u r T I iXMrtgiwft WsKiWragiiftMWQwiw WBgwr THAT GIRL of JOHNSON M4Z Author of At a Girli Kercr Etc Entered Acconlinz to Act of Corurew n tde Year 1TO by Street ft SciJth In tho CHce of tho J ibrsrUn of Congress ctAVcshinzton D C uuaafjB9aeu3iavXSf CHAPTER XXII Continued Yes ho said gently I know ho Is dead Dolores but after death all things are made straight He know3 now better than he ever could have known from your telling and I lcnow lie has forgotten us There were sweetness and solemn ity In tho young mans voice as he 1ent above the beautiful cold face that caused Dora to catch her breath iu sudden comprehending of the depth of tho kindly heart as he slowly re peated the touch on the girls hands very tender tho light in tho loving eyes entering into her very soul There Is no death What scorns so Is transition This life of mortal breath Is but a suburb of the life elysian Whose portal we call death CHAPTER XXIII That Girl of Johnsons Dora was standing at- the well at Dolores old home with her husband waiting for Dolores and Charlie Green who had gone at the girls request to the opposite mountain It was a strange freak of Dolores but with the usual simple acquiescence in any wish of hers they had gone and here Dora and her husband were waiting for their return at the girls old home But it was not the home of the girls remembrance The garden was in fine order and the fence well built no longer did the gate swing on its rusty rickety hinges The enterpris ing chickens were scratching among the shrubs at the back of the house but not a chicken dared show its face at the front of the neat little house where Jim Lodie and Cinthy lived the two young pepole who had always had a kindly thought for its former mistress Dora was standing at the well watching her husband as he swung the bucket down among the cool shadows her sweet face grown more womanly and holding a deeper mean ing in every delicate line She stood on tiptoe to look down and follow the flight of the bucket but even standing so she scarcely reached to his shoul der She turned her pretty head on one side as a bird might do and said with an air that convulsed her hus band though there was a deeper and more tender meaning to her words that ho would not let her know he un derstood The course of true love never did run smooth and look at that poor bucket Hal You are fairly beating the life out of it against the sides of the well Poor thing said the big fellow in a tone that implied scant sympathy for the luckless bucket You had better say that Charlie is eating his heart x out because your cousin will not love i him Dot Is she never going to be good to him for his faithfulness dear He deserves a good life and a good woman Dora even your cousin cannot deny that Dont talk of Lorie as though she were heartless Harry Dora said Rolftlv with one of her swift wistful Lorie is not like other girls Et do pear ter me t ye might keep yer mouth shet ef ye ken only say sech spiteful thengs only got these ter say ter ye Sadie an ter ye too Smith ef ye kyant say- kind thengs o the gal o Johnsings arfter all shes done an s still doin fer us jg555fiffHiwSy2L - - N ye aint so welcome ter this tavn as yo were An ye ken talce et as yo will Thcts all Ive got ter speak an now my minds hottern when I sot hyar listnin tor yer men talk A flush came even through the tan of rough Sadlers face and Smith shuffled his feet upon the gravel and knocked the ashes from his pipe as he said slowly Thanke ee Jones We3 been fricns nigh onter foty year an fer my part I aint a gointer low sech trlflin words ter kern atween we Hyars my hand on t I aint mebby so onfrienl tord Dlores es ye pear ter thenk Wes all say thengs t wes dont mean an mebby thets ther way of us Eh Sadler Sadler nodder his grisly head slow ly He wasnt so frank spoken as Smith nor perhaps so kind hearted un der his rough speech Smith said many rough things but he would have done much also And young Green holding Dolores warm hand closely in his to assist her up the rough seldom trodden path un der the bending boughs and ghastly mists was thinking of the many years she had lived there in the stolid set tlement with not one friend in all the world save it might be the rough un spoken kindliness of Jim Lodie and Cinthy And with his kindly eyes up on the grave beautiful face he could but wonder how such a life could yield such a marvel of womanliness and tenderness It was a strange freak of hers no doubt this wish to once again stand upon the brink of lier fathers death but how could he loving her dissuade her from a desire so intense as this was shown by the pleading of the dark eyes And so they had come and standing in the very place where she stood years before with the misty mysterious gulf at her feet and tho broken glimpses of blue heaven through the floating mist a touch of grief and pleading and tenderness cariie over the pure pale face that caused this man loving her to bow his head as one involuntarily bows tho head before the chancel with the touch of an indescribable holiness brooding above And he removed his hat standing so with his hand upon her round arm as she stood immova ble searching the terrible death below her as though for the solving of the bitterness of her life as though for the solving of her own harsh heart lessness In accusing her father when none other save the man at her side and others with wicked intent charged him with crime And there was an agony dawning over the pallid face and wide eyes that hushed all other thought for the time in the heart of her friend all thought save an intense desire and longing to take her into his arms and soothe this agony of bit terness and shield her all her life long from any touch of pain any touch of lifes harshness But he waited si lently with bent head his hand upon her arm while she fought and won perhaps a struggle that few are called dances ud to his face Lorie is not Pon to fight that few would con like other girls The other two having passed down out of the settlement followed by the half scornful eyes of the men at the tavern crossed the rotten bridge over the river and ascended the opposite mountain slowly among the bent bushes and mysterious mists that held in their hiding the snares of death and the pitfalls that lay in wait ing Thar goes thet gal o Johnsings Tom Smith said with a rough break of laughter in his deep voice What on ther world shes goin ower yander fer beats me holler Goin ter say her prayers ower her feythers grave I reckon joined in Hiram Sadler coarsely but the an swering laughter on Smiths lips never passed them as Jones turned his indig nant eyes upon them removing his pipe from his lips to make reply Et pears to me he said slowly with an emphasis that hushed their mirth thet ye might hev gained a mite o respec an kindly feelin arfter all these years senca Johnsing died AAW X quer men tne eyes widened with agony were lifted from the depths of horror and mystery seeking the brok en bits of blue heaven through the mist of the tangled pines upon the height and an indescribable grandeur and beauty gradually grew upon the lifted face and in the depths of the grave eyes as though the peace sought had been won and the bitterness of years wag buried never again to be resurrected in alL the life before her never again to shadow as it had done the love and life of this friend beside her And he guessing in part the thoughts ii her heart made no move ment save a more tender hold upon the steady arm he held And he waited for her to speak All her life passed her in review as she stood there conscious even though the bitterness of this warm kindly friend at her side all the bitterness and pain and humiliation and struggle of her life all the thoughts and sor rows and struggles and when at last she turned facing this friend the change upon her face was as though an angel had touched her standing there and lifes suffering had passed from her lifes struggles and pain and left only the touch of heavenly fingers upon the eyes and mouth One of her slow radiant smiles broke the sadness of her face as she laid her hand upon the hand on her arm as she said softly a new intona tion even in the low voice You mustnt be so good to me Charlie I ought to suffer alone some times You cannot realize how much I deserve it He laid his other hand warmly over this soft hand onthis arm a new light on his face and in his eyes that caused a sudden drooping of the face in tho light of the sunset You deserve to suffer there was an intensity in his voice born from watching the suffering on her face and from the suffering in his own soul You deserve to suffer Dolores John son If there is need for your suffer ing how much more should I suffer who was equal with you in thinking the unkind thoughts Come away from this terrible place Dolores leave all these old bitter memories here in the weird shadows and mists only fit for them and give your life to my keeping tell me you love me as l love you give me the answer to the question I asked no long ago Lorie under tho light of your heavens un der the tender light of your stars ero you left me for ypur new life and pos sible forgetfulness She met his eyes gravely and square ly though the new light of tenderness was still In them as she said slowly with almost her old slowness Tho happiness of a mans life does not altogether depend on the love of a woman Charlie To a great extent darling But even if I should tell you no you would be liappy after a whije Charlie Time heals everything Not everything Lorie JTes everything she said decid edly You know that time heals ev erything Charlie even the old pain of unforgiveness Hush he said swiftly and his hands on both her arms as he held her facing him were trembling with the wish to hold her free from pain You are never to say such things again dearest Let those things pass You have suffered enough for them and God will lay His great tenderness over them She was silent a moment as though reading his inmost thought the lifted eyes grave and searching and tender Then she turned from the gruesome chasm buried at her feet in its hk l WkPsl BrfllwH sz RW M vJ vti zr I am sure I want you erous shroud of mist and said softly with a tenderness that touched him deeply God is very good Charlie I can not doubt his tenderness All my life I will leave in his hands as you say all my life past as well as future Then presently she added Let us go Charlie I leave here buried in the heart of His mountains the oitlerness that has shadowed not only my life but the lives of those who love me The mountains are His and my life is His But as they paused for an instant on the rotten bridge with the waters sobbing at their feet black with the slime and smoke of the town she laid her hand earnestly upon his arm and lifting her grave face to his flushing with its new tenderness she added softly You have been so good to me al ways Charlie Are you sure sure you do want nobody but that girl of Johnsons I come with empty hands you know He smiled into the quivering face and wide searching eyes and he an swered her taking her two hands in his closely as though he would never again let them go from him I am sure sure that I want you Dolores Johnson more than any wom an in Gods beautiful world Your hands may be empty hands but they are beautiful in the work they do and have done for others for even these cruel people here who would have ruined your sweet life and the woman who now your uncles wife would have stained her hands forever for the darkening of your heart And what could she say And the lights of the sunset were very tender over them as they crossed the bridge and passed up along the road through the settlement where the changes of her working had given an air of neat ness and home life and widening of view with its school and church and kindly touch of neighborliness and as they passed the tavern where Jones and his comrades still sat with their pipes in lazy enjoyment the men gave greeting with a new touch of kindli ness that went to the heart of the girl whohad lived her twenty years among them uncared for and unloved And the eyes of her lover were bril liant with the depth of his thought for her and his arm was strong to guide and guard her through any pain the future might bring and never again could this pale beautiful girl of Johnsons suffer alone or bear her lifes burdens outside of the pale o tenderest love The End Possibilities of Radium Mr Hammer who was formerly a coadjutor of Edison has produced with radium a partial paralysis of the fish known as the electric ray so that it could give no further shocks He has with the radium paralyzed small fish so that they have been drowned or at least died In talking of this ex periment Mr Hammer called atten tion to the experiments of Prof Curie and others recently in Paris in which guinea pigs mice and rabbits were paralyzed and later killed by placing radium near the spinal column It is perfectly reasonable to suppose said Mr Hammer that peoples brains might be paralyzed by putting powerful radium near their heads say on a pillow at night or near the spina cord and thus produce paralysis as in the case of the animals PAETI OBLIGATIONS TO WHAT EXTENT ARE POLITI CAL PLATFORMS BINDING If They Are Mere Platitudes They May Be Easily Repudiated but If They Are Pledges Ought They Not to Be Faithfully Carried Out Why do we frame and adopt party platforms Are they platitudes or are they pledges And if the latter are they to be broken or kept These questions would seem to be superflu ous and yet we appear to be on the eve of breaking a distinct Republican promise for as such a plank in a po litical platform is understood Tho Republican party in its half century of existence has made few promises that it has not kept or attempted to keep No matter how often Democrat ic pledges have been broken the Re publican legislators and executives have tried to keep taith with the ma jority which elected them Going back to 1860 the Republican platform de clared that sound policy requires such an adjustment of imports as to encourage the development of the in dustrial interests of the whole coun try Time and time again Republi can platforms have declared for pro tection to labor and industries some times in general terms sometimes more specifically And the president elected on those platforms was ex pected to carry out or preserve their provisions so far as lay in his power The same was expected of congress and never have the legislative and ex ecutive power broken the platform pldges For the first time in the history of the Republican party it is proposed to break faith with the people In the platform adopted in 189G the only in dustry singled out tor specific pledge tho ili3sful sweetness of tho Cuban climate one Is forced to conclude that It were better to own and cultivate a single acre of land in Cuba than to drag out a weary and profitless exist ence on a hundred acres in Michigan If tho half is true of what is so flamingly set forth as to the vast sums of money to be made out of agricul ture in Cuba that island has no need of special reciprocity privileges In the American market It not only does not need them but from tho stand point of the American farmer it ought not to have them What Senator Hoar Said Senator Hoar has now said right out in meeting that the Dingley sched ules ought to bo revised after presi dential election Will tho American Economist be ablo to believo its ex pansive ears Hartford Courant Senator Hoar has said nothing of the sort What he said in substance was that the tariff should not bo re vised at all until the people have by their votes directed congress to under take revision A very different thing is it not Perhaps if the Courant will read what Senator Hoar really said dt may be able to believe its strabismic eyes American Economist Let Congress Bear in Mind The Cuban agrarians have transmit ted to President Roosevelt their thanks for his efforts in behalf of Cu ban reciprocity Wrell they may for if Congress ratifies the pending treaty it will add several dollars to the Cu ban planters profits on every ton of sugar he sells As that sugar all comes to the United States market this extra bonus will come out of the domestic consumer Two years ago we were told that the Cubans would starve if Congress did not grant a heavy reduction in duties within thir ty das but the fact is Cuba has been almost entirely regenerated industrial- OUGHT HE TO TURN THE OTHER CHEEK was the sugar industry and this was the declaration The Republican party favors such protection as will lead t6 the produc tion on American soil of all the sugar which the American people use and tor which they pay other countries more than 100000000 annually Immediately upon tho election of McKinley and Hobart and a Republi can congress capitalists having faith in a Republican promise invested their money and farmers having the some iaitn began tne cultivation or beets The beet sugar industry year after year grew amazingly first be cause the industry cculd be estab lished with adequate protection and second because protection had been promised and it was believed it would be continued so long as the Republi can party remained in power Again in 1900 the party declared unequivocally for protection and again monied men and farmers of the country having faitn in that pledge renewed their energies in the devel opment of a domestic sugar industry From an output of 20000 tons a few years ago an output of more than ten times that amount has been reached and even though this is less than one tenth of our consumptive capacity it is believed that in a few years more with the knowledge and experience gained and the impetus already giv en our output would reach the full amount of what we use And yet the president and senate have taken the first steps toward nulli fying the protection given to our sugar industry in accordance with promises of 1896 as embodied in the Dingley law and reasserted in the platform of 1900 It remains now for the house of representatives to complete the break ing of the pledge or by refusing to confirm the action of the president and senate to enable us to keep our pledge to our sugar industry and our honor as a party Overdoing Things It is at least a curious coincidence that Michigan the home of the sugar beet should he selected as a field for exploiting the fascinations and allure ments of Cuba as an agricultural para dise A company has been organized in Detroit to boom things Its pros pectus and printed matter give out a high temperature Reading the hot stuff about the pi enomenl fertility and productiveness ii Cuban soii and ly and her sugar crop this year bids fair to be one of the largest in her his tory Let Congress bear in mind the interests of domestic producers of sugar tobacco cigars early fruits vegetables etc in considering the pending treaty American The Farmer Is Satisfied The slight falling off in exports seems to be giving considerable com fort to the free traders as they wel come anything that will serve as an argument against the Dingley law They do not note that the falling off is in agricultural products while our exports of manufactures are increas ing High prices naturally have the tendency to check exports and in crease imports and exports of agri cultural products will always fluctuate But it is no argument against protec tion when our farmers can market at home more nearly all they produce and at profitable prices The table of the prosperous American is loaded three times a day and full stomachs full dinner pails and full lunch bas kets are full testimony to the efficacy of protection When to Revise the Tariff The fact is that the tariff will be re vised when the people at the polls de mand it and not before New York Times Right for once That is precisely when and only when the tariff will be or shouldbe revised When the peo ple being tired of prosperity or for any other reason satisfactory to them selves want the tariff revised reduced or removed they will say so and it will be done But until that time comes until the people have said so the proper thing to do is to let the tar iff alone Helpless Without a Tariff Her is a little lecture on protective tariisj from the Birmingham Eng Pos- America attracts our skilled worraen by the larger wages that are poslUe under protection and gets year by yjar a larger helping of the limit ed supply of potters clay and so a one prosperous industry is approach ing sxirvation point Having no tar iff we are helpless to check these pro ceedings Higher wages and the de velopment of home industries cause no complaint in the United States St Louis Globe Democrat E8888888S3S8838SB88ffi888f NEXT WEEK THE FATAL REQUEST Or FOUND OUT By A I Harris Author of Mine Own Familiar Friend etc NEXT WEEK AMERICAN LOVE OF CHANGE It Is One of the Chief of the National Characteristics Love of change is fast becoming an American characteristic Tho repose ful man or woman bids fair to be in ime the most unusual of our types We strive and strain and direct all our energies to the obtaining of some thing which when mastered we never pause to enjoy By reposo is not meant idleness or indifference These terms are too often confounded The reposeful na ture can be energetic forceful con scientious and laborious but it is free from that indefinable spirit of unrest the danger menacing our na tional life just now There is a restlessness of pleasure too as well as of business or daily life The amusement must be con stant and it must be constantly varied Little children in the nursery demand1 the same thing in a childish way Mother or nurse must be prepared to furnish something new each day of the week New toys are supplied in profusion and tired of in an hour The liking for change is encouraged It grows rapidly In time it will be come almost incurable It is sometimes claimed that this rapid passing from interest to interest develops the mind of the child Tho theory is not upheld by the results Little John Ruskin had a ball for his only plaything and the patterns in the carpet for his puzzles He became a great analyst It lies with the mothers of growing America to make it a land of repose strong energetic dominant but with a deep flowing current of rest below the mighty tide of its life The quality is not merely desirable It is actually essential The truly successful career will be at the bottom a restful one THE TIMID MAN FLED Must Have Had Guilty Conscience Concealed Somewhere The imperfections some call it elasticity of the English language are responsible for the destruction of the most beautiful specimen of night blooming cereus I ever saw said a man the other day For reasons of my own I invited a number of gentlemen prominent in lo cal politics to my house and for their entertainment provided a buffet lunch and appropriate liquid refreshments In the course of the evening a timid looking gentleman stepped up to the buffet He was the most un assuming man I ever saw and I am at a loss to know what he is doing in politics At any rate he stepped- up to get something and following him was a well known detective When the timid man saw the detective he drew back to make room for him and when that gentleman observed this he Iziid his hand on the timid gentle- mans shoulder and said in his hoarse voice with a well meant attempt at politeness Im after you The timid man sprang from him and hatless as he was with fear de picted on every line of his face darted across the room and vaulted through the open window into the side yard The detective was puzzled for a moment and those who had not heard the remark were mystified It is need less to tell you that the frightened man jumped on my cereus Scotch Tact Will Carleton the poet author was speaking the other day of his last in terview with Gen Grant I had seen him and met him on various occa sions he said but this was the first time I had ever had him to myself for half an hour We talked of his famoii3 trip around the world and compared data concerning places we haI both visited Especially was he struck with Ayr the birthplace of Burns and with two of Burns nieces the Mijses Begg two elderly maiden ladies who lived in a cozy cottage a few miles from auld Kirk Alloway I had happened to visit them immediately after Grant was there and they were naturally enthusiastic about the great American hero When he vent awa said one of them to me confidentially he kissed my sister good by But when I laughingly repeatc d this to the gen eral he said quietly I kissed both of them New York World France Honors Charcot The memory of Charcot founder of the school of hypnotism in Paris has been perpetuated by the chisel of his wife The statue just erected at is her work done dur ing his life and is highly esteemed as a piece of portraiture New French Dramatic Critic The Important post of dramatic ditic of the Paris Temps left vacant by the death of M Larroumet has been given to Adolphe Brisson the of Francisque Sarcey 1 1r i M -