like one of those patent insides used in small towns The odd thing about it all was that I was never allowed to tell the whole story You know it goes on to explain that after you hit the ball you walk a mile and that if you find it the same day you win At that point the audi ence thought the climax had been reached and laughed The first time I tried to finish the story but nobody heard me and I never tried it again It would have been useless The story continues that if you dont find the ball the same day you send your man to look for it the next and if he finds it he wins After awhile I saw that the audience was right and that the story really ended better where they insist ed it should At first though it mado me pretty mad Giants Kettles In Minnesota In the Interstate Park near Taylors Falls Minnesota has been discovered a singular group of giants kettles or potholes covering an area of two or three acres and ranging in diameter from less than a foot to 25 feet and in depth from one foot to 84 feet They have been bored in exceedingly hard rock and in many cases they are like wells in shape the ratio of width to depth varying from one to five up to one to seven Mr Warren Upham ascribes their origin to torrents fall ing through glacial moulins at the time when the northern territory of the United States was buried under ice As with similar pot holes else where rounded boulders are occasion ally found at the bottom of the cavi ties Earthquake Swallows a Lake An earthquake wrecked several buildings in the town of Aulton Mex ico and then passed on to Zopothon where it sported with the waters of a big lake At first the waters seemed in a state of great agitation and then they subsided and gradually disap peared The earthquake had caused a fissure in the bed of the lake and through this the lake had passed out of sight Our Population and Great Britains Forty one and one half millions of people are now crowded into the United Kingdom says the National Geographical Magazine A similar density of population in the United States would mean a total population in this country excluding the depend encies of about one billion thirty six millions Carnegie Invltei Johnston John Johnston is in receipt of a per sonal letter from Andrew Carnegie in which the multi millionaire invites tho Milwaukee Scotchman to visit him in Scotland Mr Carnegie writes that he will give Mr Johnston a genuine Highland welcome Milwaukee Wis consin m fj r