JL V - 44i44 15he Bondmrv By HALL CAINE A t Continue Story 3KS3g3 CHAPTER XIII Continued The Bishops words had quickened 3he pulse of the people and cheer fol lowed cheer again It is written continued the Bishop that whosoever exalteth himself shall he abased and he that humbleth himself shall be ex alted Our young President has this flay sat down in the lowest room and if he must needs leave us having his own reasons that are none of ours may the Lord cause His face to shine upon him and comfort him in al his adver sities Then there was but one voice in that assembly the voice of a loud -Amen And Michael S unlocks had risen again with a white face and dim eyes to return his thanks and say his last word before the vote for his re lease should be taken when there nvas a sudden commotion a sound of Jurying feet a rush a startled cry -and at the next moment a company of soldiers had entered the house from the cell below and stood with drawn swords on the floor Before anyone had recoverd from his surprise one of the soldiers had Gentlemen he said the door as locked you are prisoners of the -King of Denmark Betrayed shouted fifty voices at once and then there was wild confu sion So this mysterious mummery is over at last said the leader of the Levelers rising up with rigid limbs and a scared and whitened face Now we know why we have all been brought ihere to Dight Betrayed indeed and -there stands the betrayer So saying he pointed scornfully at Michael Sunlocks who stood where 5j -had risen with the look of deep emo tion hardy yet banished from his face by the look of bewilderment that fol lowed it False Michael Sunlocks cried -It is false as hell But in that quick instant the people looked at him with changed eyes and ireceived his words with z groan of xage that silenced him That night Jorgen Jorgensen sailed aip the fiord and landing at Reykja vik took possession of it and the sec ond Republic of Iceland was at an end That night too when the headed -by Thurstan trudged through the streets on their way to -Government House looking to receive the reward that had been promised them they were elbowed by a drunken company of the Danes who frequented the drinking shops en the Cheapstead Why here are his brothers shout ed one of the roysterers pointing at the Fairbrothers His brothers His brothers shout ed twenty more Thurstan tried to protest and Jacob io fraternize but all was useless The brethren were attacked for the relation they had claimed with the traitor who liad fallen and thus the six worthy and unselfish souls who had come to Iceland for gain and lost everything -and waited for revenge and only won suspicion were driven off in peril of their necks with a drunken mob at full cry behind them They took refuge in a coasting schooner setting sail for the eastern fiords Six days afterwards the schoon er was caught in the ice at the mouth of Seydis fiord imprisoned there four months out of reach of help from land or sea and every soul aboard died miserably Short as had been the shrift of Red Jason the shrift of -Michael Sunlocks -was yet shorter On the order of Jor gen Jorgensen the late usurper of the Government of Iceland was sent for the term of his natural life to the Sul phur Mines that he had himself es tablished as a penal settlement And such was the fall of Michael Sunlocks THE BOOK OF RED JASON CHAPTER I WHAT BEFELL OLD ADAM Now it would be a long task to fol low closely all that befell dear old Adam Fairbrother from the time -when the ship wherein he sailed for Iceland weighed anchor in Ramsey Ibay Yet not to know what strange risks he ran and how in the end he overcame all dangers by Gods grace and his own extreme labor is not to know this stcry of how two good men with a good woman between them pur sued each other over the earth with vows of vengeance and came together at length in heavens good time and way So not to weary the spirit with much speaking yet to leave nothing unsaid that shall carry us onward to that great hour when Red Jason and Michael Sunlocks stood face to face let us begin where Adams peril be gan and hasten forward to where it ended Fourteen days out of Ramsey in latitude of 64 degrees distant about five leagues north of the Faroes and in the course of west northwest hoping to make the western shores of Iceland Adam with his shipmates was over taken by foul weather with high seas and strong wind opposing them stout ly from the northwest Thus they were driven well into the latitude of sixty six off the eastern coast of Ice land and there though the seas still ran as high as to the poop they were much beset by extraordinary pieces of Ice which appeared to come down from Greenland Then the wind abated and an unsearchable and noisome fog fol lowed so dense that not an acre of sea could be seen from the top mast Lead and so foul that the compasses would not work in it After that though they wrought night and day with poles and spikes they were beat en among the ice as scarce as any ship ever was before and so terrible were the blows they suffered that many a time they thought the planks must be wrenched from the vessels sides Nev ertheless they let fall sail thinking to force their way through the ice before they were stowed to pieces and though the wind was low yet the ship felt the canvas and cleared the shoals that encompassed her The wind hen fell to a calm but still the fog hung heavily w oevr the sea which was black and smelt horribly And when they thought to try their soundings knowing that somewhere thereabouts the land must surely be they heard a noise that seemed at first like the tract of the shore It was worse than that for it was the rut of a great bank of ice two hundred miles deep breaking away from the far shores of Greenland and coming with its steady sweep sucn as no human power could resist towards the coasts of Iceland Between that vast ice floe and the land they lay with its hollow and terrible voice in their ears and with no power to fly from it for their sail hung loose and idle in the dead stillness of the air Oh it is an awful thing to know that death is swooping down on you hour by hour to hear it coming with its hideous thunder like the groans of damned souls and yet to see nothing of your danger for the day darkness that blinds you But the shipmaster was a stout hearted fellow and while the fog continued and he was without the help of wind or compass he let go a raven that he had aboard to see if it could discover land The raven flew to the northeast and did not re turn to the ship and by that token the master knew that the land of Ice land lay somewhere near on their star board bow So he was for lowering the long boat to stand in with the coast and learn what part of Iceland it was when suddenly the wind larged again and before long it blew with violence At this their peril was much in creased for the night before had been bitterly cold and the sails had been frozen where they hung outspread and some of the cables were as stiff as icicles and half as thick as a mans body Thus under wind that in a short space rose to a great storm with can vas that could not be reefed an ocean of ice coming down behind and seas beneath of an untouchable depth they were driven on and on towards an un known shore From the like danger may God save all Christian men even as he saved old Adam and his fellowship for they had begun to prepare themselves to make a good end of their hopeless lives when in the lift of the fog the master saw an opening in the coast and got into it and his ship rode safely on a quick tide down the fiord called Seydis fiord There the same night they dropped anchor in a good sound and went in stantly to prayer to praise God for His delivery of them and Adam called the haven where they moored The Har bor of Good Providence So with cheerful spirits thinking themselves indifferently safe they sought their births and so ended the first part of their peril in Gods mercy and salva tion But the storm that had driven them into their place of refuge drove their dread enemy after them and in the night while they lay in the first sleep of four days the ice encompassed them and crushed them against the rocks The blow struck Adam out of a tran quil rest and he thought nothing bet ter than that he was awakening for another world All hands were called to the pumps for the master still thought the ship was staunch and might be pushed along the coast by the shoulders with crows of iron and thus ride out to sea But though they worked until the pumps sucked it was clear that the poor vessel was stuck fast in the ice and that she must soon get her death wound So at break of day the master and crew with Adam Fairbrother took what they could car ry of provisions and clothes and clam bered ashore leaving the ship to her fate It was a bleak and desolate coast they had landed upon with never a house in sight never a cave that they might shelter in or a stone that would cover them against the wind with nothing around save the bare face of a broad fell black and lifeless strewn over with small light stones sucked full of holes like the honeycomb but without trees or bush or grass or green moss And there they suffered more privations than it is needful to tell waiting for the ice to break look ing on at its many colors of blue and purple and emerald green and yellow and its many strange and wonderful shapes resembling churches and cas tles and spires and turrets and cities -all ablaze in the noonday sun They built themselves a rude hut of the stones like pumice u id expecting the dissolution of the ice they kept watch on their ship which itself look ed like an iceburg frozen into a ships shape And meantime some of their company suffered very sorely Though the year was not yet far advanced to wards winter some of the men swooned of the cold that came up from the ice of the fiord the teeth of oth ers became loose and the flesh of their gums fell away and on the soles of the feet of a few the frost of the nights raised blisters as big as walnuts Partly from these privations and partly from loss of heart when at last one evil day he saw his good ship crushed to splinters against the rocks the master fell sick and was brought so low that in less than a week he lay expecting his good hour And feeling his extremity he appointed Adam to succeed him as director of the com pany to guide them to safety over the land since Providence forbade that they should sail on the seas Then all being done so far as his help could avail he stretched himself out for his end only praying in his last hours that he might be allowed to drink as much ale as he liked from the ships stores that had been saved This Adam or dered that he should and as long as he lived the ale was brought to him in the hut where he lay and he drank it until between draught and draught it froze in the jug at his side After that he died an honest a worthy and strong hearted man And Adam being now by choice of the late master and consent of his crew the leader of the company began to make a review of all men and clothes and victuals and found that there were eleven of them in all with little more than they stood up In and provisions to last them with sparing three weeks at utmost And seeing that they were cut off from all hope of a passage by sea he set himself to count the chances of a journey by land and by help of the ships charts and much beating of the wing3 of memory to recover what he had learned of Iceland in the days when his dear lad Sunlocks had lef him for these shores he reckoned that by following the sea line under the feet of the great Vatna Jokull they might hope if they could hold out so long to reach Reykjavik at last Long and weary the journey must be with no town and scarce a village to break it and no prospect of shelter br the way save what a few farms might give them So Adam ordered the carpenter to recover what he could of the ships sails to make a tent and of its broken timbers to make a cart to carry vic tuals and when this was done they set off along the fell side on the first stage of their journey The same day towards nightfall they came upon a little group of grass covered houses at the top of the fiord and saw the people of Iceland for the first time They were a little colony cut off by impassable mountains from their fellows within the island and having no ships in which they dare venture to their kind on the seas with out tall and strong limbed in their persons commonly of yellow hair but sometimes of red of which neither sex was ashamed living on bread that waB scarce eatable being made of fish that had been dried and powdered lazy and unclean squalid and mean-spirited and with the appearance of being depressed and kept under It was a cheerless life they lived at the feet of the great ice bound jokull and the mar gin of the frozen sea so that looking around on the desolate place and the dumb wilderness of things before and behind Adam asked himself why and how any living souls had ever ventured there To be continued Biggest Emerald in the World The Duke of Devonshire owns thb biggest emerald in the world It is known as the Devonshire emerald and was purchased by the present dukes father from Dom Pedro As of late years this stone has become the rarest of gems the Devonshire emerald measuring two inches in diameter and of the finest color is of fabulous value Skyscraper Makes Clerks Seasick Down at the Battery in New York city there is a skyscraper office build ing on the top floor of which are the headquarters of a big trust During a violent windstorm last week the building swayed so that half a dozen clerks became seasick One of them said he would sooner keep books on an ocean lingr Missouri Giantess Now House Miss Ella Ewing the Missouri giant ess who is eight feet four inches in height recently completed a house for herself at the town of Govin in that state Her new house has doors ten feet high ceilings fifteen feet high with chairs tables beds and every thing in proportion Capable Sign Artists The makers of the big and gaudy ad vertisements which so offend on ever side are not as might be supposed mere inartistic daubers They are fre quently real artists who have had years of training even abroad but who find that more legitimate forms of art afford them only a precarious liveli hood Californias Bis Registration Boko California visitors to the Buffalo exposition next summer will register In the largest book ever bound It has just been completed in Los Angeles The book Is twenty nine inches long twenty eight inches wide and eighteen inches thick is of 4000 pages and weighs pounds Jerusalems Stamp Jerusalem has its own Hebrew can cancellation stamp says the Jewish World Hitherto all manner of stamps have been current in payment of out ward bound mails Now however the Turkish stamp is the order of the day and Jerusalem in Hebrew neat square characters forms part of the postmark which cancels the stamp Big Order for Wire The order recently filled in Con necticut for a million pounds of trol ley wire for an electrical road in In dia is the largest export order for this material ever received in the state The reels upon which the wire was wound required nearly 100000 feet of lumber for their construction Iiong Delayed Chocolate Arrlvo It is reported that three boxes of chocolate sent by Queen Victoria the Christmas before last for the Rhode sian forces have now arrived at Mafe king There had been much grum bling at the non arrival of her late majestys gift Automobiles Ftlghten KatiTes The arrival of two automobiles made a great sensation recently at Lag hoaut in the south of Algeria and on the edge of the Great Sahara The na tives whom they passed on the route appeared both surprised and fright ened and ran away shouting They are the devils machines Kalsors Imperial Train The German Emperors Imperial train cost 750000 and took three years to construct There are altogether twelve cars including two nursery carriages The reception saloon con tains several pieces of statuary and each of the sleeping cars is fitted with a bath A perfect woman nobly planned to warn to comfort and command TRUTH ABOUT ALASKA Secretary Seward Said Its Acquisition Was Most Important To the vast majority of people Alas ka is a frigid barren valueless section of country It has never seemed to be closely enough connected with tht United States to arouse any patriotism or interest in the hearts and minds of the masses Doubtless there are thousands who cherish the same sen timents towards the cold corner that were entertained by the opponents of the Alaska purchase thirty years ago Congressman Ferris then said that it Was a wretched God forsaken region with absolutely nothing of value and he moved that the bill authorizing the president to pay 7500000 for it be amended to read to pay the sum to any European Asiatic or African pow er that would take Alaska off our hands Congressman Price declared that the payment would be a dead loss to the country Gen Butler proposed that if we must buy the friendship of Russia we give her 7500000 and let her keep Alaska and he denounced those who favored the acquisition as being insane enough to buy the earth quakes of St Thomas and the icefields of Greenland Such sentiments in view of the value of Alaska as at pres ent understood by every well informed person appear almost like the babbling of idiocy We paid 2 cents an acre for the territory the area being 369 529600 acres The Alaska Fur com pany have taken 33000000 worth of seal skins and have paid or owe the government 7340533 in royalties It is officially estimated that the Alaska fisheries not including seals and whales are worth 67890000 and since the purchase the territory has produc ed 25000000 of gold Secretary Sew ard said that the acquisition of Alaska was the most important event in his long career but that it would take a generation for the people to realize it NOW FOR MEDICATED EGGS Unbounded FosslbUltles That Are Open ing Up to Pharmacy There is scarcely any branch in which medicine has not advanced with in the last twenty years but in no dne branch has more improvement been shown than in the compounding and putting together of drugs No more is the unwilling patient made to swallow large doses of nauseating med icine for sugar coated pills capsules and wafers have come into use and pa tients can now take the most vile tasting medicines without any dis comfort Now comes along a French man with a still more ingenious plan which opens up to pharmacy unbound ed possibilities of going still further ahead On account of the difficulty of assimilating iron as a medicine a French druggist has sought to intro duce it in a digestible way by what he terms ferruginous eggs Hens can di gest iron easily while rendering it back through the albumen of their eggs in a form which is easily digested by the weaker stomachs of mankind A salt of iron is given to the hens with grains of wheat A dozen of these medicated grains of wheat a day makes the hens after three or four days lay eggs which are very rich in iron al ready digested The Frenchman is ex perimenting further with other flrugs and it is not without the bounds of possibility that we shall shortly be able to take all our medicine in the form of eggs Senator Elkins Talked Spanlsb Senator Elkins talks Spanish like a native He learned the language when he was a young man in New Mexico and he has never forgotten it Yes terday he was talking Spanish in the marble room of the senate at the rate of 200 words a minute says the Wash ington Post A delegation of Porto Ricans had come to the capitol to pro test against a law recently passed by the legislature of that colony which provides for the raising of revenue by the assessment of property Their com plaint is that the assessment was so high as to be ruinous although it is only 1 per cent and they wanted con gress to repeal the law as it has -a right to do under a section of the For aker statute They poured out their grievance to Senator Foraker in brok en English and with much gesticula tion Presently one of the delegation spoke to a fellow member in Spanish Senator TSlkins happened to pass at the same moment He greeted the delegation with a Spanish sentence In stantly joy was visible upon the faces of the Porto Ricans One of them spoke to Mr Elkins in Spanish Mr Elkins answered- promptly and intelli gibly A moment later and he was surrounded by the entire delegation all of whom were jabbering away in a loud tone of voice and with the words pour ing from their lips like molten lava Senator Elkins jabbered back at them in their own tongue The conference lasted several minutes and its unique character monopolized the attention of all the visitors in the marble room The satisfaction of talking in their native language was all that the dele gation could secure by their visit The law of which they complain is not to be repealed Had an Irlsb Wife The death of Baron Satge de Thor ent at the age of 97 has removed from the roll of the Lesion of Honor its oldest member After having served for many years in the French army he went to reside in Ireland and married an Irish wife by whom he had a large family One of his sons served in the British army but the baron himself spent the latter part of his life upon a pictuesque estate In the eastern Pyrenees He was a per fect type of the Frenchman of the old school CHHKWKKK -49 -- S Commoner Comment Extracts From W J Bryans Paper In a recent issue of the Courier Journal Mr Watterson that quaint and always interesting journalist ad vises his party to raise the white flag and surrender to the republican party on the question of Imperialism He does not announce that he is convinced of the righteousness of the republican position but he excuses himself by as suming that it is impossible to combat the forces which seem to be behind the republican party He admits that im perialism is an innovation upon Am erican principles and antagonistic to the teachings of the earlier statesmen Here are his words Let us say at once that the scheme of occupying a territory remote from our borders of subduing a people alien to our character and institutions and of undertaking a system of colonial government over this territory and these peoples without their consent and apparently in opposition to their will is not merely a serious innova tion upon the original plan embodied by the constitution of the United Stat es and contemplated by the authors of that constitution but that it is re pugnant to the prudent counsels de livered by the wisest of our older statesmen to say nothing about the teaching of history After a brief review of the past one hundred years he accepts the republi can doctrine of providence and says God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform He made the Spanish war He was not less behind Dewey in Manila than He was behind Shafter and Sampson and Schley at Santiago What was His all wise pur pose We know not But there we were and there we are and nothing is surer in the future than that we shall be there a century hence unless some power turns up strong enough to drive us out Instead therefore of discussing the abstraction of imper ialism illustrated by the rights and wrongs of the Philippines Mr Bryan were more profitably engaged in con sidering how we may best administer possessions which for good or lor evil are with us to stay It will be noticed that he adopts the republican theory that God is respon sible for what we have done that it is a matter of destiny and that we are being swept along by influences over which we have no control The doctrine enunciated by the re publicans since the Spanish war and now indorsed by so great an editor as Mr Watterson is not only dangerous but it is immoral It is politically dan gerous because it encourages the re publican party to shirk responsibility for its sins and shield itself behind the pretense that it is working out the will of the Almighty and it is immoral because it obliterates the distinction between right and wrong The repub lican argument is built upon the theo ry that wrong done upon a large scale loses its evil character and becomes an integral part of Gods plan It is in keeping with the tendency to call an embezzler a Napoleon of finance pro vided the amount embezzled is large Mr Watterson has not in the past been in the habit of defending his po sition with the philosophy which he now employs In former years he was known as the special champion of the star eyed Goddess of Reform When the democratic party went down to de feat as it often did he did not say God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform He made protec tion and the republican party and therefore we must bow to both On the contrary he raised the democratic banner aloft and appealed time and again to the intelligence of the Ameri can people Neither has he been in the habit of excusing the crimes of indi viduals by attributing them to divine inspiration When Governor Goebel was assassinated Mr Watterson did not say God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform He prompted the assassin to kill We cannot understand His all wise pur pose but there we were and here we are and there is nothing to be done about it Instead he insisted that a murder had teen committed and that the guil ty should be brought to justice When the Louisville and Nashville railroad entered the arena of politics and Logan its work of corruption and intimidation Mr Watterson did not s y God moves in a mystvous way His wonders to perform This rail road company has sprung into exist ence and must be carrying out the pur poses of an all wise Ruler Far from it He insisted that the railroad should keep out of politics and attend to the business for which it was organized There is no more reason for throw ing upon the Almighty the responsi bility for a war of conquest and for an imperial policy which burdens our na tion with a large army and suppresses the aspirations of distant peoples for self government than there is to blame Him because one individual chooses to kill another or because a great cor poration attempts to control a state government Questions must be decided by the ap plication of fixed and immutable prin ciples Jefferson said I know of but one code of morality for men whether acting singly or collectively and Franklin expressed the same idea only in different language when he said Justice is as strictly due be tween neighbor nations as between neighbor citizens The highwayman is as much a robber where he plunders in a gang as when single and the nation that wages an unjust war is only a great gang Perhaps the Sultan of Turkey will agree to pay that 100000 on the day the administration keeps its promise to Cuba Attorney General Knox received his appointment because he was just the man to see that the trusts received ex act justice according to the trust idea of justice Those New York insurgents should not prematurely rejoice over the Odelllng of Uncle Tom Piatt Thomas is quite a hand at enjoying the lastlaugh in matters of this kind nS WATTERSON ON DESTINY If Jefferson and Franklin were right how can we delude ourselves with tho doctrine of destiny which is being de veloped now Yielding to a bad principle because it seems triumphant Is simply an easy method of avoiding labor and sacrifice It is a complacent but unsound phil osophy which teaches compromise with wrong merely because the enemy is strongly entrenched No one has a right to assume that error will be permanently victorious If some of our citizens condemn small crimes but seem inclined to condone grand larceny and killing on a large scale Mr Watterson should remem ber his lecture on morals and point out to the deluded ones that a nation can no more than an Indiviaual avoid the consequences of transgression If he believed the authors of the consti tution and the wisest of our states men wrong he would be justified In repudiating their counsels but believ ing them right it Is surprising that ho should be carried away by the brutal and barbarous doctrine upon which empires are built His Influence might help to restore American ideals he cannot afford to aid in their overthrow The position of Mr Watterson would be untenable even if the issue of Im perialism had been the only issue pre sented last fall and the people had de liberately indorsed the republican pol icy Suppose the campaign of 1900 had been fought with no other question be fore the people even then It would still be the duty of those who are con scientiously opposed to imperialism to continue the discussion with the hope of convincing a majority of the people But as a matter of fact there were a number of issues in the campaign While imperialism was declared by the democratic convention to he para mount every one knows that other questions entered into the contest and it is also well known that the can party constantly denied that it had any thought of attacking fundamental principles or of converting a republic into an empire The indictment1 brought against the republican party was so severe that a great many re- fused to believe the party capable of such intentions as were charged Then too the republicans sought cover behind the fact that a war was In progress They circulated misleading reports from the Philippine Islands and declared that the lives of Ameri can soldiers were imperiled by the fact that the democrats were criticising the administration Vhat the democratic party needs is not advice to surrender but courage to resist the attacks which are being made upon American doctrines and democratic principles The campaign of 189G was the first one in recent years when there was a radical issue between the parties The republican party pretended to want in ternational bimetallism when it really wanted the gold standard It won its victory under the cover of interna tional bimetallism and as soon as tho election was over threw off the ensile and came out for the gold standard Many of the democratic papers which had supported the ticket and all of the democratic papers which had deserted the party in that year counseled the party to accept a decision won by fraud as conclusive of the question And for four years the leading demo cratic dailies gave no assistance what ever to the democratic party in its fight against the money power In the campaign of 1900 the repub lican party practiced another fraud upon the people on the subejet of im perialism and now Mr Watterson and a few other democratic editors advise the acceptance of the republican posi tion on that question On the trust question the republican party also practiced deception and some -of our democratic papers seem willing to concede the triumph of the trust principle Nothing is to be gained from a party standpoint and everything is to be lost from the standpoint of principle by Mr Wattersons method of dealing with the questions at Issue He ex pects the democratic party to indorse the colonial system and then promise to send better carpet baggers to Ma nila than the republicans have sent Such a course would make our party a laughing stock No party is good enough to admin ister a colonial system honestly and for the benefit of the subjects A na tion that is selfish enough to want a colony is too selfish to do justice by it and a party demoralized enough to in dorse a colonial system would be im Dotent to administer it satisfactorily The Commoner is pained to see so able and brilliant an editor as Mr Watterson unconsciously lend his in fluence to the republican party Far better that his voice should command a charge uDon the republican strong holds than that it should call a retreat in the midst of a battle which must de termine not only the fate of this re public but the fate of all republics for years to come The St Louis Chronicle is charging that Mayor Wells was elected by fraud This is adding Insult to injury - To run seventeen thousand votes behind the national ticket and then owe his election to republican votes is bad enough without having a suspicion cast upon his title One of the most humorous remarks of the decade Is the one to the effect that Philander Knox sacrifices a pri vate income of 50000 a year as attor ney for the Carnegie Interests to ac cept an 8000 position in the presi dents cabinet Caesar had his Brutus Charles his Cromwell and McKinley has just given a Rodenberg to the civil service The discovery of a new island in the Philippine group would tend to make Mr John A T Hull favor a special session of congress lor concession in suring purposes If La Discussion the Havana newspaper which was suppressed would change its name to Division and Silence it might secure a new lease of life Discussion is not popular in an empire -A