V A An American Nabob A Remrkble Story of Love Gold 2xnd t Adventvire t By ST GEORGE RATHBORNE Copyright by Street Smith New Yorlt CHAPTKR r JACK FROM BOHEMIA Famous old Big Ben had boomed out the hour of 3 one afternoon in May when Jack Overton who had recently shaken off the dust of the Bo hemian Latin quarter in Paris de bouched from one of the numerous courts branching out from the Strand London and strolled along this great thoroughfare Overton was a man of possibly twenty five His form was well built and athletic his countenance while not wholly handsome worthy of deep study an expert at physiognomy would have gloried in reading the po tential features so plainly marked and his verdict must have been that while the young man had not yet awakened to the resistless and domi nant power that slumbered within his grasp the force of circumstances would sooner or later bring it to the fore For some time he had drifted along in his studies a faint gleam of suc cess had begun to brighten the eastern skies there was a promise of his lat est picture being accepted for the Salon when his future could be look ed upon as assured It was at this critical juncture in his affairs when a little more resolute work would have landed him well on the road to success that fortune and a woman brought about a crisis which threatened his bark with dis aster This accounted for the eagerness with which he scrutinized the inmates of the various vehicles moving hither and thither along the Strand Final ly his kindling gaze Avas glued upon a dashing equipage evidently headed toward Rotten Row and particularly upon the beautiful woman who sat there nonchalantly holding a lace trimmed parasol above her dainty head and occasionally addressing some word to her elderly gentleman companion whose bronzed face and air of distinction marked him as a traveler or man of note in Her Ma jestys colonial empire Jack held his breath and gritted his teeth as he looked He loved aye worshiped this radiant creature He a poor unknown artist dared to raise his eyes to such a beautiful bird of fashion Why not who had a right one half so strong Time was when he knew Fedora as a modest little English girl with a passionate desire to study art when he had given innumerable opportunities to stand between her and insult to soften the rough places for her dainty feet to assist her in the work she had chosen while his own lay neglected in his garret studio Yes they had become such great friends in Bohemia that it ripened into love though on Jacks part he fairly adored the girl from the hour they first met Thus vows were exchanged and for months they drifted along in a fools paradise Then Jack poor fellow in sisted on endeavoring to open com munications between Fedora and the grim old English grandfather who had exiled his daughter for marrying against his august will The negotiations succeeded all too well and one day there came a dolor ous scene when Jack and his betrothed separated she to go to her new English home he to work feverishly on the great picture that was to make such a sensation in the Salon the face of Fedora created by a hand in spired by the divine passion and bring him the fame and fortune which he longed to lay at her feet At last it was finished all but a few touches He had for some time been on the verge of distraction Stray rumors that Fedora had forgot ten him He faithful to death him self believed steadfastly in the wo man he loved and indignantly chased all satanic doubts headlong from his mind Still they crept back in spite oLhim and when existence finally be came unendurable away from the at mosphere she breathed he had brought his treasured canvas to Lon don Never had he suspected the full ex tentof her radiant beauty and her queenly manner until the moment his eyes fell upon her in the vehicle that rolled toward Rotton Row Could such a prize be for him Then came a revulsion of feeling She belonged to him she had again and again vowed no power on earth but death could take her from him More than that did he not owe her his life There had been a fire and Jack overcome in his sleep by smoke might have perished but that some girl dared death to run in and drag iiim to the open air They told him it was Fedora and although she had always in her modesty appeared con fused when he spoke of the subject yet he never doubted At this day Overton had not learned what a mighty influence Moloch had upon the average human heart nor the winning power of Gold The time was coming when he would discover these things through bitter experience that would warp his nature and change his disposition It was his desire to notice what effect his presence might have upon the beautiful girl in the landau When her wandering gaze suddenly fell upon him she gave a perceptible start and the color left her cheeks only to immediately return and as the vehicle passed he was quick to discover the card which she had dex trously tossed out apparently unseen by her escort flutter to the asphalt CHAPTER IX THE MEETING ON THE STRAND Jack lost not a second in capturing the bit of pasteboard It was simply a carte de visite and gave the address of her grandfathers city house Overton made up his mind that come what would that night should see him at the address she had given to hear from her own lips his doom Until that had been pronounced he could not and would not believe that she meant to cast him aside As he swung down the crowded Strand he was suddenly aware of a gentle pull at his sleeve a modest lit tle jerk entirely lacking the assur ances that might suggest a bold seek er after alms Oh Mr Jack said a quick voice in accents of eagerness An when Overton looked down from his six feet and saw the girls rosy face half shrouded in a blue hood ho experienced such genuine pleasure that the haunted devil-may-care ex pression gave way to a glow of sin cere satisfaction as he caught the hand she had laid on his own and squeezed it in his own broad palm If he hurt her the girl gave no sign Bless me Mazette this is a pleas ure now Fancy our meeting in the crowded streets of London How do you get on Has fortune looked your way I hope and trust those divine little miniature portraits on ivory bring you in a fair income among these people of your blood Thus he chattered on Mazette looked up to the long legged big hearted American as a prince of men Secretly she adored him but no one ever knew that his face was the shrine at which the modest child of nature worshipped for like most girls of the present day Mazette re fused to wear her heart upon her sleeve for daws to peck at What brings you here Mr Jack she asked Overton winced as he remembered the nature of his hasty jump from Paris Then he made up his mind to unburden his soul and having re solved to make the plunge he started in with an impetuosity that startled his demure little companion If Jack had been able to look under that blue hood while he poured out his passionate story he might have received something of a shock Most certainly poor Mazette was experienc ing one It is hard to give advice Mr Jack She has not thrown you over yet she said You know Fedora so well you should be able to judge what she will do whether or not the glitter of gold would tempt her to give up the man to whom she swore deathless fealty Tell me truly little friend although I would bless you for words of com fort still I only desire to know what you believe the truth even if it kill me You must be calm Mr Jack Even though you lost Fedora there are other things in the world worth living for she began slowly painfully He uttered a hollow groan Ah money is very powerful Mr Jack It makes the strongest weak You must not think too harshly of her if the temptation proves irresistible Already you fear the worst he exclaimed God help me if it proves to be so You would never condemn the man you loved Mazette sell him for filthy lucre Thanks for your good opinion No one may ever know how strong they are until the temptation has come she replied steadily but deep down in her heart the little artist girl was saying over and over again Not for all the gold in the world nor for precious stones would 1 sell his love if it were only mine Mazette adroitly changed the con versation and endeavored to cheer him up You must be sure to drop in to see us very soon and take tea with aunty she said at length as they were about to separate I promise you he replied quickly God bless you for a true hearted com rade and may you in the years to come never know the agony of mind and heart that threatens me now I shall endeavor to avoid that by never allowing myself to fall in love she replied a little hysterically of fering him her hand What your left hand Mazette Pardon me did I hurt the other brute that I am No then surely you have been in an accident since last I saw you else why should your arm hang so helplessly at your side Tell me is it not so with anxious solicitude that was not at all affected The girl looked either vexed or frightened It is nothing Long ago I had an accident and when I use the arm steadily I feel it Of late I have been unusually industrious That is all believe me Mr Jack You will come soon as she moved off Surely was his reply As Mazette hurried on her heart throbbing with conflicting emotions she was saying to herself almost hys terically He must never never know what a weak little fool I am or why this poor arm sometimes hangs useless at my side That is my secret and it shall die with me But r fear Fedora is lost to him forever that gold has won her heart CIIAPTKK III DECLINED WITH THANKS Somehow Overton felt better after this little chat with the miniature painter True in her candor and knowledge of Fedoras weakness she had not been able to give him much encouragement In fact she seemed to accept it as a settled fact that the girl he loved would sacrifice him on the altar of Mammon but the very contact with such a cheery nature as that of Mazette was bound to exert a helpful influence upon him He was standing at the corner of Chancery Lane debating the moment ous question as to where he should bestow the favor of his patronage for supper when he was given something of a staggering shock for there with in ten feet of him seated in a hansom and evidently trying to attract his at tention was the identical bronzed and bearded gentleman whom he had seen some hours before at Fedoras side in the handsome turnout bound for Rotten Row In this distinguished personage Overton at once and instinctively rec ognized the rival whom he had to meet on uneven terms The gentleman had now a fair look at his face and immediately jumped out of his cab Pardon me said he in a deep voice that somehow grated on Jacks ears perhaps because he had already conceived a deadly feeling of enmity toward the other Pardon me but I believe I have the honor of ad dressing Mr John Overton late of the Latin Quartier Paris Overton answered stiffly That happens to be my name sir Allow me to introduce myself Overton looked at the card and de iberately looked at the inscription Captain Maurice Stanton Livermore The Horseguards It was a name known far and wide a name that had been carried to re mote places in the Dark Continent a name mentioned with especial honor in descriptions of English operations on the borders of India where only valor counts and men carve oue repu tations with the sword in a desperate duel with savage tribes Jack knew it well The name is not unfamiliar to me In what way can I be of service to you sir he said with an effort at diffidence not You are an artist if I mistake Yes I aim to be I am greatly interested in art and desire to have some commissions executed Having heard you favor ably mentioned I would like you to join me at dinner where we can doubtless find an opportunity to reach an agreement It was on the tip of Jacks tongue to coldly decline the invitation Prul dence policy if you will checked his disdainful tongue in time I accept your invitation sir with out in any way committing myself to any policy you may suggest or com promising myself in the least he said quietly The other looked grimly pleased They walked along together as well as the crowded condition of the street would permit until finally they reach ed a notable restaurant into which the strangely matched couple plunged As Overton sat there in the cozy room with Captain Liver more somehow he was reminded of a man whom the irony of fortune had seated above a volcano or a powder magazine liable to explode at any moment To be continued BUCKEYE ANIMADVERSIONS Iu an Indianapolis Plan to Mnke Ilfe Sweeter The young women of the Indianap olis telephone exchange are to be given the benefits of voice culture A prom inent elocutionist has been engaged and all the sharp voices will be filed down and all the rough voices will be planed off and if there is any dignity and sweetness in a voice it will be drawn to the surface It is a nice scheme but it will take some time The average Hoosier voice is far from being of the liquid velvet order and the elocutionary improver will find his hands full for some time to come Of course the hours for vocal practice will have to be snatched from the regular hours of duty and the Indianapolis subscriber who calls up exchange may be expected at any time to hear somebody shrieking I am not mad I am not mad A good deal startled he will probably hastily remark Hello central you have given me the insane asylum And then the girl will explain that shes only getting let ter perfect in The Maniac And very likely some other subscriber will be told that the curfew shall not ring to night and perhaps hell vigorously ask the curfew to ring off And may be an incensed patron of the line who earnestly inquires what the girl means by not answering his call will be told to wake and call me early call me early mother dear In short therell be a good deal doing in that Indianap olis call shop before all the voices that need it are cultured into proper vocal shape Cleveland Plain Dealer Womans function is a guiding not a determining one John Ruskin In mythology no god falls in love with Minerva A mannish woman only attracts a feminine mas DEEPLY SOLICITOUS FREE TRADERS WORRYING ABOUT AMERICAN PATRIOTISM Hecuuso Wo Are Prospering So Well Under Protection Thoy Argue Tbut Iove of Country Is Dying Oat Aiuoiij the People of the United States This Is the caption of the last article sent out by the Free Trade League over the signature of Prof John Bascom of Williams College The two words pro tection and patriotism ccrtaiijly go well together and are closely related But says Prof Bascom protection as developed in the United States is pro foundly opposed to patriotism And yet he does not prove it or even at tempt to He tells us that it begets personal strife but does not tell us wheein personal strife and ambition become inimical to patriotism Con tinuing the professor says The little kernel of sound theory that may in the beginning have lain at the bottom of protection was shorty lost sight of in a greedy struggle be tween ever increasing claimants to re tain old and win new advantages It is encouraging to see an old time free trader admitting that there was ever even a kernel of sound theory in the principle of protection though it has been lost sight ol in the struggle for advantage Does the professor mean to say that the strife to excel is unpatriotic Would he have our in ventors stop thinking our miners stop digging our farmers stop planting our mechanics stop fabricating and so cease to retain and gain advantages not only among themselves but over the peoples of other countries Does he want us to go back to the habks of the aborigines and live the lives of savages He complains because we have set no limits to individual enter prise Why should we set a limit to ambition to attainment and accom plishment And then he complains again because the policy of private thrift which gained such a foothold in protection has spread everywhere If the professor is preaching social ism or anarchy that is one thing but if he is preaching free trade because it would do away with competition aud destroy commercial advantages tliaz is another He concludes his little piece as follows Patriotism cannot thrive in the we have provided for it If we would restore and strengthen love of country we must get back to the prosperity of the masses of men the people and the nation as the true aim of government Does the professor question our love of country Was he awake during the Spanish war when millions were an gry only because they could not fight for the Stars and Stripes Did he not for months see Old Glory waving from every flagstaff from every building and from every house Who is there outside the little band of American Cobdenites that does not think wc could lick any country on earth or if needs be all of them put together Dees not the professor see any other paper but the Springfield Republican As for getting back to the prosper ity of the masses of men back where Brck to 1837 or to 1857 or to 1895 90 When have the masses of men the people and the nation been so prosperous as they are to day It seems incredible that a man of average enlightenment could put forth such twaddle as this paper of Prof Bascoras It is not worth noticing ex cept to show to what pitiable ends the Free Trade League is obliged to go to get matter to send out to the few coun try papers that will print its stuff Surely the free trade issue in the Unit ed States is at a low ebb indeed when it must depend on such argument for support Prof Bascom knows no more about patriotism than he does about protection He knows no more about the ambitions and national characteris tics of the people of the United States than he does about the uncivilized tribes of darkest Africa or else for the sake of his pet theory he would Co away with an exertion and all lalor of mind or bod He should study the strenuous life of his countrymen from the president down to the urchin with his bundle of extras He should take a progressive daily or weekly paper and read the current history of his country Or be might take the pivi dents message by installments and gather a few ideas concerning the prog ress and achievements of our institu tions He should get a little American flag and count the stripes and then the stars He should get a portrait of Wash ington and of McKinley and little by little study the lives of our other great men It may be a hopeless case but it would seem as if even Prof Bascom might be injected with a little Ameri can spirit and patriotism One Sided IJeciprooity To illustrate one sided reciprocity let us name Canada Canada wants free access to our markets and in return will cheerfully give us free access to hers Canada has 5000000 people the United States has S0000000 Her peo ple can buy of us provided Great Brit ain does not demand her trade one sixteenth of what we would naturally buy of her Though her soil is Ameri can and she controls a great deal of the North American continent the wage paid by her for labor are 20 to 50 1 or cent lower man in the United States She would of course fill our markets with cheap goods to compete with bet ti r paid American labor Such a condi tion would undoubtedly help Camdian immigration of which there has been practically none for half a century It is better for the United States to at- tract this Immigration to her own states and territories where despite the fact that we have sixteen times as many people as Canada on a smaller area there is yet room with only a small fraction of our magnificent re sources developed New Haven Palla dluiu A Kcuitounhtu Ili ductlou Unreconciled to the gloomy pros pect for wide open reciprocity the Chicago Evening Post plaintively asks Are there no industries which are sufficiently established to stand n reasonable reduction of duty It may be there are such but if so what of it A reasonable reduction of duty would amount to nothing in tha estimation of foreign competitors It must be such a reduction as will ren der the duty non Protective What they clamor for and what the Post seems to think they should have is an unreasonable reduction of tariff duties a foolish destructive reduc tion one that will enable them to break Into this market and undersell domestic producers such a reduction as would either close our mills and factories or else lower the American standard of wages and of living and thus diminish the purchasing capac ity and the consuming power of our wage earners That is what the for eigners want Is it what the Chicago Evening Post wants ArgumentH Ilnscd on MlHlnforination Some wonderful information finds its way into low tariff newspapers The Boston Transcript for Instance which apparently wants reciprocity with Canada after reflecting on the motives of Senator Burrows and others who do not agree with it prints this surprising information which was sent to it all the way from Wash ington In the Dingley tariff the duty on logs was made double that carried by the McKinley tariff of only ten years ago Logs were on the free list in the McKinley tariff and are also on the free list in the Dingley tariff If the advocates of reciprocity with Canada were to base their argu ments on facts instead of such won derful misinformation as that about the duty on logs they would cease to talk on the subject Philadelphia Press The Cuban Carrying Trade Lately the Tribune made the admir able suggestion that any reductions in the duties between this country and Cuba should be confined to such com modities as were carried under either the American or the Cuban flag Cuban vessels to be built in the United States This proposition im mediately meets with opposition from the Munson line whose ships are greatly Norwegian that sail under temporary charters The prompt op position of this line seems to have killed the Tribunes proposition and this foreign line that neither employs American sailors nor repairs or out fits its ships in American ports seem to be dictating the maritime policy of this country A Stuhborn Fact That reciprocity convention was a cruel disappointment to the tariff re formers They are now up against the fact that the end of protection is not yet in sight and as Sam Jones says a fact cannot be gotten over nor around rt must be camped by and sot up with Clyde N C Journal What It Cleans If the Republican party proposes a measure you may bet your boots it means more prosperity at home and more business abroad Blackfoot Idaho Mail Good Idea Representative Babcock might bettei employ his unquestioned ability in fighting for a horizontal reduction in the price of coal Brooklyn Standard Union Touching The Eastern tariff reformers are al agreed that the duty should be taken off of Western hides Such dnanimity is quite touching Kansas City Jour nal Information for Prospective Uridi s Except in the case of a prospective bride who occupies a high social po sition it is not usual to make any for mal announcement ot the engagement of a lady The members of her fami ly impart the news to her friends as they happen to meet them If it is j desired to inform friends at a dis tance the mother being dead a girls father lister or brother may write the informal announcement or to inti mate friends and relatives the girl may write herself Invitations to the wed dings would be issued in the name ol the brides father It is usual to wear a veil with a white wedding gown but if for any reason it seems more de sirable a hat may be substituted A bride is at perfect liberty to decide the details of her own costume All the arrangements for the wedding should be made to suit the conveniencs and comfort of the contracting par ties first of all regardless of fashiol or custom Montreal Herald and Star Noted Men Do Xot Dot the i Having just looked critically over 200 autographs of noted men I am ready to assert and maintain that the dotlet over the i is sadly neglected Even our late lamented president was cruel in this respect He did usually dot the i in McKinley but rarely squandered a speck of ink on the twe is in William It was going baci too far New York Press CURIOUS CHIMNEYS DenlRuor and Ilulldert Who Had Vivid Tmaslimtlon In the neighborhood of Stamford ntreet in the southeast of London there Is a chimnoy shaped after tin likeness of a huge cotlln It is made uc of dark colorod bricks and presents an appearance which is gloomy to the point of depression This quaint erec tion curiously enough Is well nlgli unnoticed by the inhabitants of the district many of whom arc quite unaware of its presence iu their midst A small music hall hi a southern city of France is decorated with a chimney shaped to resemble a man The figure is attired in frock coat and silk hat while a huge metal tube painted brown and representing a cigar re poses in the lips of the queer appa ratus From this cigar the smoke issues in great black clouds and so realistic is the whole contrivance when regarded from the street below that at first sight the spectator is led to believe that a fashionably attired gentleman is enjoying a weed on the theater roof Curious chunmys abound In all quar ters of the globe In several American cities it Is no uncommon occurrence to encounter wine flasks the base of the erections bein swathed in straw-colored woodwork to resemble the baskets wherein such flasks usually recline Perhaps however one of the most pe culiar chimneys in the world is that which is to be seen in a Roumanian township and which is known by the name Death Funnel It represents a skeleton some fifty feet iu height ami is built throughout of gun metal The shaft is conveyed upward through the spine of the figure and the smoke is sues from the apex of the skull Veri tably a ghastly chimney and one would have imagined that the eccen tric millionaire who thus adorned his roof top might have hit upon some less gruesome means ot enhancing his repu tation for extravagant whimsicality ORIGIN OF TALK TURKEY ICotort ot an Indian Whom a Whitu Man Was Trying to Ovurreach A man who listened to some spell binder every evening for three weeks during the recent municipal campaign according to the New York Times said the other day Campaign orators do not always have time or occasion to explain ex pressions used in driving home argu guments They must necessarily de pend upon their audiences to see the point through apt applications of sucr expressions I have in mind one to talk turkey repeatedly used Tht story of its origin is as follows Two men an Indian and a white man agreed to hunt together for a day and to divide the spoils When the time came there was no difficulty in ap portioning the smaller birds and ani mals one of a kind to each At last they reached the last pair a crow and a turkey Now says the white man with a great show of fairness you may have the crow and Ill take the turkey or Ill take the turkey and you may have the crow Huh says the Indian why you no talk turkey to me Sho Read the Signal A romantic story is told in London about Lord Kevlins second marriage In the early 70s he then Sir William Thomson was in Wst India waters on board his schooner yacht the Lalla Rookh As a recreation lie took up the question of simplifying the method of signals at sea He had been talking of it at the dinner table of a friend in Madeira and the only apprehension that seemed able to grasp it was that of his hosts daughter a lady he great ly but silently admired I quite understan S it Sir William she said Are you sure he questioned half doubtfully If I sent you a signal from my yacht do you think you could read it and could answer me Well I would try she responded I believe I could succeed in making it out The signal was sent and she did succeed in making it out and in trans mitting the reply The question was Will you marry me and the an swer was Yes Adventure with Rattlesnake Fred Harris an express messenger on the Illinois Central had an experi ence which he does not care to repeat He was on train No 22 and just after leaving Centralia HI settled back into his chair and dropped into a doze He was awakened shortly by a tickling under his chin and drowsily opened his eyes to discovered the coils of an enormous snake lying across his breast its restless head waving under his chin It is hardly necessary to state that Mr Harris made all former records for in stantaneous and lightning moves In that car look like six counterfeit nick els He also awoke to the fact that while one snake is bad several are worse in a geometrical proportion and he was scon on a pile of baggage sur veying a den of rattlesnakes The rep tilos were a consignment from Tampa Fta to Chicago and had made their escape while Mr Harris slept Spread by Ships The common cockroach has spread throughout the civilized world by means of ships This disagreeable bug and goes on ships almost as freely as the rats The two live to gether amicably and they monopolize the holds of the ships which carry icodstuffs Decoration of the playroom may well be largely left to the youthful occu pant V