o i 1 M if U a 1 S 11 i i 41 3 4- iBr m 3S3SxyS 2A y r J3 H6e Bondman By HALL CAINE A Conttaued Story Q CHAPTER V Continued At that resolve she sat and wrote four pages of pleading and prayer and explanation But having finished her letter it smote her suddenly as she folded and sealed it that it would be ft selfish thing- to steal away with out warning and leave this poor pa per behind her to crush Jason for though written in pity for him in truth It was fraught with pity only for herself As mean of soul as that she could not be and straightway she threw her letter aside resolved to tell her story face to face Then she remembered the night of Stephen Or rys dath and the white lips of Jason as he stood above the dying man his father whom he had crossed the seas to slay and again by a quick recoil she recalled his laughter of that morning and she said within herself If I tell him he will kill me But that thought decided her and she concluded that tell him she must let happen what would So partly in the strength of her resolve and partly out of its womanly -weakness and the fear that she might return to her first plan at last she took up her own let ter Jason and locked it in a chest liven takiner from the folds at her reast the letter of Sunlocks to her self she read it again and yet again for it was the only love letter she had ever received and there was a dear delight in the very touch ot it But the thought of that sensuous joy smote her conscience when she re membered what she had still to do and thinking thfat she could never speak to Jason eye to eye with the letter of Sunlocks lying warm in her bosom she took it out and locked it also in the chest Jason came tjack at sundown to fetch her away that they might make some innocent sport together because his mill was roofed Then with her eyes on her feet she spoke and he list ened in a dull impassive silence while all the laughter died off his face and a look of blank pallor came over it And when she had finished she wait ed for the blow of his anger but it did not come Then all is over between us he said with an effort And looking up she saw he was a forlorn man in a moment and fell to her knees before him with many pit iful prayers for forgiveness But he only raised her and said gently Mistress Greeba maybe I havent loved you enough No no she cried Im only a rough and ignorant fel low a sort of wild beast I dare say not fit to touch the hand of a lady and maybe a lady could never stoop to me No no theres not a lady in all the world would stoop if she were to mjarry you Then maybe I vexed you by finding my own advantage in your hour of need No you have behaved bravely with me in my trouble Then Greeba tell me what has happened since yesterday Nothing everything Jason I have wronged you It is no fault of yours but now I know I do not love you He turned his face away from her and when he spoke again his voice broke in his throat You could never think how fast and close my love will grow Let us wait he said It would be useless she answered Stay he said stiffly do you love anyone else But before she had time to speak he said quickly Wfait Ive no right to ask that question and I will not hear you an swer it You are very noble Jason she said I was thinking of myseli he said Jason she cried I mean to ask you to release me but you have put me to shame and now I ask you to choose for me I have promised my self to you and if you wish it I will keep my promise At that he stood a sorrowful man beside her for a moments space be fore he answered her and only the tone of his voice could tell how much his answer cost him No ah no he said ro Greeba to keep your promise to me would be too cruel to you Theres no need to do -that he said for either way I am a broken man But you shall not also be broken hearted and neither shall the man who parts us Saying this a ghastly white hand seemed to sweep across his face but at the next moment he smiled feebly and said God blss you both Then he turned to go but GreeDa caught him by both hands Jason she murmured It is true I cannot love you but if there was another name for love that is not He twisted back to her as she spoke and his face was unutterably mourn ful to see Dont look at me like that he said and drew away She felt her face flush deep for she was ashamed Love was her pole star What was Jasons Only the blankness of despair Oh my heart will break she cried aagin and again she grasped his hands and again their eyes met and then the brave girl put her quiv ering lins to his Ah no he said in a husky voice and he broke from her embrace CHAPTER VI ESAUS BITTER CRY Shrinking from every human face Jason turned his dumb despair to wards the sea for the moan of its long dead waves seemed to speak to him in a voice of comfort if not of cheer The year had deepened to au tumn and the chill winds that scat tered the salt spray the white curves of the breakers the mists the dapple gray clouds the scream of the sea fcwl all suited with his mood for at the fountains of his own being the great deeps were broken up It was Tuesday and every day thereafter until Saturday he haunted the shore the wild headland to sea ward and the lonesome rocks on the south There bit by bit uie strange and solemn idea of unrequited love was borne in upon him It was very hard to understand For one short day the image of a happy love and stood up before his mind but already that day was dead That he should never again clasp her hand whom he loved that all was over between them it was painful it Wias crushing And oh it was very cruel His life seemed as much ended as if he had taken his death warrant for life with out hope was nothing worth The fu ture he had fondly built up for both of them lay broken at his own feet Oh the irony of it all There were moments when evil passions arose in his mind and startled him Standing at the foot of the lone crags of the sea he would break into wild peals of laughter or shriek out in rebellion against his sentence But he was ashamed of these impulses and would sink taway from the scene of them though no human eye had there been on him lika dog that is disgraced Yet he felt that like a man among men he could fight anything but this relentless doom Anything anything and he would not shrink Life and love life and love only these and all would be well But no lah no not for him was either and creeping up in the dead of night towards Lague just that his eyes might see though sorrow dimmed them the house where she lay asleep the strong man would sob like a woman and cry out Greeba Greeba Greeba But with the coming of day his strength would return and watching the big ships outside pass on to north and south or listening to the merry song of the seamen who weighed an chor in the bay he told Himself sadly but without pain that his life in the island was ended that he could not live where she lived surrounded by the traces of her presence that some thing called him away land that he must go And having thus concluded his spirits rose and he decided to stay until after Sunday thinking to see her then in church and there take his last tender look of her and bid her farewell in silence for he could not trust himslf to speak So he passed what remained of his time until then without bitterness or gloom it ying within himself as often as he locked with bereaved eyes to wards Lague where it lay in the sun shine Live on and be happy for I wish you no ill Live on and the lucmui j ui an Liiia win imaD atvaj But he did not in the meantime re turn to his work at the mill which stood as he had left it on the Tuesday when the carpenter fixed the last of its roof timbers This with the gen eral rupture of his habits ot life was the cause of sore worry and perplex ity to his housemate Aw reglar bruk bruk complete old Davy said far and wide A wnile ago ye couldn hould him for workin at the mill and now hes never put tin a sight on it and gcod goold waitni fcr him and showin no pride and what hes thinkin of no ones knowin Davy tried hard to sound the depth of Jasons trouble but having no line to fethom it he had recourse to his excellent fancy Aw bless yer sowls the thick as a haddick I was he whispered one day and me wonderin why and wonder in why and the thing as plain as plain whats agate of the poor boy Its divils thiafs took at him divils in the head Aw yes and two of them for its aisy to see theres fight in goin on inside of him Aw yes same as they tell of in Revelations and Ive seen the like when I was sailin forrin Having so concluded old Davy thought it his duty to consult an old body that lived in a dark tangle of birchwood at Balaglass Its fit to make ft man cry to see the way hes goin said he and a few good words cant do no harm any way The old woman agreed with Davy as to the cause of the trouble and said that Jason must be somebody after all since what he had was a malady the quality was much subject to for to her own knowledge the Clerk o the Rowls had suffered frcm it when a little dancing girl from France had left suddenly for England Yet she made no question but she should cure him if Davy cculd contrive to hang about his neck vhile he slept a piece of red ribbon which she would provide It was not easy for Davy to carry out his instructions so little did Ja son rest but he succeeded at length and thought he remarked that Jason became calmer and better straight way But bless me I was wrong said he It was four divils the poor boy had in his head and two of them are gone but the other two are agate of him still When Sunday morning came Jason mfade himself ready for church and then lounged at the doorway of old Davys cottage by the dial to watch the people go in at the gate And many hailed him as they went by in the sweet sunshine and some ob served among themselves that in a few days his face had grown thin In twos and threes they passed while Davy rang the bell from the open porch and though Jason seemed not to -heed any of them yet he watched them one by one Matt Mylechreest he saw and Nary Crowe now tooth less and saintly and Khne Wade who had trudged down from Ballure and his wife Bridget grown wrinkled and yellow and some bright young maid ens too who gave a side long look nis way and John Fairbrother Gen silken bows on the toes of his shoes But one whom he looked for he did not see and partly from fear that she might not come and partly from dread lest she should pass him so closely by he shambled into church with the rest before the bell had stopped He had not often been to church during the four years tnat he had lived on the island and the people made way for him as he pushed up into a dark corner under the gallery There he sat and watched as before out of his slow eyes never shifting their quiet gaze from the door of the porch But the bell stopped and Greeba had not come and when Par son Gell hobbled up to the communion rail still Greeba was not there Then the service was begun the door was closed jand Jason lay back and shut his eyes The prayers were said without Ja son hearing them but while the first lesson was being read his wandering mind was suddenly arrested It was the story of Jacob and Esau how Isaac their father seeing the day of his death at hand sent Essau for ven ison that he might eat and bless him before he died how Jacob under the person of Essau obtained the blessing and how Essau vowed to stay his brother Jacob And Isaac his father said unto him Who art thou And he said I am thy son thy first born Essau And Isaac trembled very exceed ingly and said Who Where is he that hath taken venison and brought it me and I have eaten of all before thou earnest and have blessed him yea and he shall be blessed And when Essau heard the words of his father he cried with a great and exceeding bitter cry and said un to his father Bless me even me also O my father And Isaac his father answered and said unto him Behold thy dwel ling shall be the fatness of the earth feind the dew of heaven from above And by thy sword shalt thou live and shalt serve thy brother and it shall come to pass when thou shalt have the dominion that thou shalt break his yoke from off thy neck And Essau hated Jacob because of the blessing wherewith his father blessed him And Essau said in his heart The days o mourning for my father are at hand then will I slay my brother Jacob As Parson Gell at the reading desk mumbled these words through his toothless gums it seemed to Jason as though he were awakening from a long sleep la sleep of four years a sleep full of dreams both sweet and sad and that everything was coming back upon him in a dizzy whirl He remembered his mother her cruel life her death and his own vow and so vivid did these recollections grow in a moment that he trembled with ex citement A woman in a black crepe bonnet who sat next to him in the pew saw his emotions and put a Bible into his bands He accepted it with a slight movement of the head but when he tried to find the place he turned dizzy and his hands shook Seeing this the good woman with a look of pity and a thought of her runaway son who was flar off took the Bible back and after opening it at the chapter in Genesis returned it in silence Even then he did not read but sat with wandering eyes while nervous twitch es crossed his face To be Continued Skilled Debaters In the Senate Among the best debaters in the sen ate are Chandler of New Hampshire and Spooner of Wisconsin Chandler is the keener and more caustic of the two Spooner has the advantage in the spectacular surprises of a running debate Chandler is more feared as an opponent than any other man He has a genius for discovering the vul nerable point in the enemys armor and he is merciless in sending his weapons home Both he and Spooner are invariably good natured Neither of them was ever known to lose his temper in debate Estimating Experts Three exceptionally clever men have become recognized experts in guessing or estimating as they call it the an nual crops of wheat corn and cottonj Millions of dollars are investod in futures on their published opinion When Neill says that the cotton crop will be a million bales skort prices rise When his confreres send out timates on corn and wheat the mar- ket is instantly affected More tion is paid to these individual metns than to the reports by private wire of all the banking and commis sion houses combined Dewey Arch Goes to Charleston The navy arch in New York City is not yet to depart into the rubbish heap though it is to be disposed of as rubbish for President Gnggenheimer of the municipal council says that un der the city charter there is no other way So the South Carolina Inter state and West Indian exposition will receive the rch which will be taken down with all the care possible and transported to Charleston where it will be reconstructed Referred Him to One Who Knew A new bit of Washington gossip tells how one day last winter Senator Chandler of New Hampshire being about to enter the senate chamber from the public corridor was accost ed by one of two little girls who had wandered in there Mister what does it cost to go in there said the child At that moment Chandler saw Clark the Montana millionaire can ing around the corner Ask that man said the New Hampshire man He knows all about it Left HI taw Books Jn His Office The late Senator Davis was known as one of the foremost students of Shakespeare of the present day and in his home he had a magnificent library A remarkable thing about this library was that thsre was not a single law book in the collection for during the last twenty jears of his life he made it a rule never to1 bring his business cares to his fireside A VrtSfl IntAvlAnnto vll 3L tleman John who tripped along with those cells THE TARIFF EUMBUG IMPORTS AND EXPORTS AS GAUGES OF THE TIMES Doe Exporting More Than Wo Import Maka Ufi Prosperous T It Is Rathor a Blffii of Prosperity Among Those Who Buy of Us Iw Prices Still Kule Octobers commercial record out shines that of any month in com pleted calendars reaching an export total of over 163000000 If that rate were kept up for the year it would aggregate pretty nearly 2000000 000 and it affords one among many other reasons why Bryans tale of woe about the calamities of the country produced so little effect on his hear ers New York Tribune The thick and thin Republican spellbinders report abounding prosperity- without any regard for the truth In the same paper from which the above clipping is taken we find a report from R G Dun Co saying that the failures in November carried liabilities of over 12300000 while for the corresponding month last year they were only 8046848 An increase of 50 per cent in liabilities from last year yet we had a month of unpre cedented prosperity Dont that par alyze you And we exported more than we im ported and this shows further pros perity We sent out 163000000 more than we got and obtained great riches by giving away our substance During the same time Great Britain imported an immense amount of goods more than she exported and Great Britain also got rich We make scads of money by excessive exports Eng land makes scads of money by ex cessive imports There is a big lie out somewhere Who is telling it Johnny Bull or Brother Jonathan All we know about it is that England has every year during the last half century imported vastly more than she has exported and has thereby achieved the reputation of being the richest country in the world Can we do the exact opposite from that which England has been doing and become rich thereby We do not believe a word of it If we get rich by this process England ought to be the poorest country in the world but she isnt the poorest country in the world not by a long shot Egypt and India have been export ing more than they imported for cen turies and Lazaru3 would be a mill ionaire compared with those coun tries And yet we are told that what has made England rich will make us poor and that which has made India and Egypt beggars among the nations will make the United States rich be yond the dreams of avarice RICH AND POOR Why do great riches and great pov erty Jive alongside oL each other Why is New York the richest and also the poorest city in America Why does immense wealth or grinding poverty never live alone Where there is no riches there is no poverty It takes a thousand paupers to fur nish the gilding for one millionaire If there were no millionaires there would be no paupers When one man gets too much other men must get too little The rich man has got hold of the property that of right belongs to the poor There is wealth enough in New York to support every citizen in comfort and even in affluence but on account of unequal distribution some men are richer than the fabled Midas while a million are as poor as Laz arus Out in the agricultural portion of Nebraska there is neither great riches nor great poverty no man has a mil lion and no industrious man comes face to face with destitution All the immense fortunes are in the city and the grinding poverty is there also the city is the natural home of both wealth and poverty one attends as hand maiden on the other Why is this so There is no mystery about it it is plain simple and natural To make one millionaire it is neces sary to exploit a thousand other men a man can only make a million by appropriating the toil of others the millionaire grows rich by using the icvuui uj me poor ana tne man in moderate circumstances becomes a pauper because some other man en joys the fruits of his toil There is property enough in New York City to give every family ten thousand dol lars but if one man gets fifty millions many men must necessarily have noth ing It takes ten thousand Lazaruses to make one Rockefeller and so long as there is one Rockefeller in the world the Lazaruses will serve and starve Can this be remedied Yes Let the state take Rockefellers mil lions with an income tax and with the money thus obtained give Lazarus a good job at fair wages Will this be done Not very soon and possibly never What will be the consequence then The proletariat will level up the existing conditions with a sword and a gun and after a cataclysm in which Rockefeller and those like him will perish the world will start new AN ADJUSTABLE ARMY The army will be increased There will be 50000 or 60000 regular sol diers and the president will be author ized to increase it to 100000 when ever he shall think necessary It used to be the province of congress to fix the standard of the army but con gress has resigned its prerogative Hereafter the president will have an army large or small as suits his con venience Two jears ago we practi cally conceded to the president the power to levy war to make peace to contract alliances under the last power he has contracted an alliance offensive and defensive with the sul tan of Sulu now we give him power to establish an army That is a power that no constitutional monarchy ever assumed We rank with Rus3ia and Turkey in that regard instead of Great Britain and Germany The president has been granted the power of an absolute monarch Do you sup pose the Parliament of England would allow the queen to levy an army and carry on a war according to her own sweet will The first Charles he of gracious memory and besmirched rep utation lost his head for the exer cise of less power than the president of this republic is exercising every day The congress and the supreme court are subordinate powers The president is supreme He exercises absolute power under the direction of rings and syndicates He is the nom inal head of this plutocratic power and exercises complete dominion in the manner that his rulers and owners suggest No autocratic sovereign on earth exercises such absolute power as McKinley He is the whole push and the congress Is composed of a lot of cheap clerks who register his will This is what the people voted for and the people should have their wishes gratified UNSPEAKABLE OUTRAGE Senator Stewart has Introduced a bill in congress which appoints five judges for the Philippines and gives them a salary of 25000 each Isnt that a pretty steep price Isnt that all the traffic will bear and more too We get a pretty good class of judges in Nebraska at 2500 a year Why should wre pay eight times as much in the Philippines Common laborers get 150 a day In Nebraska and our judges get 2500 a year Laborers get 15 cents a day in the Philippines and judges are to get 20000 a year We are paying too rgich in Asia or too little in America Judjtje Sullivan or Judge Helcomb would probably be able to decide causes between Tagals and Chinamen and we get such men in this state for 2500 Stewart says that the salary is made high in order to get men of character and professional standing for the office of judge The men they will get will be broken down political hacks with neither credit nor char acter at home or abroad In a thou sand years they will not get a man so competent or so honest as have been on the supreme bench of Nebraska for thirty years It is nothing but a fat office to be given to some Rathbone or Neeley to pay him for dirty work done for some Hanna or Addlcks It is a mean cowardly dirty steal it takes the money from the gaunt hands of poverty and gives it to dishonest and disreputable politicians CROKERS INCOME TAX When Mr Croker landed in London the tax collector was waiting for him and demanded 5000 of his honest dol lars as a contribution to the income tax 5000 of his money to be spent in strangling liberty in South Africa Mr Astor and Mr Bradley Martin had also to pay an income tax on their princely fortunes Mr Croker didnt iike it and neither of the other gen tlemen were pleased Our rich men go to England and are taxed to carry on the British govern ment They stay at home and it dont cost them a cent for the enjoyment of their mighty incomes Doesnt it strike you that Thompsons colt was wise when compared with American legislators The only men that pay no taxes in America are the very men who could pay a very large tax and never feel it If an American judge had not had a changeable mind we would have been collecting tax off of the superfluities of the rich instead of the necessities of the poor John Rockefeller would have paid three mil lion dollars a year into the national treasury instead of raising that money on revenue stamps at two cents apiece We are glad they stuck these rich Americans and we hope that this coun try may learn a lesson from our wise cousins over the sea WHAT ARE LAWS FOR It is very evident that most laws are not made to be obeyed unless con venient for the reason that while they may appear on first reading to be plain a further reading or an other law on the same subject will introduce technical points to hinder its operation If it is more convenient to obey the plain letter of the law than to contest the matter in court it will be obeyed but if obedience will inconvenience a person more than a lawsuit then the law is disobeyed with impunity and the technical pro visions are relied on to avoid punish ment This is the exact situation with regard to our corrupt practices act It clearly forbids certain things and the honest man obeys the law The dishonest man looks farther and finds a lot of technical provisions of procedure behind which he can hide his guilty head if he has money and he disregards the law and expects to go scot free A GOOD PLATFORM FOR 1904- 1 Direct legislation or the initia tive and referendum The Question of whether we are to have a peoples government is greater than any question of administration of a hypothetical government 2 The right to issue currency must be taken from the banks and the gov ernment must issue all money and make it all equally a full legal tender and must abolish the fraudulent pre tense of redeeming one kind of money with another kind of money 3 We demand the public owner ship of public utilities s When a sure thing man takes an other in out of the rain it isaptto be a Questionable transaction Skilled Debaters la the Senate Among the best debaters In the sen ate are Chandler of New Hampshire and Spooner of Wisconsin Chandler is the keener and more caustic of the two Spooner has the advantage in the spectacular surprises of a running debate Chandler Is more feared as an opponent than any other man He has a genius for discovering the vul nerable point In the enemys armor and he is merciless in tending his weapons home Both he and Spooner are invariably good natured Neither of them was ever known to lose his temper in debate Cant Pay a 5 Cent Fare with SSO Some time ago Ida Balk tendered a street car conductor in Toledo a 20 bill in payment of one fare The con ductor refused to accept the bill on the ground that he did net have change for that amount and ejected the woman from the car She brought suit against the company for damages and the case was decided against her Judge Pugsley said in deciding the case that it was unreasonable to ex pect the street car conductor to carry that amount of change To Raise Georgia Preachers lu Africa A shipment of 100000 young peach trees from Georgia nurseries bound for Cape Colony and Natal South Af rica will be made next week They go largely into Natal and a large num ber of the trees going to lhat country are consigned to Ladysmith Cape Colony fruit growers get less than half of the shipment MR AYERS NOT DEAD Very Much Alive and Oat With a- Letter Telling How Ho Was Saved Minneapolis Minn Dec 29 Spe cial Few who knew how ill Mr A E Ayers of this city had been with Brights Disease and Diabetes ever ex pected he could live Four doctors gave him but three or four days to live He recovered through the prompt and con tinued use of a well known remedy and hlas given the following letter for publication It is dated at Bath N Y where Mr Ayers now resides - Soldiers and Sailors Home Bath N Y Dodds Medicine Co Buffalo N Y Dear Sirs I wist to tell you what Dcdds Kidney Pills have done for me As far as I am concerned they are the best in the world for they not only saved my life but they have given me new life and hope I lived in Minne apolis for forty nine years and am well known there by many people I suffered severely with Brights Disease and Diabetes Four well known physi cians gave me up to die In fact they gave me only three or four days at the longest to live I had spent nearly everything I had In the effort to save my life but seeing an advertisement of Dodd Kidney Pills I scraped what was nearly my last half dollar sent to the drug store and bought a box I had very little hope of anything every doing me any good as from what the four doctors had told me it was now a mat ter of hours with me I commenced to take the Pills and from the very first they helped me I took in all about forty boxes I doubtless did not need so many but I wanted to make sure and after all 20 is a small amount of money to remove the sentence of death and save ones life I have since recommended Dodds Kidney Pills to hundreds of people and I have yet to hear of the first one that did not find them all that you claim for them I can remember of two people to whom I hbd recommended Dodds Kidney Pills and who after wards said to me that they received no benefit I asked to see their Pill boxes and behold instead of Dodds Kidney Pills it was s Kidney Pills an imitation of the genuine Dodds and not the real thing at all that they had been using I gave each of them an empty pill box that Dodds Kidney Pills had been put up in so that they could make no more mistakes and they afterwards came to me and told me that they had bought and used the genuine Dodds Kidney Pills and were cured I still continue to use the Pills off and on and would not be without them if they were 50 a box I think that every old gentleman in the world would be healthier and better if he would take one after each meal I wish I could think of words strong enough to express to you my gratitude for what your Medicine has done for me It is not often I suppose that a man who is staring death right in the face is permitted to live cind tell of the means which saved him and as that is my position my heart Is over whelmed with thankfulness to God for His mercy to me in permitting me to see the advertisement of Dodds Kidney Pills when it seamed that I was beyond all earthly power to save that I cannot express my real feelings If lanyone doubts the statement I have made they- may write to me and I will try and prove to them that all I have said in this letter is true and more than true There are hundreds of people in Minneapolis who know all about my case and the Way Dodds Kidney Pills pulled me through when I had been given up by the four doctors of Brights Disease and Diabetes and had practically lost all hope You are at liberty to publish this testimonial which I give you from the bottom of my heart and I sincerely wish that I could findefche right words to express my feelings of gratitude to you and to Dodds Kidney Pills for my restora tion to life and health Signed A E AYERS Late of Minneapolis now at Soldiers and Sailors Home Bath N Y Mr Ayers is only one of thousands of aged gentlemen who say that their lives hiave been prolonged and their -declining years made worth living by the use of Dodds Kidney Bills V