A H L x 1 flit lift By JOHN R MUSECK Aatborof Mysteries Mr Howard Tbi Doric Stranfrer Charlie Attend Doak Etc OoTTrigbt 18T7 fa Bobkit Boxvni 8os AU right referred I CHAPTER VIII Continued You cried Captain Fairweather sharply Yea If she sails for Juneau from Seattle In the President I will sail Irom San Francisco In the Occident Would not your presence awaken her suspicion Why should It Everybody Is go ing to the Klondyke now and why not I as well Thats so with a craning swallow -which ended in a bow Seems all right Plan is a good one but it will be very uncomfortable to you I am willing to undergo all the dis comforts when It is a matter of such importance said Lackland I want two more faithful trusty men Men -who will go wherever I send them obey every order I give and keep still tongues in their heads Money Js no object Well well said the captain wink ing and rubbing his hands gleefully thats talking to the mark that is talking just as I like to hear a gentle man What is your price asked Lack land his pale white face almost quiv ering in his intensity Well they come high I expect to pay high for them How much do you want for finding two such men for me in the next twelve hours With a wink and another craning neck and swallowing bow he gasped One thousand dollars I take you up go bring them at once Meet em at my boat at midnight to night I will do it and the money is yours as soon as they are secured CHAPTER IX Pauls Departure From Metlakahtla Paul Millers discovery that the white man prospecting on the island was one of the men who had captured the hermit and beyond doubt one of the four who had robbed him for a moment deprived him of speech He had his own reasons for not wishing to be recognized by the man who had robbed him and attempted his life He also had strong reasons for wishing to have him held a prisoner He be lieved the man could unfold the whole story of the robbery and mystery of the hermit and determined to make him do so before leaving the island After a lew moments the babel of voices without ceased and the crowd gathered near the house began to dis perse The thought then occurred to his mind that the prisoner having been arrested for trespassing might he released on his solemn promise never to return With this new dan ger in his mind he started toward the door when he was met by Father Dun can What have they done with the pris oner he asked anxiously He has been sent to the prison to be detained for a while until certain mysteries with which he is connected are cleared up said the old man Father Duncan do you think the fellow is secure Do you think there is no danger of his escape None whatever My Indians are very watchful and careful They will obey me to the letter Then let us sit here and compare notes for a few moments He seated himself by the old mis sionary and told him of his rescue by the mysterious old man of the moun tains whom he had called the hermit Thi he told of the capture of the her mit and concluded with This man was one of the three who seized the good old man and took him away from the cavern The interest of good Father Duncan increased and he shook his head say ing This is certainly very very strange - There is a mystery in it all which I am unable to solve I cannot com prehend who this strange hermit can be unless he is the captain to whom you refer It looks very much as if the unfor tunate man was the beloved captain whose mysterious disappearance has occasioned so much distress Paul remembered the story which the ex sailor Glum Ralston had told him of his captain and also recalled to his recollection the mysterious wal rus hide His anxiety to escape from the island and return to the Klondyke where his friends were was more than over balanced by a desire to learn something of the motives of the trespasser Mr Duncan will your friends see that he does not escape There is little danger of his doing so Father Duncan answered My friends are kind and Christian men yet they have by no means lost their native watchfulness Paul had ample proof In time of the danger of over confidence The third night after his visit to the jail he was awakened by a loud noise in the direction of the little wharf There came the report of a gun something rarely heard at Metlakah tla and he leaped from his bed hur riedly dressed and ran ut upon the street At last he m Father Dun can whom he found as calm and firm as usual What has happened Father Dun can he asked L Alasi my son you were all too good a prophet The prisoner has escaped The wicked are oyer cun ning and watchful and Satan sleeps not Pa Jr gave utterance to a groan sank upon a largo stone at the side of the road and bowed bis head in his hands One more hope and In fact aoout the last hope he had was gone Paul remained two weeks longer with the Motiakahtlas and then de cided to leave his dusky friends and start for the Klondyke Father Duncan selected four stout young Indians to accompany him The Indians were well supplied with provisions suitable for crossing the mountains and ho and his escort were provided with dried meat and compressed bread and hardtack The four Indians selected for Pauls party were stout young fellows in ured to hardship and danger They were strong brave and faithful The instructions given them by the old missionary were carefully listened to and they promised to carry them out to the letter There is always something en chanting In a great deep forest with its tall trees clothed in moss and solemn depths which seem to speak of divinity At night in the forest adds to the gloom the solemnity and awfulness of the scene A camp fire in the great northern -woods with its rocks and cliffs its moss covered trees has something grand In it Gathered about a camp fire built at the base of the mountain range were five persons Paul Miller and his four Christian Indians It had been a long hard days travel and the poor fellows were almost exhausted It was only Pauls indomitable will driving him on to more than super human energies that kept him on his feet He had aban doned all hope of finding the men who had robbed him and now he longed to get back to the Klondyke take another fortune from the frozen earth and return to Laura and his mother The faces which ever seemed to smile at him from the smoke and darkness gave him courage and hope It has been a long time since I wrote to them he thought They have no doubt given me up for dead How sad to cause them grief and all through a mischievous yet truthful message witten in a fit of delirium He was suddenly roused from his painful reverie by the falling and roll ing of a great stone down upon and across the camp fire scat tering the burning brands in every direction The great round bowlder passed within a few inches of where Paul sat and between two of the In dians but fortunately did not touch any one The stone was heavy enough to crush out life or break bones had it struck one Paul leaped to his feet and the In dians started up with exclamations of fear From whence came that stone cried an Indian Pauls first suspicion that some con vulsion of the earth had shaken the stone loose from the mountain side and sent it thundering down the cliff upon them but there had been no perceptible quaking While he was still trying to dis cover the cause there came another object rolling down the steep descent mingled with dirt fine stones and snow It semed a great dark ball from which there issued a human cry It rolled to Pauls feet and stopped He seized one of the burning brands and held it so the fame threw the light upon the face of the stunned and half insensible man who sat stupidly gazing about him The sud den and unexpected advent of this stranger was enough tc startle the campers and disturb their wits The Indians starting to their feet stared at him in amazement Paul was first to recover his speech He cried Throw the wood on the fire They obeyed and the light flashed up throwing out a broad red glare on the scene which illumined the face of the man who had tumbled down the cliff Paul starting back said It is the escaped prisoner the ab ductor the robber and perhaps murderer He seized one of the In dians muskets and raised it to brain the scoundrel but two stout Metla kahtlas seized him and said Nay brother Thou shalt not kill The man who had so suddenly fall en into their midst was rapidly re gaining his faculties and by this time able to speak He growled an oath and rubbed the side of his head Where did you come from ask ed Paul From aloft on the cliff he an swered What were you doing up there Tryin to cross Was any harm in that I recognize you as one of the men who robbed me Mate yer off yer course when ye accuse me o doin that You are one of the two men who seized your captain a few years since and have made away with him Yer on the wrong tack again mate I haint done nothin o the kind I tell ye Where is your captain Dont know Paul determined to keep a close watch on the rascal and conduct him across the mountains to the camp on the Klondyke where punishment would be meted out to him according to frontier ideas of justice Paul bound his arms behind his back and told him to sit in front of the fire The night passed guarding the prisoner by turns and when the day dawned he was still among them Breakfast over and they began to prepare to ascend the mountain It had snowed considerable during the night but toward morning it changed to a rain and later in the day a sleet The ascent became every moment more and more difficult About every one hundred paces they came to mountain torrents fed by the gla ciers and augmented by recent rain falls which they had to wade the cold water often coming above their knees After struggling up a steep ascent of twenty fivo or thirty feet they were often forced from sheer exhaustion to rest for a moment but when they stopped ever so short a time the piercing wind cut them to the mar row chilled them to the bono and they were compelled to continue their course to keep from chilling to death When evening came they were on the other side of the mountain in a valley wet shivering and benumbed with cold They had no tent nor shelter save the lowering heavens from above Some dry pine and scrub oak wood was collected and a fire kindled They all gathered about it to dry their bedraggled garments and warm their shivering bodies They had just made a supper on dried salmon moose meat and hard tack when they were startled to see an old man with long white hair and beard standing on a slight elevation not far away gazing at them He wore a seal skin cap which shaded his face but not too much for him to be recognized by all the camp The captain cried the Metlak ahtlas The hermit exclaimed Paul The prisoner gave utterance to a curse and was bounding away when a blow from the hermits staff sent him staggering to the earth Paul Miller started quickly toward the hermit saying Where are you from The old man gave him a piercing look and answered I am from everywhere which means nowhere This is precious fine company you keep He clutched his stout staff as Paul approached and warned him not to come too close I will strike you as I did your companion if you come too near me he added in a voice made ferocious by long years of suffering and disap pointment Paul halted and gazed at him in amazement The old man at last said I have been cheated deceived betrayed and lied to until I have about lost faith in all men Can I trust you now Do you know those men asked Paul pointing to the Melakahtlas It you know them you must know they can be trusted Yes they are brothers but they have been deceived as often as I One of the Indians approached the hermit and addressed him in his native tongue The old man answer ed in the same language and grasped his hand Though Paul could not understand a word of what was said ke knew from their manner and ges tures that it had some relation to the man on the ground After a long conversation with the Metlakahtla the hermit approached the fire His face was very grave and his brow lowered when he gazed upon the prisoner The mien of th6 prisoner had been defiant until he met the glance of the hermit then his countenance fell and his eyes were upon the ground Ned Padgett said the hermit you will some day receive the re ward you so much merit you will die a dogs death yet The ruffian gave a sneering chuckle but made no answer Have you lived long in Alaska asked Paul trying to draw the old man into conversation Yes How many years A great many To be continued FREAK DINNERS A FAD Entertainments Where Guests Cook for Themselves Freak dinners are a fad An or dinary dinner has lost its charm for some people who go out much during the season and now that Paris has set its seal of approval on the Corinthian dinner at which everyone is obliged to cook something New Yorkers and Chicagoans will select this form of entertainment as a aiversion In a studio a few weeks ago the wife of an artist gave one of these cook ing parties to a dozen guests who knew nothing of the fun in store for them when they arrived at the house The studio was arranged with a long table holding a chafing dish for each person with some particular viand be fore it ready to be cooked Each guest received a chefs cap and apron and in a short time the dishes were bubbling and simmering in a promis ing fashion When the meal was cooked it was served by the men who acted as the waiters Strangely enough the din ner in every particular was a success But cooking has become such a fad of late that it is considered quite smart to know how to cook some par ticular dish in a chafer The bach elor apartment feasts at which the host acts as cook have increased the desire for culinary knowledge as these occasions prove very enjoyable to those used to more formal enter taining Millets House to Come Down The Paris mansion of Millet the creator of The Angelus is being torn down to make room for modern flats It was one of the landmarks of the French capital THE PAKTYS POLICY SIGNIFICANCE OF THE IOWA RE PUBLICAN PLATFORM Position Taken by President Roose velt Upheld Chicago Inter Ocean Points Out Meaning of Several Planks adopted by Convention The platform unanimously adopted by the Iowa Republican state conven tion contains several clauses of pro found interest to those Republicans whose attitude toward Theodore Roosevelt is critical not to say hos tile and who labor under the delu sion that they are making him unpop ular by trying to thwart his policies and by decrying his efforts to enforce the laws Here are some of these clauses Wo indorse his recommendation as to the reciprocity with Cuba and be lieve this policy necessary to preserve and complete the beneficent work we have done in that island and that it will be mutually beneficial Here is a hint upon which those members of congress including some from Iowa who listened to the voice of Oxnard and the sugar trust instead of to the voice of Roosevelt and the people would do well to ponder We Indorse the policy of reciproc ity as the natural complement of pro tection and urge its development as necessary to the realization of our highest commercial possibilities Here is a deliverance upon which those who suggest that Theodore Roosevelt is unsafe because he up holds the policy of Blaine and McKin ley would do well to reflect We rejoice that the firm and en lightened policy pursued in the Phil ippines has secured peace and that the work of education civilization and development has begun Here is a statement which those who think they can stay in the Re publican party and still give aid and comfort to its enemies and the na tions would do well to consider We assert the sovereignty of the people over all corporations and ag gregations of capital We cordially indorse the position of President Roosevelt in appealing to the courts to secure regulations that will control great combinations We approve the determination of President Roosevelt to enforce the laws wherever violated without prejudice or favor Here is an indorsement upon which the Hanna Elkins group in the sen ate which began to conspire against the president as soon as he began to inquire into the legality of the North ern Securities company may chew se riously and with profit And all these groups of critical Re publicans may well ponder and digest the fact that all these things for which they blame the president are by the representatives of over 300000 voters of the great state of Iowa set forth as his shining merits and lead them to this conclusion We declare our confidence in the leadership of President Roosevelt and our fealty to his administration We look forward to his election in 1904 as a foreshadowed event demanded by the popular will and one that will maintain the national prosperity and conserve every national interest The voice of Iowa is the voice of Illinois of Indiana of Michigan of Wisconsin or Minnesota of Kansas of Nebraska of New York of Ohio of Pennsylvania and of all the great states that make Republican presi dents It is the voice of the Amer ican people and the critical Repub licans would do well to hear and heed Chicago Inter Ocean Searching for an Issue Ex Secretary Vilas urges that the tariff issue shall be revived and put to the front This was Mr Cleve lands counsel in his New York speech It is the last resort of those who can see nothing else to suggest It is based partly upon the old denun ciation of protection as the creator of monopolies and combinations and partly upon the claim that whatever may have been true in the past the existing tariff rates on various articles are no longer necessary But the trouble with this issue is that under the existing tariff we have had the highest domestic prosperity and the largest foreign trade we have ever had Industry has far-outstripped all previous development and commerce is stretching out its arms in every direction With busi ness thus active and labor well em ployed it is impossible to make any popular outcry on this subject The people have too vivid a recollection of the disastrous consequences of the last Democratic tinkering -with the tariff to invite its repetition Turn which way they -will the Democratic leaders find no issue on which they can hopefully fight Philadelphia Press Matters of Pressing Moment Mr Shaw says that the reciprocity speech of Mr McKinley at Buffalo has been misrepresented In what way and by whom Is it the secretarys opinion that Mr McKinley on that oc casion laid down merely an academic proposition The speech is very far from encouraging that interpretation Mr McKinley not only declared for reciprocity but gave It as his opinion that the time had arrived for the in auguration of the policy by the United States There seems to be the fullest warrant for the belief indeed that had he lieved he would have embodied in his annual message to Congress a recommendation that an immediate start be made In that direction Does Mr Shaw hold differently If so his jLuiituaKaJSLiua xiwtui views at some length on that point would be read with very great Intorest by the country Reciprocity and a limited tariff revision aro matters of pressing moment and tho Iowa Republicans- enjoy tho credit of being leaders in tho movomont Washing ton Star General Prosperity The man was fortunate In his lan guage who spoke of McKInley as the advance agent of prosperity The expression has been made the sport of Democratic and Popullstic orators who by long custom have come natur ally to look upon the dismal side of things Republicans have their view of the business situation and believe that principles preached and practic ed by the party have helped and not obstructed the nation in its forward march to an increased business They have been in power and their party is cot one to evade responsibilities either for success or defeats Tho prosperity over all the country is so splendid that Republicans are proud of the share they have had in it In the financial world during tho past week there was a healthy growth The increase in the bank clearings was nearly three per cent The grand total of the bank clearings reached 2029796712 These figures indicate no stringency in the financial world The increase in the clearings was large in the cities located in the Middle West None of them report a decrease The railroads are doing a heavy business Their carrying capacity is taxed to the fullest extent In not a few instances freights have to be delayed for want of cars and this too before the great grain crops of the west have fairly begun to move The farmers business is in good shape throughout tho nation R G Dun Co say Bright prospects in agricultural sections far outweigh the adverse influences which are still re tarding trade and manufactures All of the great factories are run ning on full time to meet the de mands and in many cases orders are not filled at once but are filed to await their turn There never has been a time when the great factories were so presed with work as they are now The slight cessation of business for the summer has about passed and people are getting ready for the fall rush The volume of business In this country for the next four months promises to be unprecedented For that time prosperity will be a record breaker Terre Haute Tribune The Farmer Finds This a Good Fence 7 t rzi V C - 5 V PROTECTION 5 5 Mci Ss Not a Trust Panacea The instances in which tariff revi sion aimed at trusts would find an other target might be multipled It is not as a trust panacea that tariff re vision appeals to the more enlight ened students of economic questions The question for present statesmen is to abandon tariff schedules that are not necessary to preserve the life of home industries and to utilize this tariff reduction in the securement of similar reductions on the part of other countries which will benefit the Amer ican export trade The word used to define this measure of statesmanship is reciprocity and the men who have given it indorsement include Blaine McKinley Roosevelt and many others Baltimore Herald Trusts Can Be Regulated Trusts and combinations can be reg ulated by a federal law and federal supervision as suggested by President Roosevelt They can be made to show their accounts their real monetary standing and responsibility but they cannot be destroyed if we remember that change of name or even in some degree of method will not change the thing itself If half the time given by speakers and writers to advocacy of destroying the trusts were devoted to formulating a practicable scheme of regulating them there would be an appreciable gain for the country in in creased public realization that the trust question can be dealt with effec tively only by dealing with it temper ately Boston Transcript Old and Worn Our Democratic contemporaries would have us repose in the sweet ber lief that they are valiantly fighting the trusts but when we read their editorials we are forced to the con clusion that they have simply dusted off some of their old free trade argu ments and are now attempting to foist them upon the country in a new guise Waverly Ohio News Too Much Prosperity You complain of being half starved on account of the high prices Why man you are making a fortune off your truck farm Thats jest it I cant afford to eat any of my vegtables when theyre wuth so much in the market b gosh Chicago Tribune CROP CONDITIONS GOVERNMENT REPORT 8HOW3 GOOD STATE OF AFFAIRS CORN SHOWING URGE GAINS All he Products of the Soil Will Make an Abundant Harvest Oati Will Be a Big Crop Average Generally All Right Washington Sept 11 Tho monthly report of tho statistltlan of tho Depart ment of Agriculture shows tho aver age condition of corn on September 1 to havo been 843 as compared with 865 on AugUBt 1 1902 517 on Sop tember 7 1901 80G at the correspond ing date In 1900 and a ten yoar aver age of 788 Except in Kansas and South Dakota which report a declina of 12 points and 2 points during Aug ust no material chango of condition Is reported from any of the principal corn states and except those of the south and the state of Michigan they again report condition averages toi ex cess of their respective averages for the last ten years Notwithstanding its marked decline during August Kansas reports a con dition of 91 or 25 points above its ten year average while Nebraska and Missouri exceed thoir respective ten year averages by 35 and 22 points re spectively Indiana Ohio Illinois and Iowa by 16 11 14 and 10 points re spectively and Pennsylvania Wiscon sin and Minnesota by 6 4 and 3 points respectively The crop however is so late that throughout the entire northern por tion of the belt prediction of moro than an average crop are invariably made contingent upon the Immediate advent and continuance for some days of the most favorable conditions of weather The average condition at harvest of winter and spring wheat combined was 80 against 828 last year G96 In 1900 and a ten year average of 789 Ohio Michigan Indiana and Illinois report 13 18 15 and 21 points and North Dakota South Dakota Ne braska and Missouri 20 20 25 and 24 points respectively above their ten year averages the condition in Min nesota differs only one point from the states ten year average while Penn sylvania and California report 5 points below the ten year average Icwa 12 points below and Kansas a Condition of 4923 points below the ten year average of the state The average condition of oats when harvested was 872 against 721 last year 822 in 1900 and a ten year aver age of 797 While correspondents re port the harvesting of an exception ally large crop of oats there are in dications that the crop will be very deficient in quality this will be re ported on more fully in December when the yields per acre are sent In Of the ten states having 1000000 acres or upward in oats Iowa alone reports a condition comparing unfav orably with its ten year average ENDORSE MEMORIAL SERVICES All Favor Proposed Tribute to Mc Kinley CINCINNATI Sept 11 Additional responses to the Times Stars inquiries have been received from governore members of congress church digni taries and others endorsing the move ment for McKinley memorial services In the churches next Monday Rev John K Schick President Roosevelts pastor at Washington and Rev Frank M Bristol pastor of the church McKinley formerly attended in Washington both telegraphed that they would speak on the life and char acter of McKinley next Sunday Arch bishop Elder issued an order that the litany of the saints be publicly recited next Sunday after high mass MAY RESTRICT EMIGRATION Men Must Perform Militaray Service Before Going Abroad VIENNA Sept 11 The Hungari an government is taking steps to adopt stringent measures to regulate and restrict emigration The ministry of the interior has prepared a bill which will shortly be introduced in parliament where by all emigration on the part of men is forbidden until after the perform ance of military service The bill also provides for strict control of emigration agencies and transporta tion companies and prescribes se vere penalties for persons attempt ing to induce emigration by means of misleading statements of over flowery advertisements Bob Evans is to Go to Asia Washington Sept 11 It was an nounced at the navy department yes terday that Rear Admiral Frederick Rodgers will turn over the command of the Asiatic station to Rear Admiral Robrey D Evans at Yokohama Japan about October 29 and that Admiral Rodgers then will sail for the United States aboard his flagship the New York coming across the Pacific to San Francisco instead of through the Suez V VI Jl