A h w i THE MAID sf MAIDEN iiANE Sequel to The Bow of Orange Ribbon s A HOVE STORY BY AMELIA E BARK CHAPTER XI Copyricht 1900 by Amelia E Barr We Have Done With Tears and Treasons Hero Is a letter lrom Arenta re peated the Doctor to his wife who was just entering the room Come Ava and listen to what she has to iy Then Cornelia read aloud the J pwing words i My Deaf Friend Cornelia IE to J -ay I could walk down Maiden Lane if to day I could see you and talk to you I should imagine myself in hea ven For as to this city I think that in hell the name of Paris must have spread itself far and vide Do you Yemciiber our learning in those happy days at Bethlehem of the slaughter of Christians by Nero Very well right here in the Paris of Marat and Robespierre you may hear constantly the same brutal cry that filled the Rome of the Caesars Death to the Christians Famine anarchy mur der are everywhere and I live from moment to moment trembling if a step comes near me As to religion there is no longer any religion Everywhere the Al mighty is spoken of as the soi disant God The monarchy is abolished and yet ignorant are the leaders of the people that when Brissot mentioned the word Republic in Potions house Robespierre said with a grin Repub lic Republic Whats a republic Spying and fear and death penetrate into the most private houses above all fear constant fear of every one with whom you come in contact I have told you the truth about our condition because I have just had a letter from my father and he talks of leaving his business in Claos Bergens care and coming here to lcok after me You must convince him that he could do me no good whatever and that he might do me much harm Tell him not to fear Arenta says not to fear While Minister Morris is here I have a friend that can do all that can be done Ask our good Domine to pray that I may soon return to a country where God reigns Never again do I wish to spend one minute in a place where there is no God for whatever they may call that place its real name is hell Arenta Marquise de Tounnerre Poor Arenta said the Doctor when Cornelia had finished the wretched epistle Suppose that yci go and see Van Ariens and give him all the comfort you can Cornelia crossed the street and was going to knock at the door when Van Ariens hastily opened it When Cor nelia told him her errand he was in a hurry of loving anxiety to hear what his child had written I understand he said when he had heard the letter She is fright ened the poor little one But she will smile and say it is nothing How ever I yet think I must go to her Do not urged Cornelia You may see by Arentas letter that she does not fear the guillotine Come over to night and talk to my father and mother Well then I will come Then he took both Cornelias hands in his and looking earnestly at her said Poor Rem Impossible is it Quite impossible sir she an swered I am very sorry he said sim ply and let her hands drop In an Van Ariens opened the door hour or two to your house I will come There is plenty to talk about The next day Gornelia walked down Broadway to Madame Jacobus house It was closed and desolate looking and she sighed as sue compared its old bright spotless comfort with its pres ent empty forlornncss The change typified the change in her heart and love One exquisite day as they went up Maiden Lane the Doctor said My friend Gen Hewitt sails for England to day and we will go and wish him a good voyage So to the pier they went and the Doctor left his carriage and taking Cornelia on his arm down to where the English packet was lying Soon Cornelia became conscious of the powerful magnetism of some hu man eye and obeying its irresistible attraction she saw George Hyde stead ily regarding her She was enthralled 71 again by his glance and never for one moment thought of resisting the appeal it made to her With a con scious tenderness she waved him an adieu whose spirit he could not but feel In the same moment he lifted his hat and stood bareheaded looking at her with a pathetic inquiry which made her inwardly cry out Oh what does he mean Then the Doctor touched her Why do you do that he asked angrily Because I must do it father I J cannot help it I desire to do it I am in a hurry let us go home She turned away with a sigh The Doctor drovq rapidly to Maiden Lane and did not on the way speak a word and Cornelia was glad of it Hence forward she was resolved to love without a doubt She would believe in Joris no matter what she had seen or what she had heard There were places in life to which alas truth could not come and this might be one of them Though all the world blam ed her lover she would excuse him Now a womans intuition is like a leopards spring it seizes the truth if it seizes it at all at the first bound and it was by this unaccountable mental agility Cornelia had arrived at the conviction of her lovers fidelity She reflected that now he was so far away it would be possible for her to call upon Madame Van Heemskirk She resolved therefore to call upon Madame Van Heemskirk the following week She expected the old lady might treat her a little formally per haps even with some coldness but she thought it worth while to test her kindness One morning Mrs Moran said Cor nelia I wish you to go to William Irvins for some hosiery and Kendals cottons Very well mother I will also look in at Fishers and it was at Fishers that she saw Madame Van Heemskirk Good morning madame said Cor nelia with a cheerful smile Good morning miss Step aside once with me A few words I have to say to you and as she spoke she drew Cornelia a little apart from the crowd at the counter and looking at her sternly said One question only why then did you treat my grandson so badly A shameful thing it is to be a flirt I am not a flirt madame And I did not treat your grandson badly No indeed Pray then what else You let a young man love you you let him tell you so you tell him yes I love you and then when he says marry me you say no Such ways I call bad very bad Not worthy of my Joris are you and so then I am glad you said no Madame you are very rude And very false are you Madame I wish you good morn ing and with these words Cornelia left the store Her cheeks were burn ing the old ladys angry voice was in her eais she felt the eyes of every one in the store upon her and she was indignant and mortified at a meet ing so inopportune Why had Joris lied about her Was there no other way out of his entanglement with her She could arrive at only one con clusion Annies most unexpected ap pearance had happened immediately after his proposal to herself He was pressed for time his grandpar ents would be especially likely to em barrass him concerning her claims and of course the quickest and surest way to prevent questioning on the matter was to tell them that she had refused him And then after this explanation had been accepted and sorrowed over there came back to her those deeper assurances those soul assertions which she could not either examine or define but which she felt compelled to receive He loves me I feel it It is not his fault I must not think wrong of him One day at the close of October she put down her needlework with a lit tle impatience I am tired of sewing mother she said and I will walk down to the Battery and get a breath of the sea I shall not stay long On her way to the Battery she was thinking of Hyde and of their fre quent walks together there and ere she quite reached the house of Ma dame Jacobus she was aware of a glow of fire light and candle light from the windows She quickened her steps and saw a servant well known to her standing in the open door She immediately accosted him Has madame returned at last Ameer she asked joyfully Madame has returned home he answered She is weary she is not alone she will not receive to night The mans manner usually so friendly was shy and peculiar and Cornjiia felt saddened and disappoint ed She walked rapidly home to the thoughts which this unexpected ar rival induced They were hopeful thoughts leaning however she direct ed them toward her absent lover She went into her mothers presence full of renewed expectations and met her smile with one of unusual bright ness Madame Jacobus is at home said Mrs Moran before Cornelia could speak She sent for your father just after you left the house and I Suppose that he is still there Is she sick I dont know I fear so for the visit is a long one It was near ten oclock when Doctor Moran returned and his face was sombre and thoughtful the face of a man who had been listening for hours to grave matters tnd who had not been able to throw off their physical reflection Cornelia at once asked Is madame very ill She is wonderfully well It is her husband Captain Jacobus Who else She has brought him home and I doubt if she has done wisely What has happened John Surely you will tell us There is nothing to conceal I have heard the whole story a very pitiful story but yet like enough to end well Madam told me that the day after her sister-in-laws burial James Lauder a Scotchman who had often sailed with Captain Jacobus came down to Charleston to see her He declared that having had occasion to go to Guys hospital in London to visit a sick comrade he saw there Captain Jacobus He would not admit any doubt of his identity but said the Captain had forgotten his name and c y0 She waved him an adieu everything in connection with his past life Oh how well I can imagine madames hurry and distress said Cornelia She hardly knew how to reach Lon don quickly enough But Lauders tale proved to be true Her first action was to take possession of the dement ed man and surround him with every comfort He appeared quite indiffer ent to her care and she obtained no shadow of recognition from him She then brought to his case all the medi cal skill money could procure and in the consultation which followed the physicians decided to perform the operation of trepanning But why Had he been injured John Very badly The hospital books showed that he had been brought there by two sailors who said he had been struck in a gale by a falling mast The wound healed but left him mentally a wreck The physi cians decided that the brain was suf fering from pressure and that trepan ning would relieve if it did not cure Imagine now what a trial was be fore madame It was a difficult matter to perform the operation for the pa tient could not be made to understand its necessity and he was very hard to manage Then picture to yourselves the terrible strain of nursing which followed though madame says it was soon brightened and lightened by her husbands recognition of her After that event all weariness was rest and suffering ease and as soon as he was able to travel both were determined to return at once to their own home He is yet however a sick man and may never quite recover a slight paralysis of the lower limbs To be continued The Right Place to Begin When the political history of Mary land is written there will be a para graph or two for the McComas Mudd feud It is now in progress bitter and unrelenting McComas was a United States senator until March 4 last and Mudd is a Representative in Congress Both are Republicans In the old days though they were bosom friends McComas was the leader and Mudd a follower One day they were dining together Sydney asked McComas how old is your boy Sixteen replied Mudd proudly My my said McComas I didnt think he was so old but I tell you Sydney when the time comes Ill do something handsome for that boy Mudd leaned over the table Mac he said when you want to do any thing for the Mudd family you forget the boy and begin with the old man Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post Women and the Looking Glass How much time does a woman spend before her looking glass A German estimates that a girl of six to ten spends an average of seven minutes a day before a mirror from ten to fif teen a quarter of an hour is con sumed daily and from fifteen to twen ty twenty two minutes Ladies from twenty to twenty five occupy twenty five minutes from that age to thirty they are at least half an hour at their toilete Thence there is a de cline in coquetry From thirty to thirty-five the time occupied comes down o twenty four minutes from thirty five to forty it is only eighteen min utes from forty to fifty twelve min utes and from fifty to sixty only six minutes A woman of seventy has thus spent 5S62 hours before the glass la other words eight months count ing nlfjht and day 1904 TARIFF ISSUE HOW TO TEST THE QUESTION OF REVISION Should the Republicans Stand for Business Stability and the Demo crats Urge the Abandonment of Protection Which Would Win Referring to the Let-well-enough-alone doctrine advocated by Secre tary Root in his Boston speech the Minneapolis Journal says But if times continue good the doc trine of leaving things to themselves will be just as good in 1905 as now and that sort of postponement cannot be kept up very long if the tariff is to be revised by its friends There is probably not one man In a thousand in the United States that does not expect to see a business and industrial reaction in this country sometime within the next ten years and many expect it within the next five When that reaction comes it will be too late to talk about having the tariff altered by its friends The people are more likely to be in a mood to have it altered with a broad ax by its enemies This question can be tested and it will very likely be so tested in a simple and direct manner Thus Let the National Republican conven tion next year resolve that Tariff stability is a vital need of all business industry trade and com merce Therefore as the country is now in a highly prosperous condition any revision of the tarff at this time is uncalled for unwise and unwar ranted Then let the National Democratic convention next year assert its plat form that The existing protective tariff is a robbery and a tax it obstructs busi ness it shelters monopoly it permits combinations of producers to plunder the consumers it makes the rich rich er and the poor poorer Therefore the tariff should be immediately repealed and in its place a tariff for revenue only should be enacted Going before the country upon the tariff issue thus sharply and clearly defined which party would carry the Presidential election in 1904 From present indications that issue is likely aUU v WWsPSIX to FOR THE WHOLE COUNTRY The President Not in Favor of In ternal Tariff Favoritism Let well enough alone was a sentiment that appealed to the pros perous people of this prosperous na tion in thecampaign of 19U0 Go on letting well enough alone will be the talk in 1904 President Roosevelt recognized this when he said in Min neapolis In making any readjustment there are certain important considerations which cannot be disregarded If a tariff law has on the whole worked well and if business has prospered under it and is prospering it may be better to endure some inconveniences and inequalities for a time than by making changes to risk causing dis turbance and perhaps paralysis in the industries and business of the country The tariff speech of the President is a direct sequel to his able review of the subject of the trusts He points out that the question of revising the tariff is in no wise related to the trust issue In his Milwaukee speech he told about certain physicians who could cure diseases but were not so sure about saving the life of the pa tient It is easy to put the corpora tions trusts and otherwise out of business by making lines hard enough But that is not the remedy obviously The President would above all preserve the protective principle which has done so much to strengthen the position of the American working man at home He would approach with caution such changes as are sug gested from time to time with due reference to their importance to the nation as a whole Evidently Roose velt is not in sympathy with the New England idea which is to let in everything free that New England wants to buy and slap a high duty on crarthlng that New England wants to sell As a President for the whole country Roosevelt mi3t appeal to those who live outside the provinces which are fortunately only a small portion of the United States Helena Mont Record PROTECTION FOR COAL How Its Removal Has Injured the Far West The fleet of vessels engaged to bring coal from Australia to this country numbers sixty seven There is not tho slightest possibility that the effect of this will be to reduce the price of the fuel to consumers It will be to give the dealers a bigger profit and to give to a foreign country the benefit of a market that should have been left to home enterprise This fleet will un load at San Francisco In the North west there is coal enough to supply the California demand and would still be enough were the demand far great er Formerly Washington supplied much of this coal The demand has been lessened by the adoption of oil burning methods but still remains con siderable Now it will bo filled by Australia Ships can afford to carry coal at a low rate to port3 into which they have infrequently sailed In bal last Thus the wild furore to take the duty off something has deprived this coast of an important protection The public mind awoke to lively conception of this necessity when the strike and the hoggishness of the retailers had sent prices of coal in the East to a figure where the poor were in danger of freezing Statesmen smote their swelling breasts and vowed that they would remedy these conditions Then they took the duty off coal to the det riment of Pacific coast interests for which they have as little care as for the interests cf Patagonia and their consciences ceased to cause them pangs The removal of this duty could have no possible bearing upon the evils it was sought to cure All that it could do it has done It has struck a blow at the Pacific coast it has diverted money to Australia and it has not had a single beneficent ef fect This part of the country is in favor of protection and it would include coal The East has no Australian com petition to fear The agitators who favor fooling with the tariff want lunv ALPHONSE AND GASTON ffigL lwArARY fT I r MRN00LS fc r mrifi wir7 f iv m r a a diSMm to be presented In such an event watch the Republican mugwumps fall over each other in their hurry to get back into the Republican ranks A few of them might rush in the op posite direction but for every such deserter a score of business Demo crats who are making money and want the tariff let alone would be found quietly voting the Republican ticket The country is in no hurry to be torn up again by tariff experiments ber on the free list too The explana tion of this is easy The East has no lumber worth mentioning Tacoma Ledger Always Looking for Cheapness The free trader always approaches men from the standpoint of the pro ducer only They are advised to vote for cheapness with the implied prom ise on the free traders part that all other things shall remain as they are But they never do remain as they are If an era of cheapness comes upon a country everything becomes cheap in cluding labor and the product of the manufactories The result is that while everything is cheap and theore tically within the reach of the poor est the ability to buy is so curtailed that the sum total of profits is reduced and poverty ensues We are to have another campaign upon the tariff and there will be nothing new injected into it but the specious claim that the tariff is responsible for the trusts and this is not new The result of this next contest will depend altogether upon whether men are short sighted or far sighted Whether they are capable of learning from experience so recent that it seems impossible that any could forget Cedar Rapids Republi can Of Course It is a curious fact and one worth keeping in mind that the same free trade papers that so cordially ap proved the sentiments expressed in the speech of Gov Cummins in Des Moines at the Republican county con vention are greatly disgruntled at the speech of President Roosevelt in Min neapolis three weeks later Gov Cum mins declared that tire tariff ought to be immediately torn up both by direct legislation and by reciprocity in com peting products while President Roose velt declared that for at least two years to come or until after the elec tion oZ 1904 the tariff should he left entirely alone Ergo the free trade papers were delighted with Gov Cum mins and displeased with President Roosevelt Of course they were Standing Together The Republicans of Michigan seem to be standing together all right and G O P gains are reported in Ohio These straws would indicate a rather chilly wind ror democracy in the cam paigns of the near future Sioux City Journal TROUBLES OF TWO ARTISTS Why Both of Them Have Aversion to Badly Warmed Halls A concert company in which Mr Soeboeck was tho pianist had been playng In somo of tho smaller towns during February and had suffered con siderable Inconvenience through In sufficiently heated halls One evening after an unusually cold experience Seeboeck related an incident which had occurred on a tour some months previous The violinist of tho com pany had received notlco of tho time of departure at such a late hour that In tho haste of packing he neglected to Include In his wardrobe his dress trousers The omission was not dis covered until an hour before tho con cert Naturally ho was greatly- dis concerted upon realizing that ho would be forced to appear in dress coat and gray trousers In this dilemma ho called Seeboeck Into con sultation Both men were nearly of a size and Seeboeck hit upon tho plan of both using tho same trousers per forming a lightning change between appearances The plan was adopted Seeboeck appearing first As quickly as possible after reaching his dressing room he divested himself of his trous ers and the violinist donned them with equal haste The first selection of the violinists was long difficult and was so well received that an encore was demanded It was then that I fully appreciated the criminal neglect of improperly heating halls said See boeck When the time for my next appearance arrived and with It my trousers l was in a half frozen condi tion Some consolation however was to bo derived from the thought that the violinist was shivering In the dressing room during my number which also received an encore But on the whole it was a wretched evening Eight times wo alternately wore and went without those trousers If tho audience had known the cost of that performance in physical discomfort to at least two of the performers I be lieve it would have been evsn more appreciative than It was though I could have well dispensed with sev eral of the encores accorded tho vio linist TIRED OF THE MONOTONY Why George Grossmiths Butler Was Leaving His Service Many and various and weird are the reasons given by servants for wanting a change of place Here is a tale told by George Grossmith which adds a rare and wondrous instance to tho long and eccentric list His butler who had been with him for nearly twenty years went to him one day and said If you please sir I want to leave Mr Grossmith was sorry and asked the man his reason I would rather not say sir was the mysterious reply This was uncomfortable and Mr Grossmith pressed tho question again Come he said you have been with me for so long and have never complained before Surely I have al most a right to know why you wish to leave Your secrecy is unpleasant and I must really beg of you to tell me your reason for leaving my ser vice The butler thought a moment and then said Well sir as you insist I must tell you But I dont want to A pause The fact is sir Ive been with you for close upon twenty years and Im tired of the sight of you and all your family Success of the Solemn Ass Look about you gentle reader and consider the solemn ass in every walk of life Who so respected so admired so influential He never takes sides He never is partisan He goes along with knitted brows his thoughts too deep for utterance Smaller men may abandon themselves to hasty inclina tions to rash preferences to robust views He never does If he speaks at all it is with such profundity and circumlocution and complexity that the most recondite cryptogram ever rescued from a pyramid would seem to burst of innocent and childish can dor in comparison Yet he wears fine raimenr every day He enjoys the re spect and confidence of the communi ty He prospers The oil of opulence anoints him He is the incarnation of success Washington Post The Little Weak Child My little son my little son Jn heaven canst thou rest And which of all his children doe3 The High God love the beat Thou art too wak to stand all day And glorify his name Ah pray him let thee stray awhile And play some foolish gasie Thou are too young to know him great So whisper to him this Thou art just big enough sometimes To hold and fold and kiss Anita Fitch in Century Cutting It Short How would you like your hair cut sir asked the barber with the scis sors or clippers Both replied the victim Use the scissors on my hair and the clip pers on your conversation Yields AIJ to Preach the Vord F M Messenger a mill agent in Grosvenordale Conn at 15000 per year has given up his work to preach the holiness doctrine Forty Years Continuous Service John H Benton has seen forty years of continuous service in the United States bureau of pensions at Wash ington Worlds Longest Glacier The Hispar pass in the Himalayas has the longest glacier in the world It Is ninety miles in length JBfcSSaC