r M r mi oi i SSSssessiiiSi Mr round the room taking her hands in zt - ii niimwnawiiwjrriWBwwii wttkiux vy 1 1 win wawwoi THAT GIRL of JOHNSONS By JBAJV K A SHE JL V2Z VJ WMv of At a Girls Merer Etc Entered According to Act of Concreas in the Year 1890 by Street Smith In the Office or the Librarian of Congress at Washington D C CHAPTER XX Continued Mrs Allen was In an adjoining room reading to Mrs Green Mrs Green was a woman one could love at a glance and love always her sweet old ace was flushed with pink her hrown ycs were soft and gentle her silken white hair was brushed in waves back from her face and softened by a cap of lace her voice was what a womans Toice should be sweet but firm low -jut perfectly modulated She took Dolores right into her motherly heart knowing every word of her history -so far as her son knew it knowing too without being told that this was the girl her son loved And the slen der silent girl seemed to melt toward Jier as toward no one else though at iirst it was very bitter this having to accept hospitality from the mother of the man who had been so wronged She had been forced to accept the hospitality of his mother been forced and with no excuse to place the ac ceptance out of the question because there was no excuse she could offer when they took her father from the little house bearing him carefully to the carriage waiting for him at the gate soft with cushions and pillows of down to the station and the city some thirty miles below the town down the valley with Doctors Dunwiddie and Grey and her uncle They had every thing that money could buy to gain comfort for him A car was reserved for him on the train everything ab solutely was done that could be for liis comfort And then they had forced upon her the acceptance of this hospitality Mrs Green was watching Dolores through the open doorway leaning back on the cushioned sofa her soft hands folded in her lap at this her rest time of the day as she listened to Mrs Allens reading her thoughts somehow tangled with that and the girl at the western window in the sun set lights and the boy of her heart their only child the best son she often said laughing that a mother ever had Dora was partly in shadow though her face too caught the glow from above The silence that had followed Dolores all her life seemed to fall like a veil around her and even to her cousin for the time The sunset lights faded aind died a mellow darkness enveloped the eastern slope of -the mountain the road that wound up its side was like a slender thread in the darkness Suddenly the sound of a church bell smote the air and Dolores started turning from the window What is it she asked of Dora and Dora arose as she answered her Church bolls Lorie touching tne hand nearest her shyly as though she were half afraid This is Wednesday evening and the bell is ringing for prayer meeting Dolores made no further remark on the subject She knew nothing of prayer meetings or church bells they had little interest for her her thoughts were with her father with young Green with many things out side of this commonplace subject She turned from the window however bringing her face into shadow Mrs Allen had ceased her reading and was watching the girls with an inscrutable expression in her eyes Had she failed aner all her planning There seemed no difference in the friendship be tween this girl and the son of their host And as she cpuld not win Dora from her cousin she could at least make this stupid girl feel some of the bitterness she held in her own heart That at least was worth planning for She was so deeply buried in these thoughts that she started ner vously when Mrs Green called the girls in her soft low voice My dears she said are you not ready to join us now We have watch ed the picture you make until now we lgJW Church bells Lorie wish yourselves There is room for each of you beside me here on the sofa or will Dora play something sweet and low to charm away the darkness while Lorie and I sit here together Before they could answer her how ever quick steps sounded on the piazza the outer door was opened and young Green entered the room where the elder woman sat Mrs Green arose In haste her face suddenly paling Charlie what is the matter Dont be frightened mother Char liajsaid hurriedly with a quick glance WMiiirKttijtuJmitiin his Sit down Where Is Miss John son and her cousin Dunwiddie wires that Johnson has had a relapse and can live but twenty four hours Do lores Dolores must not know yet She can not get to him and it would do no good A dead silence reigned through the rooms for a moment then the lace curtains were drawn aside from the distant window and Dolores came out she had unconsciously pushed Doras hands from her arm and stood alone with the darkness around her the light of the faded sunset setting her in outline against the window She crossed the room with no sign of haste and stood before Mrs Green I must go to my father she said Her voice was perfectly even but the words were slow as her lips were stiff God forgive me young Green ex claimed under his breath clenching We have him safe and sure his hands at his side Mother why did you not tell me Why did you not tell me turning fiercely upon Mrs Allen in the darkness In sudden distrust of her her subtle words re turning to him losing half their mean ing Mrs Green took the girls hand in hers and her voice was tender as a mothers when she spoke Lorie she said softly She liked the tender name Lorie my dear Dolores interrupted her I must go to my father she re peated in the same set voice her eyes not moving from Mrs Greens face How can I go You cannot go Mrs Green said gently dear not just now there is no way to go until midniught then the train will be due here and Charlie and Mrs Allen will take you there I must go to my father she said at once Tell me how to get there please There is no way but the train at midnight he replied But I must go now she said gravely if there is any way Could we not go on horses I must go He shook his head slowly Even starting now and taking the fastest horses in the stables we could get there only half an hour sooner and the ride would be too exhausting for it to pay We will wait Miss Johnson and take the train and be in time I am sure we will be in time Do not worry I would get you there if it were possible believe me Dolores It was the old voice and the old tone of uttering the sad name She gave no sign that she heard but she heard She said nothing as she turned from him and went out of the room like one in a dream went out of the room and up the stairs to her room but the tone and the one low word followed her like a note of tenderness through her stony sorrow And when she had gone young Green turned to his mother like a boy in his sore distress and she understanding comforted him Then he left the room and Dora went up after Dolores and the time dragged on leaden feet ere the time came for them to go to the train when Dolores came down the wide staircase like a spirit in her trailing black dress and bonnet her face more pallid than the light of the moon on the moun tains Dora was behind her but she seemed to notice no one but passed out on to the steps of the piazza where young Green and Mrs Allen were waiting for her as though she were moving machinery and not through any wish of her own Such an unheard of thing going off like this in the dead of night Mrs Allen said sharply showing her heart for the moment in her anger Thank heaven Dora isnt like her Hush Nurse Allen If I were half as brave as Lorie I would be the proudest girl in the world I could not do what she has for my father for all I love him as I do And Doras soft hand was on the womans mouth and her pleading face turned to her And these words out of all the others seemed to reach Dolores mind She stood for a moment silently on the moonlit steps her face immovable and pallid against the dead black of her gown then she turned to Dora and cried in sudden fierceness born of pain a pain her gentler cousin could nev er understand And your father loves you Dora every one loves you And no one has ever loved me nMtttttH CHAPTER XXI Even in Death As they were whirled along through the night and the darkness young Greens mind was full of the one thought he must tell Dolores about the trial in court that afternoon be fore they reached the station and away from Mrs Allens hearing Miss Johnson Dolores he said presently Her head was leaning against the back of the seat and her eyes were closed but he was pretty certain she was not asleep Dolores you remember the laming of my mare just after I first met you and the ex citement and indignation among us because of it and our inability to catch the fellow though suspicion pointed strongly in one direction She roused with a sinking at heart when the young man spoke she shook off every other thought and sat wait ing for what might be coming upon her Dolores he said and he tried to keep his voice steady for her sake as well as his own we have been fol lowing up every clew letting nothing slip us in this matter as doubtless you have heard no matter how trivial it might appear Just before the deed was committed Hal and I disturbed two fellows in the act of stealing the mare It was a dark night and they had her out of the stable her hoofs bound to deaden the sound but she would whinny in her excitement and terror of the rough men and that saved her We were late home that evening from the house of a friend and hearing Bess we went at once to the stables One of the fellows we caught but the other made good his escape We tried our best to get the fellow we had to tell where his comrade was the young man continued his voice steady now and natural but he was silent as the grave I give him credit for that There is an honor among even these rough lower men that one must respect Then we wait ed for your father as you know de pending considerably upon his evi dence for he knew the condition of the mares hoofs when he shod her and that there was nothing wrong then save a slight lameness from going too long without shoes over the rough road But even without his evidence we have succeeded even better than I had dared hope Dolores did not move She did not quite understand this that he was tell ing her How could they succeed with out her father and how could they get the guilty man It was only yesterday Green went on and there was a touch of pleasure in his voice that Dolores caught with a dull sense of dead pain It was only yesterday that we caught the fellow but we have him safe and sure enough now Surely they had not Dolores caught her breath and her swift terrified eyes flashed upon his startlingly His own eyes darkened as though with troubled thought The men we sent out in search of him found him yesterday Dolores not a stones throw from where your father fell on the opposite mountain The first fellow we have sentenced to five years for attempted horse steal ing and the other has had his trial to day It was sharp and swift I as sure you Such a dastardly deed de served the severest penalty the la7 allows To be continued Find Ancient Scotch Bridge Laborers engaged in digging a trench for the new drain along the White Sands recently disclosed an arch pier and buttress of the Old Bridge which tradition says was first erected at Deverogilla though in 1620 it was reconstructed after having been wrecked by the flood At a much later period when the New Bridge was built and Buccleuch street opened up through the Castle Gardens and the level of the old Sand Beds raised over which the river used to spread some of the arches of the Old Bridge at the Dumfries end were buried by the road being brought over them It is one of these the one next to the bridge as it is now seen that was disclosed It is in good preservation except that the crown of the arch which is only about a foot and a half below the level of the pavement has been broken through At nine feet down in the cut- ting for the drain the gravel of the old bed of the river was turned up The Scotsman Stop Slaughter of Elephants The British government is taking steps to stop the indiscriminate slaughter of elephants in its African possessions Many thousands are killed every year for the sake of their Ivory The governors of the various colonies have been directed to pro hibit by every means in their power the killing of the huge animals as it is feared that unless prompt meas ures are taken elephants in Africa will soon become very scarce Valuable Old Coins George J Laporte of Sbxewsbuiy Mass has three old coins which he has picked out of the earth where he has been at work on the grading around the new Howe memorial libra ry The three coins are a penny made in 1817 and a half dollar with the date of 1803 plainly stamped on it The third piece of money is a three cent silver piece badly mutilated and the date cannot be made out Egyptian Cigarettes In a recent German report on the Egyptian cigarette industry it is stated that all the tobacco from which these cigarettes are made comes from Turkey Macedonia Smyrna and Greece LET THE PEOPLE SAY WHEN TARIFF REVISION SHALL BE UNDERTAKEN Senator Hoar Urges That Changes In Our Protective System Be Not Made Until the People Shall Have Passed Upon the Question at the Polls Senator Hoar dropped some pearls af wisdom and sound policy in his speech at the dinner of the Essex club an tho 10th of September The Grand Old Man of Massachusetts was sasily the star among the speakers He tisually is in any company He talked about the tariff about foreign trade and about reciprocity and it was clear brained wholesome talk that was alike timely and pertinent Tariff revision he said might become neces sary just as it is necessary to some times revise the statutes of Massachu setts but said the wise statesman and profound economist you cannot be doing it all the time because whenever you are doing it business n thrown into confusion and uncertain ty In the course of time he added and no protectionist disputes this changes may be required in the most satisfactory and the most scientific tariff schedules but the time to make such changes he insisted was not in the year before a presidential election but after a presidential election when tne changes can be made in accord with the instructions of the people Note the qualification Tariff changes should only be made in obedience to the expressed will of the people The Dingley law having been enacted in response to the demand of the sover eign people may not and must not be changed in any essential particular until the people shall have declared their wishes through the ballot box That is the thought which the Ameri can Economist has again and again urged as the guiding principle in all tariff changes whether by legislation or by any other method It is also the thought which Senator Hoar enter- tains It should be the uniform thought and doctrine of the Republi can party As to the much talked about and little understood question of reciproc ity as a means of promoting foreign trade the venerable statesman was equally clear and pointed when he saio Everybody is in favor of reciproc ity and everybody is in favor of for eign trade We wish to sell every thing we can sell to foreign countries and to buy from foreign countries t v ft l5STT NOT FOR RECIPROCITY Why Secretary Shaw Had So Little to Say About It In his speech at Chicago before tho National Association of Merchants and Travelers Secretary of the Treas ury Shaw spoke of three ways cug gested to acquire more markets for this country One is reciprocity to which the secretary referred as a plan to trade compliments to exchange trade privileges to set our doors somewhat ajar for tho special advan tage of our people Considerable has been said along this line but not very much has been actually accomplished Just this passage on reciprocity and no more from the cabinet official at the head of the Treasury department And in truth no more can be said Reciprocity is a neblous thing an un tried theory No one can defino it The situation is wisely described in a few words Reciprocity is not as yet oven an experiment Its actual work ings are unknown One of the three ways commented on by Secretary Shaw is to move toward free trade in the hope that greater freedom of importation will induce other nations to follow the example I would like to Inquire asked the secretary of the business men he addressed whether you in making your purchases abroad give preference to those countries which favor us with an open door or do you buy where you can obtain the desired article to the best advantage The answer is evident Business men buy according to margins of profit They go for silks to protective France and not to free trade England We open ed the door to Brazil and yet that country continues to sell to us 70000000 worth of goods a year and buys from us only 10000000 worth The third method which Secretary Shaw approves is to adopt a system of encouraging regular lines of Ameri can ships flying the American flag and carrying American merchants and American travelers with their wares and merchandise the product of American labor between our ports LOOKING BACKWARD everything that it is for the interest of the whole people that we should buy rather than make ourselves That is the question Reciprocity begins and ends right there if it be gins at all under and in accordance with the principles of protection to domestic labor and industry What is we should stop making in order that we should stop making in order niat foreigners may make and sell it to us What industry or group of industries shall Wft wipe out of existence dis placing American employment Ameri can labor and American wage paying It is ahard question and one that de mands an answer No advocate of reci procity in competing products has ever answered it none ever will an swerit except he answer it as a free trader namely No mater what in dustry or group of industries shall be annihilated Let us have more for eign trade at any cost to domestic labSr and wages That is not the answer of protec tionisms and it should not be the answer of any Republican It is not Serfatqr Hoars answer This is what he said at the Essex Club dinner DcCyou wish to buy of Canada any thing we can make better ourselves DoVryou want to strike down one American manufacture for the benefit of Another Or do you want to establish-the reciprocity that Blaine favor ed Sell to Canada everything that we have got to sell that she does not produce and buy of Canada every thing that she has got to sell that we do not produce That is Blaine reciprocity Republi can reciprocity as defined in the plat form of 1900 the only reciprocity that hr not free trade and countries where our trade is un developed Here is practical food for thought Secretary Shaw has little to say about reciprocity because little can be said about a mere theory ii not a chimera St Louis Globe Demo crat Hampered The New York Journal of Com merce is of the opinion that our woolen manufacturers are greatly hampered by the tariff on wool They were not thus hampered during the free wool period 1894 97 a period oi stagnation loss and bankruptcy If occasionally a woolen manufacturer indulges himself in a dream of free trade in wool he is sure to wake up when he recalls what happened to him as the result of the Wilson-Gorman atrocity and particularly what would happen to him when the re moval of the tariff on wool should be as it certainly would be accom panied by a very material reduction of the tariff on woolens The World Is Advantaged A Democratic free trade paper com menting on the fact that the British are protesting against cheap bounty sugar says that their attitude and the facts suggest that the bounty busi ness may be carried so far as to chief ly benefit the consumers of other coun tries and that the production of beet sugar has tended to enormously re duce the worlds price of sugar That being the case it would be preposter ous to deny that the world generally is advantaged San Francisco Chron icle Familiar Tactics The free traders in England are trying to defeat the protectionists by setting up a cry of the dear loaf How like the tactics of the free trades in this country The facts are against free trade therefore the appeal to ig norance must come from the realm of fiction Jersey City Journal They Know There is not a farmer in the United States whether he raises sugar beets or not who favors the Cuban treaty Our farmers know what is best for the country as well as themselves THE HORSE AND THE AUTO Capn Titus Makes a Suggestion That May Be of Value Laat week ono o the summer folks bed one o them new fangled land steambuts come down Utermoble they call her and I want tu tell yo hes a slick one Gosh cr mighty low sho can go But Im afeard wo shall hev trouble until the bosses In town get used tu It BUI Ganzy was omin up from tho neck tho otcr iay with a load o milk and when het land steambut went by him his ld hoss thet aint gone fastern a walk In ten years I guess shied out the road and into a fence Spilt ill tho milk and raised ruchshuns there fer a few minutes The owner of the utermobile was all right though he paid Bill fer all o tho milk and somethin handsome be Bides tu I hearn It was so much anyway thet Bill said hed be comin up the same road next mornin with another load o milk and he was Kinder hopin hed meet the uter mobile and hev his milk cart upsot agin Beats all how everlastin graspin some people is They tell me thet all bosses is fraid on em more or less at fust and cant seem tu do nothin tu prevent it Ezra Huckins says he blieves that if they hed a pictur painted on each side o the utermobile o a nice pile o red apples a few ears o yaller corn and a nosebag or few o oats thet instead shyin the bosses would come right up tu it It might not work o course but maybe its wurth tryiif Capn Titus in Outing NEW USE FOR PHONOGRAPH With It a Physician Cures a Case Without Seeing Patient A novel use for the phonograph impressed me the other day says -a clergyman in the Philadelphia Record I was calling on my doctor and he told me of it then He said a patient of his while on a visit to California had developed a bad cough and feared that this cough was of a tubercular nature His heart also was weak and he was anxious about that too Well for the doctor to go all the way to California would have been expensive and for the patient to have come to Philadelphia would have been impossible In the dilemma a phono graph was called in The sick man first talked into the phonograph all his symptoms Then he coughed be fore it and then with the help of an instrument that highly magnifies sound two or three minutes beating of his disordered heart was registered on the sensitive cylinder The outcome was wonderful Philadelphia doctor receiving phonograph record ascertained his patients cough was not a The the that con- sumptive one and that his heart was not seriously affected The doctor let me listen to the record in his office It was Impressive First I heard the patient in a weak voice detailing his symptoms a pain here an ache there and so n Then I heard him cough ing Then I heard his heart pulsating in an odd irregular way Thanks to the phonograph the doctor said I diagnosed that case as well as though my patient has sat be side me Purification She comelh all stained and passion tossed FulflUd with mans sins and care Her sorrow flows on and soon it is gone And her voice has the pleading of prayr She murmurs A river polluted am r O cleanse me and wash me with foam And give me the leaven of thy deep heaven Before I shall turn to my home And the great rebuking Sea replied Though vast thy need my gift is wide She siffhs I fed on the fresh clean sedge Away in old pastures green rill I darkened and gloomed as a Spirit doomed In gathering things unclean Yet the patient Mother the cleansing Sea Withheld not her kiss of Purity And the River turned and thundered again With joyous song from her tide held bars She dimpled and smiled as a waking child CVhen he laughs at the paling stars For the mighty Mother had hidden for aye The sings and the griefs of her Child away G II H in the Westminster Gazette A Humane Man She handed him his evening clothes They had been packed away all sum mer with a moth exterminating sub stance As the odor of tar and cam phor assailed him his face grew sad What is troubling you I was thinking of these clothes It seems to me that you ought to look pleased There certainly are no moths in them I cant help my sympathetic na ture he responded Sometimes it leads me to an absurd extreme Of course Im glad that the moths are one but and he sighed deeply it must have been a horrible death Wanted Some Chance Himself Eernard Shaw was a guest at a din ner given by Mr James Douglas ed tor of the London Star at Mr Doug as home in Inverness terrace Lon don a few weeks ago Addressing an American guest Mr Shaw said What a lot of you Americans come over here every summer Yes replied the American Eng land has come to be a favorite sum mer resort for Americans Well we wont complain of that said Shaw But for heavens sake Jont make it a winter resort also New York Times Busy Pinching Bug A new kind of pinching bug has appeared at Bayonne N J and is busy pinching the pretty girls at that place The bugs are black and three to four inches long i r f Kl