INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION. CHAPTER VIII.—(CoKTlunaD.) "Have you been to Pranchard, Jean* tMarle?" inquired the Doctor. “I fancy •at" “Never,” replied the boy. "It Is ruin in a gorge,” continued Desprez, adopting his expository voice; • "the ruin of a hermitage and chapel. History tells us much of Franohard; 1ww the recluse was often slain by rob ■toprs; how he lived on a most lnsufil ■fcers; how he lived on a most lnsuffl 'dent diet; how he was expected to pass v tils days in prayer. A letter is pre •aerved, addressed to one of these soll -taries by the superior of his order, full of admirable hygienic advice; bidding -film to go from, his book to praying, ■and so back again, for variety’s sake, •and when he was weary of both to stroll «about his garden and observe the honey 't>eca. It is to this day my own system. You must often have remarked me ' leaving the ‘Pharmacopoeia’—often | ■' -even in the middle of a phrase—to come forth into the sun and air. I admire ■the writer of that letter from my heart; he was a man of thought on the most important subjects. But, indeed, had I ’lived in the Middle Ages (I am heartily -Clad that I did not) I should have been •an eremite myself—if I had not been •a professed buffoon, that is. These were the only philosophical lives yet •open; laughter or prayer; sneers, we might say, and tears. Until the sun V of the Positive arose, the wise man fead to make his choice between these 'two.” “I have been a buffoon, of course,” •observed Jean-Marie. “I cannot imagine you to have ex -celled in your profession,” said the Doctor, admiring the boy’s gravity. “Do you ever laugh?” “Oh, yes,” replied the other. “I ’-laugh often. I am very fond of Jokes.” “Singular being!” said Desiprez. “But ■ I divagate (I perceive in a thousand ■ways that I grow old). Franchard was At length destroyed in the English •wars, the same that leveled Gretz. But | not smiling; cards, dice, opera Dinging, orchestra, castles, beautitul parks and gardens, big ships with a tower of sailcloth, all lying unborn in a coffin— and the stupid trees growing overhead in the sunlight, year after year. Ine thought drives one frantic.” “It Is only money," replied Jean Marie. “It would do harm.” “O come!” cried Desprez, “that is philosophy; it is all very fine, but not to the point just now. And besides, it is not ‘only money,’ as you call it; there are works of art in the question; the vessels were carved. You speak like a vessels were carved. Yu speak like a child. You weary me exceedingly, quoting my words out of all logical connection, like a parroquet.” “And at any rate, we have nothing to do with it,” returned the boy, sub missively. CHAPTER IX. HEY struck the Route Ronde at that moment; and the sudden change to the rattling causeway, com bined with the Doctor’s Irritation, to keep him silent. The noddy jigged along; the trees went by, looking on silently, as if they had something on their minds. The Quadrilateral was passed; then came Franchard. They put up the horse at the little solitary inn, and went forth strolling. The gorge was dyed deeply with heather; the rocks and birches standing lumi nous in the sun. A great humming of bees about the flowers disposed Jean Marie to sleep, and he sat down against a clump of heather, while the Doctor went briskly to and fro, with quick turns, culling his simples. The boy’s head had fallen a little forward, his eyes were closed, his An gers had fallen lax about his knees, when a sudden cry called him to his WHOOPED LIKE AN INDIAN. —here is the point—the hermits (for 'there were already more than one) had ’foreseen the danger and carefully con cealed the sacrificial vessels. These 'Vessels were of monstrous value, Jean :Marie—monstrous value—priceless, we. •may say; exquisitely worked, of ex •qulsite material. And now, mark me, they have never been found. In the •reign of Louis Quatorze some fellows were digging hard by the ruins. Sud denly—took!—the spade hit upon an •obstacle. Imagine the men looking one to another; imagine how their hearts bounded, how their color came and went. It was a coffer, and in Fran chard the place of buried treasure! "They tore it open like famished beasts, Alas! it was not the treasure; only -some priestly robes, which, at the touch -of the eating air, fell upon themselves and instantly wasted into dust. The perspiration of these good fellows ■turned cold upon them, Jean-Marie. I will pledge my reputation, if there was •any thing like a cutting wind, one or -other had a pneumonia for his trou ble.” “I should like to have seen them turning into dust,” said Jean-Marie. “Otherwise, I should not have cared •so greatly.”^ “You have no imagination,” cried the Doctor. “Picture yourself the scene. Dwell on the idea—a great treasure lying in the earth for centu ries; the material for a giddy, copious, •opulent existence not employed; dresses and exquisite pictures unseen; the swiftest galloping horses not stirring •a hoof, arrested by a spell; women with the beautiful faculty of smiles. feet. It was a strange sound, thin and brief; it fell dead, and silence returned as though it had never been interrupt ed. He had not recognized the Doc tor’s voice; but, as there was no one else in all the valley, it was plainly the Doctor who had given utterance to the sound. He looked right and left, and there was Desprez standing in a niche between two bowlders, und look ing round on his adopted son with a countenance as white as paper. “A viper!” cried Jean-Marie, run ning toward hiim. “A viper! You are bitten!” The Doctor came down heavily out of the cleft, and advanced in silence to meet the boy, whom he took rough ly by the shoulder. “I have found it,” he said, with a gasip. “A plant?” asked Jean-Marie. Desprez had a fit of unnatural gayety, which the rocks took up and mimicked. “A plant!" he repeated scornfully. “Well—yes—a plant. And here,” he added suddenly, showing his right hand, which he had hitherto concealed behind his back—“here is one of the bulbs.” Jean-Marie saw a dirty platter, coat ed with earth. “That?” said he. "It is a plate!” “It is a coach and horses,” cried the Doctor. “Boy,” he continued, growing warmer, “I plucked away a great pad of moss from between these bowlders, and disclosed a crevice; and when I looked in, what do you suppose I saw? I saw a house in Paris with a court and garden, I saw my wife shining with diamonds, I saw myself a deputy, I saw you—well, I—I saw your future,” he concluded, rather feebly. ‘‘I have Just discovered America,” he added. “But what Is It?” asked the boy. “The Treasure of Franchard,” cried the Doctor; and, throwing his brown straw hat upon the ground, he whooped like an Indian and sprung upon Jean Marie, whom he suffocated with em braces and bedewed with tears. Then he flung himself down among the heather and once more laughed until the valley rang. But the boy had now an Interest of his own boy’s Interest. No sooner was he released from the Doctor’s acco lade than he ran to the bowlders, sprung Into the niche, and, thrusting hta hand Into the crevice, drew forth one after another, incrusted with the earth of ages, the flagons, candlesticks, and patens of the hermitage of Fran chard. A casket came last, tightly shut and very heavy. “Oh, what fun!” he cried. But when he looked back at the Doc tr, who had followed close behind and was silently observing, the words died fromhls lips. Desprez was once more the color of ashes; his Ups worked and trembled; a sort of bestial greed pos sessea nun. “This is childish,” he said. “We lose precious time. Back to the inn, har ness the trap, and bring it to yon bank. Run for your life, and remember—not one whisper. I stay here to watch.” Jean-Marie did as he was bid, though not without surprise. The noddy was brought round to the spot indicated; and the two gradually transported the treasure from its piace of concealment to the boot below the driving seat. Once it was all stored the Doctor re covered hds gayety. “Ipaymy grateful duties to the ge nius of this dell,” he said. “Oh, for a live coal, a heifer, and a jar of coun try wine! 1 aim in the vein for sacrifice, for a superb libation. Well, and why not? We are at Franchard. English pale ale is'to be had—not classical, in deed, but excellent. Boy, we shall drink ale.” “But I thought it was so unwhole some,” said Jean-Marie, “and very dear besides.” “Fiddle-de-dee!" exclaimed the Doc tor gayly. “The inn!” And he stepped into the noddy, toss ing his head, with an elastic, youthful air. The horse was turned, and in a few seconds they drew up beside the paling of the inn garden. “Here,” said Desprez—“here, near the stable, so that we may keep an eye upon things.” They tied the horse, and entered the garden, the Doctor singing, now in fan tastic high notes, now producing deep reverbrations from his chest. He took a seat, rapped loudly on the table, as sailed the waiter with witticisms; and when the bottle of Bass was at length produced, far more charged with gas than the most delirious champagne, he filled out a long glassful of froth and .pushed it over to Jean-Marie. “Drink,” he said; “drink deep." “I would rather not,” faltered the boy, true to his training. “What?" thundered Desprez. “I am afraid of it,” said Jean-Mane; “my stomach-” “Take it or leave It!” Interrupted Desprez fiercely; “but understand it once for all—there is nothing so con temptible as precision.” Here was a new lesson! The boy sat bemused, looking at the glass but not tasting it, while the Doctor emptied and refilled his own. “Once in a way,” he said at last, by way of a concession to the boy’s more rigorous attitude, “once in a way, and at so critical a moment, this ale is a nectar for the gods. The habit, indeed, is debasing; wine, the juice of the grape, is the'true drink of the French man, as I have often had occasion to point out; and I do not know, that I can blame you for refusing this out landish stimulant. You can have some wine and cakes. Is the bottle empty?] Well, we will not be proud; we will have pity on your glass.” (10 n» COXTI.HOID.t - The Precious Volume* The highest price ever paid for a sin gle volume was tendered by a number of wealthy Jewish merchants of Ven ice to Pope Julius II for a very ancient Hebrew Bible. It was then believed to be an original copy of the Septuaglnt version made from the Hebrew into Greek in 277 B. C., careful copies of the Hebrew text having been prepared at that date for the use of seventy trans lators. The offer to Julius was 20,000 pounds, which, considering the differ ence between the value of money then and now, would in our day represent the princely sum of $680,000. Julius was at that time greatly pressed for money to maintain the Holy League which the pope had organized against France, but in spite of this lack of funds he declined the offer. Hot Milk a* a Tonic. If any one doubts the nourishing properties of milk, let a test be made of the following preparation of It. When very weary or weak from ex haustion heat some milk to a scalding point, until a thin skin begins to wrinkle upon the surface, and then drink it as hot as possible. It refreshes almost Instantly and restores the ex hausted vitality to a surprising extent as soon as it is taken. It is more nu tritious than any of the best beef teas made from meat extracts, or that made | from fresh beef which is carefully strained, as many of the recipes direct j that it shall be. Metallic Finished Cambric. I Metallic-finished cambric, which has ■ all the gloss of a real satin, is a itow ] lining for thin dresses. It comes in all! the pretty colors, costs only 35 cents a yard, and is fully a yard wide, I THE CUBAN POLICY. “LEADER” BAILEY OBJECTS TO THE PRESIDENTS PLANS. Business Conditions Improve Notwith standing Continued Heavy Imports— Free Sliver Theories Kxplodod—Pern's Adoption of the Gold. ! Washington, May, 1897. — (Special correspondence)—The knowledge that citizens of this country were suffering and in want of food and shelter brought instantly from President Mc Kinley a message recommending an ap propriation of J50,00(Mor their benefit. It is understood that the President is only awaiting for more detailed infor mation, from special representatives whom he has sent to Cuba, before tak ing equally vigorous action in regard to other matters there. When it is remembered that the first three weeks of McKinley’s administration witnessed the release of practically all the Americans who were in Cuban prisons on the 4th day of March, and that his action for the relief of those who were suffering for want of food was equal ly prompt, the contrast between his actions and those of President Cleve land is strongly marked. When it is remembered, also, that the objection oi a Democratic “leader” prevented the prompt passage of the relief bill in the house, the contrast between Republi can and Democratic methods is still tnore sharply outlined. Republican n. Democratic Methods. The President, who learned only a few days ago from his representatives in Cuba that American citizens there are suffering for food, shelter and clothing, sent to congress on Monday a message pointing out this fact, and asking an immediate appropriation. A resolution making this appropriation a as offered in the senate by a Repub lican as soon as the reading of the mes sage, and passed by a unanimous vote. A similar resolution was offered in the house by Mr. Hitt, a Republican, as soon as the reading of the message was finished, but its immediate considera tion was objected to by Congressman Bailey, an alleged leader of the Dem ocratic party of the house. That any man representing only his own con gressional district or himself individ ually could have thrown himself be tween 800 suffering American citizens and relief freely offered by the govern ment of the United States seems in credible, but that a man professing to speak for a great party could have done so is even more astounding. But it is a fact, nevertheless, and Mr. Bai ley was successful in preventing the passage of the measure for at least three days. Why? Upon the alleged ground that he wanted to couple with it legislation recognizing the belligerency of the Cu bans. In point of fact, it was a po litical trick to try to restore himself in the graces of the Democracy, which had been accusing him of subserviency to Speaker Reed and his methods. Mr. Bailey was willing to stand between 800 suffering and starving American citizens and relief for an indefinite length of time for the sake of again making himself solid with the Democ racy. He knew that the house of rep resentatives would not pass a resolu tion recognizing the belligerency of the Cubans in the short space of time that It'was necessary to pass the relief res olution. The senate has been debating that kind of a resolution for not only days, but weeks and months. So his demand that the resolution of the rec ognition of belligerency should be coupled with that of appropriating money for immediate relief was not only unnecessary but unreasonable, and sure to cause delay to the relief measure. Yet since it would attract attention to Mr. Bailey, and possibly reingratiate him In the regard of the Democracy, hundreds of American cit izens can starve while Mr. Bailey thus masquerades. Foreign Goods Still Coming In. The importers who are rushing goods into the country have the double pur pose of making an extra profit by raising the price on them when the Dingley bill goes into effect and put ting the law into disrepute by making its receipts light during the first year. The importations in April were the largest recorded in the recent commer cial history of the United States. They amounted to $101,305,131, or nearly double those of April, 1896. The rate at which importations have increased since importers became aware that a protective tariff bill would be soon adopted is indicated by the following figures, which show the value of im ports since the month in which Mc Kinley was elected. IMPORTATIONS. November, 1896, $50,043,288; Decem ber, 1896, $58,960,660; January, 1897, $51,354,016; February, 1897, $50,237,377; March, 1897, $76,344,946; April, 1897, $101,305,131. Yet in the face of this showing comee the recent announcement by a leading commercial agency that the sales ol goods in April were within a small fraction of the amount in the most prosperous business year which the country has seen for a long time. Thai there is a genuine revival in business activity is apparent, not alone froir this announcement, but from the state ments of the press, irrespective of par ty, in every section of the country. Money Circulates. An interest rate of three and a hall per cent is very low; yet a railroad company which put a hundred million dollars of bonds upon the market re cently at that rate of interest bad nc difficulty in finding capital to accepi them. The people who are indus triously insisting that the United State: should have more money find it diffl cult to hold this position when such quantities of money are seeking invest* ment at so low an interest rate. Free Sliver Theorlei Punctured. Some of the assertions of the silver orators of the last campaign read curiously now. For instance, that one in which they Insisted that farm prod ucts and silver kept pace In rise and fall la especially amusing. In view of the fact that farm products have steadily risen in value In the past eight months, while silver has gone in the other direction. Silver has, in the last few weeks, reached the lowest point In its history, while wheat in that same time has reached a selling price double that which existed at the very time that these arguments were being most vigorously presented. The Kansas Populists are reported in a state of distress over the condition of the country. Prosperity has set in in that state without the adoption of the free coinage of silver or any other of their numerous nostrums of this char acter. Prices of cattle, hogs, wheat, corn and farm products of all kinds have advanced and there are more signs of activity and prosperity fol lowing the rejection of the free coin age of silver than the state has seen for many years. These disgusted gentry are now making bon-flres of their recent cam paign speeches in which they insisted that the low farm prices in this coun try were due to the treatment which silver had received. The country re jected their proposition for the free and unlimited coinage of silver and simultaneously with that action prices of farm products began to rise and have steadily advanced, while silver has steadily gene in the other direc tion. Peru** Action • Blow to Sllverlte*. Little Peru Is Just now the subject of a good deal of attention from all parts of the world by reason of the fact that on May 10 her new currency system went Into effect. This system creates the gold standard and prohibits the importation of silver coin, the purpose of this prohibition being to maintain the standing and nominal value of the silver coin already In the country. Commenting upon this action by Peru, the Macon Telegraph, a Democratic paper, says: "The statesmen of little Peru are wiser than the new breed of our own country, who spring from the mining camps of the west." . Q. H. WILLIAMS. The World's Gold Output. The Engineering and Mining Jour nal, an excellent unofficial authority, represents that the world’s production of gold for the year 1896 exceeded that of the previous year by nearly $17,500, 000, while It was fully $43,500,000 great er than that of 1894. In this estimate the production by countries was as fol lows: United States..$ Africa . Australia . Russia. Mexico . India. China. Colombia. Drazll. Germany . Guiana (Brl’sh) Guiana (Fr'ch). A’strla-H’ng’y . Other countries 1896. 57,000,000 45.250.000 43.710.000 31.600.000 6.990.000 6,000,000 5.170.000 3.100.000 2.480.000 2.390.000 2.185.000 1.875.000 1.870.000 8.920.000 1895. 46.830.000 44.545.000 42.795.000 31.780.000 5.600.000 4.500.000 4.650.000 3.185.000 2.230.000 2.355.000 2.170.000 1.865.000 1.830.000 6.77P.OOO Total .$218,500,000 $201,105,000 The estimate for the United States by the director of the mint falls short of the figures given In this table by Ihe large margin $5,500,000, but It is be lieved by experts that the grand total for '96, when made up from full and accurate information, will come very near to $220,000,000. Attention Is call ed to the alleged and generally admit ted fact that the production of gold last year was largely In excess of the value of both gold and silver produced In all countries in.any year prior to 1S73—the year of “the crime.” As late as 1888 the total production of gold was only half that of '9G. Pern Deserts Silver. The state department at Washing ton has received official information of the suspension of silver coinage In Peru. The decree putting into effect the new system of coinage in that country tells the same old story. The fluctuation of exchange arising in the constant depression of silver has forced the government, as a measure of protection, to suspend the coinage of national silver money, and the white metal thus drops to an ordinary article of commerce. This is the history of silver the world over, and the action of the Peruvian government will occa sion no surprise. But it will cause dis may in the ranks of the silverites, who thus lose another of their bright and shining examples. One after another all the nations of the world, great and small, which still cling to silver coin age, are responding to the natural tendency of the times, and relegating silver to its proper position in the ex changes of the world. The advocates cf bimetallism will And little consola tion in the action of Peru, and the free silverites none at all; yet neither can make any complaint, for it is based solely upon universal trade conditions, which are beyond the control of any man, body of men or nation, and here in, after all, lies the key to the entire financial question.—Philadelphia North American. The ordinary American fox skins to the amount of seventy or ninety thou sand are annually sold in London at prices varying from fifty cents to $4. These skins are great favorites In east* i era countries, such as Turkey.Greece, Russia and Bulgaria. Protection Takes terns Strides. The most significant sign ot the times In the political world Is the revolu tion now going on in the South, its awakening to the loss It has suffered. from the Democratic “tariff for rev enue only" system, and Its rapid con version to the Republican doctrine of protection. That this change Is now going on Is beyond dispute, and Is proved by the utterances of dozens of Democratic newspapers in every South ern state. Some of them, to be sure, are grudging In their admissions that the Southern people are becoming ad vocates of protection, but that very ef fort to belittle the movement only goes to prove the strength it has al ready attained. The Times of Canton, Miss., pub lished in a section that has no coal, iron or manufacturing interests, cornea boldly out with the following state- i?5 ment: It is plainly evident to the Intelli- . gent and watchful observer of passing events that the time is not far distant when the material Interest of the South will in all probability work a revolution In Bentlment on the tariff question. Protection Is now sought from Egyptian long-staple imported In to this country, and rightly so. The su gar Interests and various other inter ests will seek protection. The labor ing people will want it from the pau per labor of Europe—like the labor ele ment North. The recent election was carried by the laboring people of the North, not by being bought up or in timidated by employers, but from a sensible and well-defined idea of pro-' tectlon. The political complexion at the South cannot long remain sb It ta> now; negro domination and force bills' are things of the past. We are In at state of transition, both financially and politically. A Democratic newspaper of New Or leans says: ouuauie protection on sugar ror ien> years will, in ail probability, enable on to produce our own supplies of sugar,, and save that large outlay of cash an-t nually given to foreigners for that pur pose. This is from the Richmond (Va.) Dispatch: Well, it does look a little incon sistent, from a political point of view, for cotton planters to be asking for protection. But since pretty much ev erything else is to be protected, andl free Egyptian long-staple cotton would} put the Sea Island cotton raisers at the mercy of the New England cotton manufacturers, It would be Inconsis tent with common sense for the Sea1 Island, planters not to try to protect' themselves. One of the strongest admissions that the Wilson bill has hurt the South la from a Vicksburg, Miss., paper, and reads: The discovery that for every dollar’s worth of trade our lumber manufact urers have gained abroad they have,. ^ lost three dollars’ worth at home is ai stubborn, conclusive fact that Wllson ism is not the thing for Mlsslssippl’h lumber interests.—Cincinnati Com mercial Tribune. Currency Heform. The first need of the government la for revenue sufficient to meet its ex penses. The Republicans propose to meet that need by passing a bill to Increase revenuea The Republicans believe, too, that a protective meas ure, which will encourage American industries, will help to restore pros perity. They propose to pass such a> > measure. ’ The Dingley bill, even as modified by th6 senate, is a bill for protection and revenue. When the government has plenty of revenue it can correct the deflclences in its currency system. The best ele- < merits of the Democrats, who honestly want currency reform, must admit that they cannot get as many as a half dozen of their party In congress to: agree to retiring greenbacks, which is the only measure of currency refoim they suggest. The way to get rid of greenbacks, and all the other floating obligations of the government, is to provide plen ty of revenue, and put the people of the country at work.—Louisville Com mercial. * Pancake Day. The day preceding the opening of the Lenten season Is Shrove Tuesday, deriving its name from the ancient practice in the church of Rome of con fessing sins and being shrived or shroved—that is, obtaining absolution. This Is a season of mirth and amuse ment. At Newcastle-upon-Tyne the great bell of St. Nicholas is tolled at 12 o’clock at noon, when all business ceases; this is known as "the ringing of the pancake bell,” and all day pan cakes are baked and devoured. In tho lime of Elizabeth it was a practice at Eton for the cook to fasten a pancake to a crow—the ancient equivalent for the knocker—upon the school door. The object of the pancakes was really to» use up the eggs, grease, lard and drippings, which were forbidden on and after Ash Wednesday, and in the monasteries such pancakes as the monks were unable to eat were distrib uted to the poor at the gates. Another good reason for this custom is that they proved a tolerable stay to the appetite during the long tours of wait ing to be “shrived” in church.—Amer ican Kitchen Magazine. A Dead Bicycle* A man in LewiBton, Me., where bi cycles are taxed, refused to pay a tax on his bicycle because it Is worn out and useless. He demands to know of the assessors whether they could tax a man for a dead horse. If not, ho wishes to know why he should pay for a dead bicycle, with a punctured wheel* —New York Tribune.