3jV - t fc I was born in it r Im wr 1 -- 3x6e Bondman By HALL CAINE yfr T- M esK A Continued Story i4 He bad hailed a passing boat to run him ashore and it was one of the light skiffs with the double prow that the boys of Iceland use when they hunt among the rocks for eggs and down of the eider duck Such Indeed though so late In the season had that day been the work of the two lads whose boat he had chanced upon and having dropped down to their side from the whaler with his few belong ings his long coat of Manx homespun over his arm his seamans boots across his shoulders his English fowling piece in hjs hand and his pistol in his belt he began to talk with them of their calling as one who knew it Where have you been working my lads said Jason Out on Engy said the elder of the boys Found much Not today Who cleans It Mother And at that a frown passed oyer Jasons face in the darkness The boys were thinly clad both were bare legged and barefooted Plainly they were brothers one of them being less than twelve years of age and the other as young as nine Whats your father Fathers dead said the lad Where do- you live with your mother Down on the shore yonder below the silversmiths The little house behind the Mis sions in front of the vats Yes sir do you know about it her said the old man No news of your father though he added with a shrug and then there was a silence for some minutes presently Now there was a good J creature And bless how she me was MaJ j boy his son and like wrapped up in her hnv T ntm met I mv lad said 1 sounus of work These were the Lat- Jason sadly and he thought to self Then the old mother is dead But he also thought of his own mother and ner long years of worse than widowhood All that has yet to be paid for he told himself wtih a cold shudder and then he remembered Lhat he had just revealed himself See my lads he said here is a crown for you and say nothing of who gave it you The little Icelandic capital twinkled low at the waters edge and as they amo near to it Jason saw that there was a flare of torchilgnts and open fires with dark figures moving buaily fieore the glow where he looked for the merchant stores that had faced the sea Whats this he asked The fort that the new governor is throwing up said the boy Then through a number of smacks some schooners a brig a coal hulk and many small boats they ran in at the little wooden jetty that forked out over a reef of lew rocks And there some idlers who sat on casks under the lamp with their hands in their pockets and their skin caps squashed down on their foreheads seemed to recognize Jason as he landed Lord bless me said one with a look of terror its the dead come to life again God a mercy me said another pausing with his snuff at his nose I could have sworn I fetched him a dead man out of the sea Jason knew them but before they had so far regained their self-com mand as to hail him he had faced about though eager to ask any ques tions and walked away Better not he thought and hurried on He took the High Street towards the Inn and then an irregular alley that led past the lake to a square in front of the Cathedral and ended at a little house of basaltic blocks that nestled at its feet for it was there he meant to lodge It had been the home of a worthy couple whom he had known in the old days caretakers of the Ca thedral and his mothers only friends in her last days Old and feeble and very deaf that had both been then and as he strode along in the dark ness he wondered if he should find them still alive He found them as he had left them not otherwise chang ed than if the five years of his absence had been but five hours The old man was still at the hearth chopping up some logs of driftwood and the old woman was still at the table ironing her linen by the light of a rush candle With uplifted hands and cries of won derment hey received him and while Je pupped on the porridge and skyr that they set before him they talked and questioned And where have you been this many a day said the old man In England Scotland Denmark many places said Jason -Well theyve buried you these four years and better said the old man with a grimace Lord bless me yes love and a cross over your grave too and your name on it said the old woman with a look of awe Who did that said Jason Jogen Jorgensen said the old man grinning Its next to your mothers love He did that too for when he heard that she was gone he repented said the old woman Its no good folks repenting when their bad works done and done with said the old man Thats who I say Theres them vaDSverthot wont call It repenting And see what has come of it said the old woman What said Jason Why he has gone Didnt you know love said the old woman How gone said Jason Dead Worse disgraced eriven out of Iceland said the old man Then an ugly smile crossed Jasons face It is the beginning he thought p iButte old mother is dead is she not he said aloud Your fathers mother Old Mother Orryson said the old woman No such luck the old man mut tered Comes to service every morn ing the old sinner But theres another family living 1 in her house said Jason Oh- thats because shes past her worlc and the new Governor keeps vYti J of tnat and not too soon eitner Ana like that when I had my poor little Olaf I never had but one child neither Well my lad she said dropping her flat iron and raising her apron you can say you had a good mother anyhow Jason finished his supper and went out into the town All thoughts save one thought had been banished from his mind Where was this Michael Sunlocks What was he How was he to be met with Better not ask thought Jason Wait and watch And so he walked on Dark as was the night he knew every step of the way The streets looked smaller and meaner than he remembered them and yet they showed an unwonted anima tion Oil lamps hung over many stalls the stores were still open and people passed to and fro in the little busy throngs Recalling that heavy quiet of that hour of the night five years ago Jason said to himself The town has awakened from a long sleep To avoid the glaring of prying eyes he turned down towards the bridge passing the Deanery and the Bishops Palace There the streets were all but quiet as of old the windows showed few lights and the monotonous c ime of the sea came up through the si lence from the iron bound shore Yet even there from two house there were in school and the jail In the school a company of students was being drilled by sL sergeant whose words of command rang out in the intervals of suflling feet What does this mean said Jason to a group of young girls who with shawls over their heads were giggling together in the drakness by the gate Its the regiment started by the new Governor said one of the girls The new Governor again thought Jason and turned away From the jail there came a noise as of carpenters hammering What are they doing there said Jason to a little tailor who passed him on the stree at that moment with his black leg on his back Turning the jail into a house for the new Governor said the tailor Again the new Governor said Ja son as he strode on by the tailors side A stirring fellow whoever he may be Thats true young as he is said the tailor Is he tnen so young said Jason carelessly Four or five and twenty hardly more said the tailor but with a headpiece fit for fifty He has driven those Danish thieves out of old coun try with all their trick and truck Why you couldnt call your bread your own no nor your soul neither Oh a Daniel sir a young Daniel Hes too be married soon Shes stay ing with the old Bishop now They say shes a foreigner Who said Jason Why his wife that is to be said the tailor Good night sir he cried and turned down an alley Then Jason remembered Greeba and the hot blood tingled in his cheeks Never yet for an instant had it come to him to think that Michael Sunlocks and the new Governor were the same man and that Greeba and his bride were one But telling himself that she might even then be in that litiie town with nothing but the darkness hiding him from her eight he shud dered at the near chance of beiK dis covered by her and passed on by the river towards the sea Yet being alone there with only the wash of the waves for company he felt his great resolve begin to pall as a hundred questions rose to torment him Suppose she were here and they were to meet dare he after all do that Though she loved this man could he still do that Oh was it not terrible to think of that he should cross the seas for that So to put an end to the torture of such questionings and escape from himself he turned back from the shore to where the crowds looked thickets in the town He went as he came by the bank of the river and when he was crossing the bridge some one shot past him on a horse It was a man and he drew up sharp ly at the Bishops Palace threw his Teins over the pier of the gate and bounded into the house with the light lfoot tthat goes -with a light heart The new Governor thought Jason though he had seen him only as a shadow Who is he I wonder he thought again and with a sigh for his own condition within sight of this mans happiness he pushed heavily along Hardly had he got back into the town when he was seen and recog nized for with a whoop and a spring and a jovial oath a tipsy companion of former days came sweeping down upon him from the open door of a drinking shop What Jason Bless my soul Come in the fellow cried embrac ing him and to avoid the curious gaze of the throng that had gathered on the pavement Jason allowed him self to be led into the house Well God save us So youre back But I heard you had come Old John Olafsson told us He was down at the jetty Boys the fellow shouted to a little company of men who sat drinking in the hotel par lor hes another Lazarus came back from the dead Heres to his goot healt den said a fat Dutch captain who sat on the hearth strumming a fiddle to tune it And while the others laughed and drank a little deformed dwarf in a corner with an accordion between his twisted fingers began to play and sing i i wffltrsrMwtafaC9as This is the last thing that should have happened thought Jason and with many excuses he tried to elbow his way out But the tipsy comrade held him while he rattled on Been away foreign eh Married since No Then the girls of old Iceland are best eh What Yes And old Icelands the fairest land the sun shines upon eh No But Lord bless me what a mess you made of it by going away just when you did At that Jason while pushing his way thought i turned about with a look of inquiry Didnt know it What That after the mother died old Jorgen went about looking for you No Want ed Whq to make a man or you when he couldnt fine you he took up with Michael Sunlocks Michael Sunlocks Jason repeat ed in a distant sore of voice Just so this precious new gover nor that wants to put down all the drinking i j Yes Put your nose out boy for that was the start of his luck Jason felt dizzy and under the hard tan of his skin his face grew white You should know him though No Well after old Jorgen had reled with him everybdoy said he was a kind of bastard brother of1 yours The reeking place hau got hotter and hotter It was now stifling and Jason stubled out into the street Michael Sunlocks was the new gov ernor and Michael Sunlocks was about to be married to Greeba Thrice had this man robbed him of his bless i ing standing in the place that oughu to have been his once with his fa 5 ther once with GreeDa and once again with Jorgen Jorgenseii He tried to reckon it all up but do what he would he could not keep his mind from wandering The truth had fallen upon him at a blow and under his strong emotions his facul ties seemed to be slain in a moment He felt blind and deaf and unable to think Presently without knowing where he was going but impelled by some blind force and staggering along like a drunken man he found himself approaching the Bishops Pal ace He is there he thought the man who has stood in my place all his days the man who has stripped me of every good thing in life He is there in honor and wealth and hap piness and I am here a homeless outcast in the night Oh that I could do it now now now But at that he remembered that he had never yet seen Michael Sunlocks to know him from another man I must wait he thought I must go to work cautiously I must see him first and watch him The night was then far spent to wards midnight the streets had grown quiet the lights of the town no longer sent a yellow glare over the grass clad housetops and from a quiet sky the moon and stars shone out Jason was turning back toward his lodgings when he heard a voice that made him stand It was a womans voice singing and it came with the undertones of some string instrument from the house in front of him After a moment he pushed the gate open and walked across the little grass plat until he became beneath the only window from which a light still shone There he stopped and listened laying his hand on the sill to steady himself To be Continued A West Pointer as a Diplomat Arthur Sherburne Hardy our new minister to Switzerland is a graduate of West Point He served in the Third artillery traveled mucn studied in France was professor of civil engineer ing at Iowa college and Dartmouth and wrote several successful novels and textbooks Slgsbees First Thought Captain Sigsbee who commanded the warship Maine when she was blown up in Havana harbor was recently asked what was his first thought on realizing what had occurred To tell the truth said the captain my first thought was what will the newspa pers say at home The Squire Fined Himself John Hartman justice of the peace at Millville N J got into a wordy war with some visitors at his office and used language of the sulphurous va riety After the fuss was all over he asked the mayor for a warrant for his own arrest on the charge of disorderly conduct I caught myself redhanded he said and why shouldnt I jpay a fine like any other honest citizen Im an honest man even if I am justice of the peace A small fine was im posed A Little City in One Building The daily population of the Equit able building in New York is 3100 and the mail averages about 18000 pieces a day Every forty five minutes mail wagons run over from the post office and carry back with them seventy-five pounds of outgoing mail Vermont Venison There were 111 deer killed in Ver mont during the open season which ended November 1 Last year ninety were reported killed in the brief ten days season allowed and in 1898 when the open season extended throughout October 130 were killed To Test Election taws Money is being subscribed chiefly in Boston Mass to test in the su preme court of the United States the constitutionality of the election laws in Louisiana and North Carolina which practically disfranchise the negroes of the two states The total expense is expected to be about 5000 Georgias Real Daughters Georgia has within its borders four known real daughters of the American Revolution they being Mrs Olina T Way Mrs Martha Penn Rodgers Mrs Oliver P Berry and Mrs Mary Bibb Hall each the daughter of a soldier who fought in the Continental army during the Revolutionary war THE FRESS What Will M Maupin Had to Say About the Eter nal Fitness of Things The following is the response of Will M Maupin of the World Herald to the toast The Press at the Omaha Jackson Club banquet Mr Toastmaster and Fellow De feated It is with fear and trembling that I undertake the task tonight of responding- to this toast a toast that should find response from more elo quent lips than mine The toast to The Press should be responded to by one whose pen is a recognized factor in public affairs and whose words of warning and of admonition are worthy the attention of party leaders and party workers Like the toast The Ladies God Bless Em the toast to The Press is often drank without realizing its solemnity and without grasping the immensity of the power thus honored It has become a matter of custom rath er than a matter of choice to have a toast to The Press upon an intellect ual are and because of its com monness men seldom pause to weigh its full meaning Oftentimes I think this toast is looked upon much like the toast of fered by the man at the stag dinner To Our Wives and Sweethearts May They Never Meet I fear that among politicians the toast to The Press is often looked upon something like this To the Press May It Whoop Things Up During the Campaign and God Help the Editor Between Times Political parties and politicians owe everything to the party press The party press owes nothing to the poli tician and nothing to the party save when it stands by time tried and test ed principles The party press owes allegiance only to party principles and should designing politicians lead the party astray for the purpose of temporary aggrandizment the party press should be and ever is found ready to oppose the surrender of principle for pelf Traitors Of the Press Of course there are exceptions to this rule One twelfth of the apostles was bad But here the analogy ceases for the apostolic one twelfth went out and hanged himself for very shame at having betrayed the master but the party paper that has sold itself for sor did gold or temporary favor boasts of its political honesty and demands a re organization of the party The press is the greatest power for good or evil in the world today In the hands of upright honest and able men it is the greatest weapon for good known to mankind In the hands of dishonest and designing men it comes a power for evil that leaves be the devil nothing to desire The honest press is feared by ty rants and its help sought by political mountebanks masquerading as men desirous of benefitting mankind in gen eral The honest press has elected congresses and been sorry for it after wards The dishonest press has de feated presidential candidates who stood for right and justice and human liberty and elected candidates who could not distinguish the difference be tween plain duty and criminal assim ilation The honest press denounces the Napolonic financier who engineers a bond issue for the benefit of multi millionaires while the dishonest press magnifies the awful crime of a man who steals a loaf of bread to keep wife and little ones from starvation We hear much of yellow journalism these days That has become a common ex pression and is used by many as a term of reproach But it is a compliment Yellow journalism does things while conservative journalism only imag ines things Yellow journalism de manded a vindication of justice and hu manity while the conservative jour nalism of the land urged delay and trembled lest stocks be depreciated begging that the blood of the Ameri can slain to be looked upon as merely an incident in our national life Yel low journalism has pulled the mask from the face of political hypocrisy and revealed sordid selfishness in all its hideous forms of ship subsidies protec tive tariffs and New Jersey organiza tions One of the latest and best com pliments to yellow journalism was to materially assist in preventing this re public from becoming a feif of Great Britain by the adoption of a treaty as drawn by the British minister at Wash ington and humbly accepted by Lit tle Breeches who should never have been allowed to doff his infantine knickerbo ckers The Country Press It is too often the case that those who propose the toast to The Press think only of the metropolitan news papers This is an error that should be rectified Because of its advantag eous position the metropolitan press is the ammunition factory but the country press is the Gatling the Nor denfelt the Maxim or the rapid fire rifle thlt shoots the ammunition thus prepared into the ranks of the common While the new congress will be even more large republican than the old and quite as unsound in political doc trine it is likely to be more sensitive to popular opinion than the expiring remnant and it has been made very manifest that popular opinion does not sustain the principles of subsidies and bounties This matter was kept carefully in the background during the campaign and when the triumph ant Hauna brought it forward after the election as though he had received a mandate to do what he pleased it was soon recognized that the country would not have it l enemy and routs him horse foot and dragoons or rather to speak more exactly routs the enemy fryingpan subsidy and coercon That is of course sometimes Oc casionally the ammunition falls short and the gunners must fall back Oc casionally as the last election demon strated the enemy of self government liberty and justice is encased in armor plate at S450 a ton and 50 percent pro fit and supported by platoons and bri gades of corporations trusts and of ficeholders thus defeating the hosts of justice and liberty But Truth crushed to earth will rise again And throw the load from off her back While error wounded writhes in pain And vainly calls to Mark and Mack The press is a wonderful institu tion Poets have tuned their lyres and sung their songs of admiration and adoration Politicians have tuned their liars same pronunciation but different orthography and eloquently sung the praises of the man behind the pen But ere the echoes of the poets sons have died away he has cursed the editor for refusing to print his poetic slush and while the politi cian is still red in the face from his exertions to make the editor feel good he rises and proposes the toast The Press God Bless It with a striking change in the verb The politician has slaped the editor upon the back and told him he is a good fellow then stolen the editors best thoughts and mounted the stump to preach thm as his own The editor is always it during the campaign and too often nit after the campaign The chief end of man is to praise God and glorify him forever The chief end of the editor is to boost poli ticians into office and beg for cord wood on subscription The chief occupation of the party editor is to elect men to office and apologize for it afterward The editors chief pleasure is to spin the linen and make the purple and then see others wear it while he hustles up enough delinquent sub scribers to get his patent insides out of the express office The editor blushes with conscious pride when the politician pats him on the back and compliments him upon an editorial leader but the editors family eat when the politician pays his subscription The editor swells out his chest when told that he surely elected John Jones county sheriff but he puts pota toes m his cellar and coal in his bin when Sheriff Jones gives him the sale notices to publish Democracys Great Weapon My friends the greatest weapon in the hands of democracy is its able and fearless press but the weapon must be sharper in other places than its ap petite It must be recognized and supported Few politicians seek an office that has no salary attachment yet it is too often the case that they expect the editor to fight the partys battles without money and without price relying upon Providence for help and individual exertion for bread The party press to be effective must be well supported It is the first to feel the effects of hard times and the last to feel the effects of returning prosper ity It is always on the firing line While politicians are m the hospital for repairs or fattening at the public crib the party press in its khaki uni form is in the field skirmishing1 to beat back the enemy or to outflank it and capture the works The party press is never discour aged Though often repulsed it is never defeated In my minds eye I can see tonight the grand army of democratic newspapers repulsed for a time but still stout hearted and wil ling reforming its lines and fixing bayonets for the great charge of 1902 It failed a few months ago in its efforts to elect to the highest office in the re public the greatest leader the ablest statesman and the most unselfish pat riot of his time and generation but it never for a moment lost heart It failed in its desperate struggle to plant again upon the hattlements of the republic the standards of liberty and justice but although beaten back it still holds the standards high aloft and has kept them free from the stains of coercion bribery and injustice It was a sore repulse my friends But what of the victory won by the enemy When Charles of Sweden was congratulated upon a dearly bought victory he looked out over the battle field filled with his dead and dying and with tears in his eyes exclaimed Hunters and Hunted Philadelphia Times Copying our Rooseveltian style of dubbing the Filipinos TVIalay pirates our British cousins across the water are demanding that the boer guerrillas must be hunted down This serves to fire the British heart at home but it doesnt seem to have made much im pression on the boer guerrillas in south Africa In point of fact they have recently displayed an inclination to do tne Hunting themselves with uiwc oiitoa Liinii uucir uritisn nents care to admit V - I Truly a great victory but another one like it will ruin us forever The men who achieved the victory of last November as they look out over the field strewn with the ruins of small industries the sorely wounded forms of liberty and justice and the wrecks of individual enterprise can well exclaim with Charles of Sweden Truly a wonderful victory hut an other one like it will ruin the republic forever Precursor of Victory It was a humiliating repulse my friends but it presages a glorious vic tory when next we marshal our forces and go forth to battle I do not come here tonight with sackcloth and ashes hidden beneath the mockery of a dress suit and a dirge sounding in my ears I come with a heart full of hope and the music of rejoicing promised for the future We arc indeed passing through the valley of humiliation but we see before us no abyss of eternal disaster The way is dark and the path is rough hut just ahead is a glim mer of light that tells us that justice still lives and that right will again rule And so we press forward with the knowledge that where the light is are the plains of eternal truth and justice where we shall plant the vic torious standards of democracy and again rally the world around liberty and f ce government And through this dark valley which now we tread the democratic press is guiding the undismayed hosts of Undaunted and unafraid it still holds on high the truths written by Thomas Jefferson and shot into British red coats by Andrew Jackson from behind the cotton bales at New Orleans When these truths are again a working vital force in the affairs of the nation the democratic press will herald the glad news abroad to all lands and this republic will again be the Mecca of the free and the guiding star of all those who seek liberty The flag will again be greeted by men whose eyes brighten at the sight of its waving folds instead of by men whose eyrs see it and fill with tears for lost aspirations and betrayed confidences When that glad day comes the vultures of greed and force will seek their rocky fastnesses of despair to prey upon one another and the breath of life will be breathed into the forms of dead industries the wounds of liberty and justice will be healed and individ ual enterprises will stand upon its feet and be strong for the race be fore it My friends that glad day is close at hand The first rosy glints of its dawning are already painting red the horizon of the future Soon the sun shine of universal prosperity will drive away the gloom of trust glut tony and corporation rapacity To the democratic press I drink a toast God give it strength to run the race to fight the fight and win the victory And when the victory is achieved let the democratic press be remembered in the proclamation of thanksgiving The candidates for United States sen ator are on edge these days It is get ting pretty close to the time when each must disclose his hand and let the other fellows see whether they hold a royal straight flush or whether they were just simply bluffing Mr George D Meiklejohn has every thing in readiness to save himself from drowning just when the contest gets darkest He has a large assortment of robes de nuit and plenty of cosmo line and matches The Jacksonian club banquet in Omaha was from all reports a grand success Democracy is not dead nor will it perish It has living principles and will live because of such Mr Lodge of Massachusetts devoted oae whole day in the senate recently trying to convince the rest of the so lons that an army of 1Q0000 would not be a menace but a blessing When the people get over the idea that the present only must be provided against then there may come the time when sober judgment will be hearkened to Reorganization Oh yes we heard somebody use that word name was Grover have His The word is forward march to vic tory on the platform of Kansas City There will be no turning back by the Bryan democracy Harrison Sot In Line Des Moines Leader The speech made by General Harri son at Indianapolis on Monday night recalls those happy addresses which he delivered during the summer of 1888 and which convinced the republicans of the country that no mistake had been made in the choice of standard bearer Benjamin Harrison although for a long time forced to endure the gibe of grandfathers hat is now gen erally acknowledged to be the ablest living republican It is therefore an event not to be belittled that he has turned his face squarely against the colonial policy of the present republi can administration Mj A Problem of the Century Savannah Xews How to make the rich bear the bur dens of government in proportion to their wealth and induce them to dis charge obligations they owe to society is a problem that is awaiting solution Its importance is not being a mated by those who are calling tion to it It is a problem that cannot be put aside It will have to be solved and with each year of the new century the necessity for its solution wilfber come more imperative J