ffc t M M - CHAPTER XII Continued Jacks hand trembled as he touched the half bowed and supplicating sen tinel that In all these decades while the world was moving on making wonderful history had remained here In the dense jungle guarding well the Kecret of those strange people of Aztec limes Jack estimated the value of the statue at some thousands of pounds in London even at the present depreciat ed price of silver But they were after higher game and could well afford to scornfully cast this base bullion aside It was not long before the descend ing pick struck metal and presently Jack shovel in hand had cleared a fclab that had a dull lustre not unlike bronze Barrajo danced what in another quarter of the world might have been termed an Irish jig or a Scottish horn pipe Por Dios It is just as the docu ment relates The old Indian did not deceive me Come lift the trap with me Senor Jack See stone steps lead down to the ruins of the old Aztec temple Oh I tell you my president we are the luckiest men on the face of the earth this night since we have but to stretch out our hands to clutch fortune The invitation to descend given by Barrajo as the two fortune hunters Hiirveyed the ancient stone steps lead ing to some mysterious subterranean depository of the Montezumas was a most welcome sound to Overton They had come upon the expedition fully prepared for all emergencies and the gloomy depths of the yawning pit below had no terrors for such brave hearts so taking pick and spade they began to descend At the bottom of the stairway they came to a long slab forming a lintel over the top of a door Upon digging the doorway was uncovered and was found to be blocked by a huge metate or native millstone Carved across its entire surface were inscriptions in the hieroglyphics of a civilized race As soon as the doorway had been cut through the two adventurous treasure hunters entered the chamber of the temple tomb Mural paintings repre senting female figures draped in shrouds and in attitudes of prayer were on the walls Niches in the crypt contained a number of skulls and other bones comprising parts of skeletons were scattered about These were all painted a bright red Red it ma be remarked was the mourning color of the Aztecs There were numbers of idols in the cave doubtless looked upon as ex ceedingly chaste in these olden times but their supreme ugliness gave Jack a rude shock when his artistic eye first fell upon them However their faults while many from this point of view could be read ily condoned when the fact was taken into consideration that each and every one of the little monsters seemed to have been fashioned from crude metal and even Overtons inexperienced eye was able to tell that it was gold un alloyed This was glorious still it was only a beginning With trembling fingers they picked up many of the less weighty images and vases By degrees the two men managed to recover their wits and calm down -when they set about a rough estimate of the value of their find Overton was fain to agree with the general when the latter exultantly ex claimed that in all probability never before in the history of the world from the days of King Solomon down to the present time had such a vast treasure been heaped up in one pile It was like a dream Overton in his wildest moods when fancy ran away -with reason had never imagined so marvelous a thing Finally Barrajo said Remember our sacred compact Senor Jack an equal division if we both live should misfortune overtake us while we are in the act of removing the treasure the one who survives is entitled to all after he has settled a few bequests we have taken the pains to write jointly Is this so understood It is in the bond general and may heaven deal with me as I deal with you They solemnly shook hands as if to again ratify the bargain Barrajo and Jack had as yet no sus picion that they were followed from San Juan and eager to begin opera tions the two comrades had each seized upon several images that were most handy and began to lug the un resisting captives toward the exit Barrajo ascended the steps first and Jack handed up the booty raising the temple images one by one while the general piled them outside on the grass beside the overthrown silver sentry Jack had handed up the last of their burden and still gasping for breath crawled up the steps himself anxious to again breathe the pure atmosphere without after having his eyes and nose and mouth clogged with the fine dust of ages Just as he reached the top a hand clutched his shoulder and Barrajos hnsky voice whispered into his ear Hush Do not move caramba I could swear I saw a figure flit through yonder stretch of bright moonlight Ah that means We iave been followed T ftcrMiMiWwttif Jhtaaui I An American Nabob 1 A RemaLrketble Story of Love Gold atrid t Adventure I By ST GEORGE RATHBORNE t THHHImwHHIW 4 Mf - Copjrleht by Stuebt Smith New York In spite of our great caution Barrajo muttered a few pet phrases as though in this opening of the safe ty valve he could allow the surplus steam to escape There are some very sly dogs in this world senor and we have our share of them in San Jose Yes de spite the care exercised by one whose long experience made him capable of doing everything possible to throw pursuers off the track we have been followed There can be no doubt of their in tentions said Overton between his teeth as he allowed a hand to steal toward his weapons for the Anglo Saxon spirit was aroused within him None at all They want this treas ure and if we hope to win we must fight for it came the stern reply BOOK TWO Tho Modern Argonauts CIIAITEK Xlir Dearly Won Evidences that the general had spoken the truth multiplied quickly for presently they heard signals and even caught a glimpse of dark figures flitting from tree to tree Perhaps it was the first time on record where white men made a rude breastworks of gold but lying behind the heap of gold images and vases tnat Barrajo had deposited upon the ground they awaited an opportunity to cut loose among the persistent shadows that had followed from San Juan It was Barrajo who found the first chance and right well the old soldier improved it At least one thing was settled the imprecations in Spanish that followed the report of his gun announced be yond any possibility of mistake that these dusky flitting shadows were not the spirits of ancient Aztec priests but genuine bonafide adventurers of to day If more evidence were needed they had it when spiteful flashes of fire punctured the dark spaces under the trees and the rattle of firearms fol lowed Some of the bullets whistled over their heads while others flattened against the novel defense behind which they crouched Five muttered the old soldier when the scattering volley had come to an end without doing any damage They had quite a little circus for some time firing back and forth guid ed more by the flash of each others guns than anything else When the enemy began to flank their position Jack knew the case was grow ing desperate and would require he roic treatment if they hoped to come out at the large end of the horn We must move on their works general he declared when a leaden messenger had sung past his ear com ing from the rear They crawled away keeping almost flat upon the ground and without in terruption reached the spot for which they aimed where at the proper time they could pour a hot and deadly fire into the ranks of the San Jose ad venturers as they rushed forward in closing upon their silenced enemies All this happened just as Barrajo who knew the habits and tempera ments of his fellows full well expect ed and the fusilade which they opened on the advancing figures sent at least a couple of them to grass before they realized the clever nature of the strat agem played upon them The fight being again open raged along the whole line It was evidently destined to be a little war of extermination one side or the other must be wiped out After further desultory firing Jack heard the awful thud which a bullet makes when it strikes a human being and caught the husky maledictions that burned his comrades tongue You are hit he exclaimed in dis may Yes and badly too I fear Try to stanch the blood hombre as best you can Your hand trembles come bear up it is but the luck of a soldier after all Many years I have mocked the Grim Reaper and laughed in his face perhaps he has me now At least hombre I shall be avenged See our three remaining enemies have come to gether yonder by the gnarled oak you can count the flashes when they fire It is a glorious opportunity to try the virtues of these experimental bombs one that may never come again The secret must die with them Jack had just turned his head mood ily aside ostensibly to look for ene mies in their rear but in reality to hide his emotion when a sudden shout electrified him As he faced about he was horrified to see his sorely wounded companion upon his feet and hurrying with uncer tain steps toward the spot from whence the last volley had come It was too late to stay him for al ready the mad general was a quarter of the way over the intervening ground His cry had drawn out shots from those in ambush Jack could see the fire run the gamut of three guns and at that distance he trembled for his tO voted comrade As he turned to look for Barrajo he discovered that his worst fears were Difin H f ii - Srfii - realized the old hero had gone down struck again by a merciless ball Then a sudden fury seemed to pos sess Overton such a feeling as may make a giant of a stripling it was the desire for revenge burning in his soul and tingling to the very tips of his fingers under the Impulse of which a man may do the most astounding feats such as might be worthy of old time heroes In that second of time he had sworn an oath to slay those three desperate adventurers or die himself in the attempt He had even scrambled to his feet with this stern resolution on his mind and was in the act of rushing forward to hurl himself upon the ambushed foe when he discovered that Barrajo was once more rising Jack had a pretty good idea as to what was upon Barrajos mind so that he was not at all surprised to see him draw back his arm and make ready to cast a projectile Overton unconsciously came to a halt and held his breath when he dis covered that the general had actually made the cast He had no time to speculate upon the result There was a blinding flash just in the spot where the trio of adventurers had concealed themselves a most ter rific concussion that actually threw Jack from his feet and then a deathly silence Overton only a trifle bruised man aged to gain his feet and rush for ward Where the San Jose treasure seekers had lain hidden the utmost havoc had been done and Jack knew no human being could have been within twenty feet of that exploding bomb and es caped with his life It was a most terrible and over whelming catastrophe He remembered poor brave Barrajo hero of a score of battles such as they are in Central American republics It was no trouble finding him The general had half raised himself to a sitting position and was eagerly looking toward the scene of desolation his terrible little hand grenade had wrought It is victory he gasped as Jack bent over him and there was a tremor to the old soldiers weak voice that told of the ruling passion strong in death I have no reason to believe a single man of their number has been left alive Jack returned The old warrior feebly waved his arm above his head Jack would never as long as he lived forget the tragic scene under the whispering gnarled oak Then I am satisfied It is sweet for a soldier to die when the field has been won But is it so bad as that my poor friend May I not be able to save you I have some rude knowledge of surgery and Heaven knows I could spare no effort in your behalf There was real agony in Jacks voice and the dying man was deeply affected by it Useless Senor Jack quite useless My sands of life are almost run my race at its end I have been wounded many times but never like this In less than ten minutes I shall be dead believe me Good heavens you give me pain Barrajo If it were my brother I could not feel more unconsolable Ah I believe you senor We have been good comrades we two is it not so And we made a sacred compact you remember it Senor Jack weakly Yes To be continued SULTAN LOVES MUSIC Grand PIano3 Purchased for the Ladies of the Harem It will be news to most Deople that the Sultan of Turkey is an enthusiastic musical amateur The statement how ever is nevertheless true A well known Anglo German firm has just sent his majesty two more grand pianos This firm has already supplied him with many such instru ments but the Sultan is still unsatis fied He does not play himself but some of the ladies of his harem do and of course many brilliant pianists perform before him But if he does not play himself he is at any rate fond of sing ing to music The Shah is another lover of musical instruments The same firm has alsc supplied him with grand pianos His majesty takes the greatest interest too in his band and he is a keen collector of musical instruments and is said tc be a connoisseur in fiddles Strangely enough too those huge mechanical structures which are so commonly found in Germany and Russia and which purport to be organ orchestra and brass band in one are very popu lar both with the Sultan and the Shah Another curious fact is that a grand piano has just been bought by an Arab sheik at Khartoum It is to be played by his chief wife -- Tault in the Home It is one of the manifestations of the careless superficial way in which many people consider an important matter that the minute a word is said about overstudy and sitting up until 2 oclock with a cup of black coffee and a history lesson the tendency is at once to shove all the blame upon the public school system Part of this is thoughtlessness and part is cowardice the exhibition of an indisposition to face the diffi culty exactly where it is In every case like that which Mr Griggs cites or any case that is approximate the trouble is so much in the home that all other contributory elements are of no ac count whatever Three hundred and thirty five places of worship provide 1GG391 sittings for members of the Presbyterian church of England IN SERIOUS DANGER ADVOCATES OF PROTECTION SEE CAUSE FOR ALARM The Proposed Tariff Concessions to Cuba Involve Needles Meddling with Hates and n Grave Menace to Our Own Agricultural Interests The situation in the United States in regard to the practice of protection as a means of national development is remarkable We have just emerged from a period of Hard Times in a way which has justified the strongest con victions of the Protectionists Many a man has in past times hesitated over the Protection according to iron and steel If such duties were needed for those products at any time when could we hope to successfully produce iron and steel in competition with the world at large Yet Iron and steel strongly protected here have sallied forth and opened for us the markets of the world The very things on which we had the greatest doubts are the things which have placed our prin ciples beyond dispute by practical il lustration known and read of all men Nevertheless this is the very mo ment when protection is running its greatest risk It is a curious fact in the nature of mankind that there is no time when there is such great dan ger as the time of victory Aften ten sion of muscles comes the natural reaction and men after victory like to concede something to their enemies This is all well enough when it re lates to the courtesies of individual intercourse but it has no application to business Protection rests upon principle or it does not If it does not then it is a mere bestowal of bounty and is no part of the business of government If it rests upon princi ple then that principle must be that the American markets belong to the Americans You cannot maintain your system and sacrifice anything to which it is applicable Recent events ought to show con gress that the people are coming to understand these things After such a victory as our system has had it can easily be understood that all attacks on the system if made at all must be insidious and disguised They cannot be open for they would be resisted at sight Hence there should be full dis cussion of these new attempts which are now being made ir our period of victory to turn the victory into de feat The first attack came in the disguise of reciprocity That sounded well All things sound well which are mere ly on paper Mr Cleveland could talk most convincingly of the tariff which should protect all manufacturers and yet be so nicely poised that it would suit all importers here and all manu facturers abroad So long as the sen ate was against him and he could do nothing there was no false note in the Bong But when he got a senate of his own party and they all went to work on a real tariff he found the product so bad that he could only cov er his face as it passed by So with reciprocity treaties Fram ed in the mind they exchange only commodities that one of the countries produces and the other does not This seems plain But no real reciprocity bill or treaty ever could do any such thing or ever really tried to Recognizing this fact when they were face to face with it the manufac turers and producers of this country quite recently in their meeting in Washington earned the thanks of their country by their courageous ac tion This they did thougn many of their friends stayed away as another method of protest Another insidious attack upon pro tection as a system has recently been made in the bill repealing more or less of the tariff for the benefit of Cuba It does not in any way appeal to our judgments It is not addressed to our intellects It is only addressed to our sympathies We are told that Cuba has been maltreated by being set free Can that be so Not at all Some en terprising Americans have gone there purchased land and built a railroad Are we going to reward expatriation We have a right to wish them suc cess and we give them our good will Why should they be benefited at the expense of those who stay at home and develop our own country Why should a desire to be kind to the absent lead us to withdraw protection for our own tobacco growers and our own beet sugar raisers Why should we for the sake of good men even who have gone abroad to seek fortune allow such an attack upon our system of protection as will be a good beginning for a final destruction If you need any proof as to the char acter of the attack look at those who are flocking to the aid of the Cuban bounty or rebate whatever it may be Every journal that has ever advocated free trade is after us in a fashion which may be called brutal all of them are attacking those who sustain protection as if it were a crime to up hold laws which have made this coun try prosperous beyond our utmost hopes If even our system should be over turned it will be by such attempts as this and not by a battle along the whole line Therefore it behooves us as citizens who desire to continue the prosperity of our country to take ac tive measures to see that the true meaning of this proposed action should be fully understood If we propose to abandon any in dustries we had better not let it be the agricultural industries Between the Atlantic and Pacific stretch vast regions still untilled The next victory of protection should be there Our system of protection is not for manufacturers alone It is for farm ers also Whoever deprives our farm- era of all the American market they can occupy Is false to his principles and must meet with defeat or the sys tem must be surrendered which pro claims that American markets are first of all for American citizens who are engaged in developing the country we already have 4 South Wants Protection The South has now entered the field of manufacturing It Is not at all Im probable that it may want all it can get out of the business Protection fur nishes much of the profit of the busi ness and the South may want that There is a tendency in the East to go back into the shipbuilding business That carries with It the Free Trade in clination More than this the East does not produce the raw material on which its manufactories work It does not want a tariff on raw material and that is an entering wedge to the de struction of Protection Already In the South there is something of a Protec tive spirit This is shown by the fact that at the Democratic convention in Chicago which nominated Mr Bryan Messrs Tillman and Bailey both on the committee on resolutions and plat form insisted on striking out the word only in the platform of four years before where it qualified the powers of the government in imposing a tariff on the country In other words the Dem ocratic annunciation for a tariff for revenue only was changed to a dec laration for a tariff for revenue leav ing the inference that under the new Democracy a tariff might be imposed for purposes other than for revenue to carry on the government Galveston News SO NEAR AND YET SO FAR fMWffflhJf Who Pays It There is an old saying to the effect that a liar needs to have a good mem ory The man who argues on the wrong side of a question has a similar need Otherwise he will get tangled up in his own contradictions At the re cent reciprocity convention one of the speakers Mr A B Farquhar a well know Free Trader said Our manu facturers are now practically barred from France by a maximum tariff which we alone of all important na tions are forced to pay In other words according to Mr Farquhar what Protectionists have always main tained is true and it is the producer and not the consumer who pays the tariff in France at least and we do not imagine that Mr Farquhar will hold that economic laws veer with the winds of the Atlantic It is gratifying to have so eminent a Free Trader ad mit the truth of the Protectionist con tention even though he did so in an offguard moment The memory of his hearers may prove better than his own and his words may come back to them when they nextlisten to Free Trade de nunciations of the robber Tariff which lays a tax on the consumer Want It All Havemeyer advocates the same self ish plan urged by other manufacturers who want it all The woolen manufac turers want free wool in order that they may use the cheai Australian and Argentine products but they want protection for their manufactures against the cheap products of England and Germany The New England shoe makers want free hides while demand ing protection for their manufactures In all these cases the result would be the same the enrichment of the man ufacturers at the expense of the farm ers who raise sugar beets and cane the stockmen who grow wool and hides The plan is too unjust and one sided to receive consideration at the hands of a Republican congress Helena Mont Record a Pair Treatment By All Means Senator Mason urges fair treatment for Cuba So does everybody else The question is what is fair treatment for Cuba First let us find that out It may easily happen that a reduction of duties on sugar and tobacco would not put an extra dollar in the pockets of Cuban growers of sugar and tobacco but that the money thus taken from the treasury of the United States would all find its way to trust treasu ries Also it is proper to ask what is fair treatment for the growers of sugar and tobacco in the United States and whether it is wise that they should be mulcted for the benefit of trusts Let us have fair treatment for all con cerned Contrasts During the Free Trade periods of Martin Van Buren James Buchanan and Grover Cleveland all industrial enterprises were paralyzed and mil lions of idle wage earners were obliged to get their supplies from soup houses to avoid starvation During tariff periods all labor has been profitably employed and the soup house is an institution gone but not forgotten o New York city is to have a child rens theater patterned after one in Boston which pays good dividends THE LIVE STOCK MARKET Latest Quotations from South Omaha and Kansas City SOIHMI OMAHA CATTLE There was a fulr supply f cattle and tliu market took on countd cranio activity In view of the liberal de mand All tho buyers were out early and It was not long before they had picked out the more desirable grades There were finite a few beef stoors but name has been the case for some time pant the quality of the offerings wan Qt particularly c holer Packers how ever took hold freely and hid steady to strong prices There was also a very active demand for cow stun and partic ularly for the better grades such as 11 from iV up Huyers took about every thing they came to tint was at all desirable and sellers were quoting th market stronger In the majority of cases with some sales 5c or even 10c higher The demand for canners however audi for the medium grades continued mod erate and the market on such klndi coul not he quoted much more than steady Hulls of good quality that wer fat commanded strong prices hut com mon kinds were neglected Veal calves and stags also sold at good strong prices Only a few stackers and feeder arrived and the market was aetlve and Ptronger on the better grudes Th r have not been too many stock cattln offered this week to meet the demand so that prices have been held up In good shape HOGS The hog market was in bettor shape than it has been for some timw past There did not seem to he any more hogs on sale than packers wanted am buyers were out early and as they started In bidding strong to He more thanJ they did yesterday the hogs began mov ing toward the scales In good season As the morning advanced the market seemed to take on more llfo and close was active and just about 5c higher Vhan yesterday The better weight hog sold mostly from 3595 to 3615 medium weights went from J5S0 to 3595 and tho lightweights went from 3575 down SHEEP Thre was another moderate run of sheep and packers took hiM in good shape and bought up the better grades at Just about steady prices Jt was noticeable though that while they were anxious for both sheep ami lamb tnfc snowt l quality and were fat the wtue slow about buying common stun and particularly those that were n I fat Sellers who had that class of stuff found it a little hard to sell out at what th v considered steady prices Anything at all desirable however sold freely at good steady prices KANSAS CITV CATTIK AI1 killing cattle hV higher stockers and feeders steady choice ex port and dressed beef steers JiWOl fair to good 3300fjGn0 mockers and feeders 3350ft49O western fed steers 525ff600 Texas and Indian steers 315 500 Texas cows 3225fi40O native cows S30OtfM7o heifer 3175f550 canners 32 O0fjCO bulls SJ25fj40 calves 34S0fr70O HOGS Market active llrrn top VllV bulk of sales 570fiC20 heavy S62O7M20 mixed packers 35S5fx60 light frSZTt 500 pigs 34fi5fi50 SHEEP AND LAMBS Market steady native lambs 3640fi665 western lambs je44fi660 native wethers 3300fi575 western wethers 3300ft 360 yearlings 35S35I645 ewes 3463fi330 culls and feed ers 3250450 LIVES LOST IN HOTEL The Park Avenue House in New York Burns NEW YORK Feb 22 Fire that broke out early this morning In the armory of the Seventy first regiment National Guard New York at Park avenue Thirty third and Thirty fourth streets spread to the Parle Avenue hotel and at least four lives were lost while the damage is roughly estimated at over 1000000 Admiral Miller U S N retired was fatally shocked and a woman guest name unknown jumped from the fifth story and will die The loss is esti mated at 2000000 Chief Croker makes an estimate of twenty dead in the ruins of the hotel Four bodies have been taken out and one of these was identified as that of Colonel Alexander Piper U S A of Louisville Ky SOUVENIR FOR PRINCE HENRY An Elaborate Casket of Hand Carved Silver and Gold ST LOUIS Feb 22 The solid sil ver and gold casket which will be pre sented as a souvenir to Prince Henry of Prussia by Mayor Wells will b finished within a day or two It will be 18 inches long 4t inches high and H2 inches from front to back All the material is of solid sliver and gold with decorations in full relief richly cut by hand in solid metal and en ameled The most ornate embellish ment will be the device on the cover This consists of the common seal of St Louis on either side of which are the American and German eagles the key to the city protruding at the top and bottom about the lower part be ing a spray of Inside the souvenir will be lined with navy bluo watered silk Postal Ruling CLEVELAND O Feb 22 Judge Wing today decided that a postal mon ey order signed by a deputy postmas ter with the addition of his single letter to indicate is not a lawful one Corn Products Company a Go NEW YORK Feb 22 A circular that has just issued informs the stock holders of the Glucose Sugar Refining company and National Starch com pany that a large majority of the hold ers of the preferred and common stocks of both companies having ac cepted the offer contained in the no tice dated February S 1902 and hav ing for that purpose deposited their stocks the consolidation plan is de clared operative ii