-2 *3-3-33**13 4333^ My Fellow Laborer. r * s tfc ili «ac«* * By H. RIDER HAGGARD. $ CHAPTER IV. HEN once we bad made up our minds to get married, we both of us came to the conclusion that the sooner we did so the better; more especially as the introduction of a new factor into our relationship was to m y u naccustomed . mind in a certain sense improper and Irksome, although by no means un pleasant. Also it wasted time and -tended to direct our attention from iht • vast undertaking to which we were pledged. Accordingly, within a very few days of the occurrence already de : scribed, I visited a register, and hav ing, as it seemed to me, paid several unnecessary fees, provided myself with a license. On my way back I walked down Fleet street, thinking amiably -of getting .married and Dr. Johnson, and intending to take the omnibps at Charing Cross. As I went I happened to look up, and my eye fell upon a no tice to the effect that a certain well known life assurance company had its offices within the building opposite. Then it was that the idea first oc curred to me that I ought to insure my life, so that, should anything hap pen to me, Fanny might have some thing to keep her from poverty. As it was, she would have absolutely nothing. All that I had, and that my wife had brought with her, was strictly settled upon the boy John in such a way that I could not even give my subsequent wife a life interest in it, or a part of it. I stopped there in the street, and having given the matter a few moments’ consideration, came to the conclusion that it was my duty to provide for Fanny to small extent— say two thousand pounds. upon this decision. I crossed the road-way, and, entering the office, some inquiries from a clerk. As it happened, the doctor attached to the company was at that moment in at tendance and disengaged, so thinking that I could not do better than get a disagreeable business over at once, 1 sent up my card and asked to see him. The messenger returned presently, •with a request that I would “step up,” which I accordingly did, to find myself, to my astonishment, in the presence of an old fellow-student of my own, with whom I had in former days been tolerably intimate, but whom I had not seen for years. We greeted each other cordially enough, and after a few minutes’ talk I told him the business I had in hand, and he began his medical examination with the series of stock ''questions which doctors always put upon these occasions. The only point upon which he dwelt at all was insanity, and he was so persistent upon this matter that I per ceived he had heard some of the rumors about me being mentally de ranged, which my friends and relations had so materially assisted to spread. However, 1 got through that part of the business, and then I undid my shirt, and he proceeded with the phy sical examination. First he applied the stethoscope to my heart, and quickly removed it, evidently satisfied. Then he placed it over my right lung and listened. While he did so, I saw his face change, and a thrill of fear shot through me as it suddenly came lo my mind that I had experienced some trouble there of late, of which I had taken no notice, and which had, in deed, quite passed out of my mind. Next be tried the other lung, and placed the stethoscope on the table. “What is the matter?” I asked, keep ing as calm a face as I could, for I could tell from his look that there was something very wrong. “Come, Gosden, you are a medical man yourself, and a clever one, and ; there is no need for me to tell you about It.” . ' “Upon my word,” I answered, “I know nothing of what you mean. I have not bothered about my own health for years; but, now I think of It, I have had some local trouble on the chest, last winter especially. What Is it? It is better to know the worst.” “Our rule here,” he answered dryly, "is not to make any communication to the person examined; but, as we are brother practitioners, I suppose I may dispense with It, and tell you at once that I cannot recommend ydur life to the board to be insured upon any terms. That is what is the matter with .you, old fellow,” and he went on, in terms too technical for me to write down here, to describe the symptoms of one of the most deadliest, and yet most uncertain, forms of lung disease, in short to pass sentence of death up on me. I do not think I am a coward, and I hope I took it well. The bitter irony of the whole thing lay in the fact that while I was in active practice, I had made this form of disease a special study, and used to flatter myself that I could stop it, or at any rate stave it off indefinitely, if only I could get at it in time. I might have stopped my -own, if I had known about it. Ah! who shall heal the physician? “Well, there you are, Gosden,” went on my friend; “you know as much about it as I do; you may live three years, and you may live thirty, but the odds are against you lasting five.' You know what an uncertain thing it is. There is only one thing certain about it, and that is, that it will kill you sooner or later. I speak plainly because we are both accustomed to face these sort ot facts. Perhaps you had better take another opinion.” I shook my head. Now that my at* tention had been called to It, no opinions could help me. He was per fectly right, I might go very shortly, or I might live till well on into mid dle life. As the event has proved, I hare lived, but I am not far from the end of my tether now. “Are you of opinion," I asked, "that my form of disease is likely to prove hereditary ?” I knew what bis answer would be, but I put the question as a forlorn hope. “Of course. I should consider that It would certainly be hereditary; and, w'hat is more, it is extremely probable that your wife would contract It also. But why do you ask? You are not go ing to get married again, are you?” “I am engaged to be married.” "Well,” he replied, “of course it is Ian awkward thing to talk to a man about, but If you take my advice, you will be a little more honorable than most people are under the circum stances, and break the match off.” “I am quite of your opinion,” I said, “and now I will bid you good-day.” “Well, good-bye, Gosden. I don’t think It will be of any use my making a report to the board unless you wish it. Don’t worry yourself, old fellow, and keep your chest warm, and you may see fifty yet!” In another minute I was in Fleet street again, and felt vaguely astonish ed that it should look Just the same as it did a quarter of an hour before. Most of us have experienced this sensa tion when some radical change of dr cumstance has suddenly fallen upon us. It seems curious that the great hurrying world should be so dead to our individuality and heedless of our most vital hopes. A quarter of an hour before, I was a man with a pros pect of a long and useful, perhaps a most eminent career.' Also I was Just going to be married to a congenial wife. Now I was, as I then thought, doomed to an early grave, and as for the wife, the Idea had to be abandoned. I was in honor bound to abandon it for her sake, and for the sake of pos sible children. •Well, I walked to Charing Cress, and took the omnibus' as I had intend ed. I remember that there was a fat woman in it, who insisted upon carry ing a still fatter pug dog, and quar reled with the conductor seriously in consequence. All this took place in the month of December, and by the time I got home it was beginning to grow dark. I went straight into the study: Fanny was there, and the lamp was lighted. When I entered she flung down her pen, and jumping up, came forward and kissed tae; and, as she did so, I thought what a splendid look ing woman she had grown into,with her intellectual face and shapely form, and somehow the reflection sent a sharp pang through me. Now that I knew that I must lose her, it seemed to me that I loved her almost as I had loved my dead wife, and indeed I have often noticed that we never know how much we value a thing till we are calif* up on to resign it. Certainly I noticed it now. “Well, dear,” she said, “have you got it? Why, what is the matter with you?" “Sit down, Fanny,” I answered, “and I will tell you, only you must try .to bear it as well as you can.” She seated herself in her calm, de termined way, although I could see that she was anxious, and I began at the beginning, and went straight through my story without skipping a word. As soon as she understood its drift her face set like a stone, and she heard me to the end without interruption or movement. “Well, Geoffrey,” she said, in a low voice, when at last I had done, “and what is to be the end of it all?” “This: that our marriage cannot come off—and death!” “Why cannot our marriage come off?” “I have told you why, dear. A man afflicted as I am has no right to send his affliction down to future genera tions. People are fond of calling the inevitable result of such conduct the decree of Providence, but it is the cause of most of the misery of the world, and as medical men know well enough, a wicked and selfish thing to do.” “The world does not seem to think so. One sees such marriages every iiav.” “Yes, because the world is blind, and mad, and bad.” “I don’t agree with you, Geoffrey,” she answered, with passion. "Our lives are our own, posterity must look after Itself. We have a right to make the best of our lives, such as they are, without consulting the interests of those who may never exist. If they do exist, then they must take their chance, and bear their burdens as we bear ours. All this talk about the fu ture and posterity is nonsense. What will posterity care for us that we should care for it? We cannot affect It one way or the other; it is hopeless to expect to turn Nature out of her path. We are nothing but feathers blown sbout by the wind, and all we can do is to go down where the wind blows us, and when we fall, we fall as softly as we may.” I looked up in astonishment. I had no idea that Fanny held views as merciless, and, opposed to all pure altruism as they were, in a sense, un answerable. Indeed, I bad heard her express notions directly contrary, and at the moment was totally at a loss to account for the change. Of course, however, the explanation was easy enough. Theory had come into con flict with interest, and, as is often the case, even in the most highly developed people, it was so much the worse tor the theory. ‘■I am sorry to hear you speak so. dear,** I said. “I hoped and thought that you would have cupported me In a very painful resolution. The blow la hard enough to bear, even with your help; without. It Is almost un endurable.” '' " She rose from her chair, and then for the first time I realized the depth.of her emotion. Her beautiful eyc3 flashed, her bosom heaved, and she slowly crushed the paper she held In her hand to shield her face from the fire, into a shapeless mass, and then threw It down. "You have no heart,” she said. "Do you suppose It is nothing to me, who was going to marry you within a week, to lose my husband and to be obliged to fall back again into this half life, this very twilight of a life? Oh! Geof frey, think again,” and she stretched out her arms toward me, and looked at me, end spoke In accents of Im passioned tenderness. "Think,” she went on, "can you not give up your scruples for me? Am I not worth straining a point In your conscience? There is nothing in the world, Geof frey, that a man can profit by in ex change for his love. Soon this dis ease will take a hold of you, and then you will grow weak, and miserable, and incapable of enjoyment. Live now while you can, and leave the conse quences to Providence, or rather to me workings oi tnose uncnangmg rules which we call Providence. Look at me: I am beautiful, and I love you, and my intellect is almost as great as your own. Don’t throw me away for a theory, Geoffrey.” All the time that she was speaking she drew slowly nearer to me, her arms outstretched and her great eyes glowing and changing in the shaded light. And now the arms closed round me, and she lay upon my heart and gazed into my face, till I thought that I should he overcome. But, thank Heaven! somehow for conscience' sake I found the resolution to hold to what I knew to be right. I think it was the recollection of my dear wife that came over me at that moment, and Induced a sudden feeling of revulsion to the beautiful woman who lay in my arms,: and who did not scruple to resort to such means to turn me from my duty.' Htgl it not been for the thought, I am1 sure that being but a man, and there-' fore weak, I should have yielded and then there would have been no possi-, bility of further retreat. As it were, I with a desperate effort, wrenched my self free from her. “It is of no use, Fanny,” I cried, in despair. “I will not do it? I think that it would be wicked for a man in my condition to get married. This dis tresses me beyond measure; but if I yielded to you I should be doing a shameful thing. Forgive me, Fanny, it is not my fault, I did not know. It is hard enough,”' I added, with a na tural burst of indignation, “to be sud denly doomed to a terrible death with out having to go through this agony,” and with a sudden motion I flung the wedding license into the fire. She watched it burn, and then sunk back in the chair, covered her face in her hands and said no more. In this position she remained for nearly half an hour. Then she rose, and with a stern, cold face that it almost frighten ed me to look upon, returned to her work, which was now once more the chief bond between us; nor was the subject of our engagement alluded $o again for many months. Nobody had known of it, and nobody knew that it had come to an end. And so it died and went the way of dead things into what seems to be forgetfulness, but is in truth the gate-way into those new and endless halls of perpetuated life on whose walls evil and unhappy rec ords of the past, blazoned in letters of fire, are the lamps to light us down from misery to misery. (to be continued.) CICILIAN LOVE CHARMS. Home of the Moat Curious and Popular Onee. The love charms of Sicily are many and curious. One, very popular and considered very powerful, is to put in to an eggshell a few drops of the blood of the longing lover, says Macmillan. The shell is exposed to the sun for three days and to the dew for three nights. It is then placed on hot ashes until calcined, when the whole is reduced to a fine powder and administered se cretly in a cup of coffee or a glass of wine to the object of affection. Anoth er charm is for the witch to undress at midnight and tie her clothes up in a bundle, which she places on her head; then, kneeling in the center of her room, she pronounces an incanta tion, at the end of which she shakes her head. If the bundle falls in front of her it is a good sign; should it fall behind her the charm will not avail. Yet another is worked in the follow ing manner: Pieces of green, red and while ribbon are purchased in three different shops, the name of the per son to be charmed being repeated, men tally, each time. The shop-keeper must be paid with the left hand, the ribbon being received in the right. When all the pieces are bought they are taken to a witch, who sets out to And the person to be charmed. On finding him or her the witch mutters to herself, “With these ribbons I bind you to such a one.” Then she returns the ribbons to the purchaser, who ties them be neath his or her left knee and wears them at church. Too l'oolhle. ICnicker—“We had to discharge our pastor because he mispronounced a word.” Bocker—“For such a trifle?" ICnicker—“Yes. He said the dear de parted had gone to “the undiscovered country from whose burn no traveler returns.’ ”—Judge. The Bashl Bazouks seem to be mere ly a somewhat Idealized set of ruifian*, WHAT DO THE BIRDS WHISPER? y ’ v> ■ - fv/.. Grojrer—“Do the wind* whisper through the trees the doom of our ‘Perfidy - and Dishonor’ to American Industries V’ Wilson—“I’m afraid so. And what will our English friends do?” IMPOSTERS ARE AT IT. HAVE SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR “STOCKING UP." Tables Showing Inoroasod Exportation! During tha Spring of INI Oral That of 1890—Hap Delay Prosperity for Many Days. ■ : Washington, D. C., July 21, 1897. The completion of the tariff bill by the senate has given the Importers a much more accurate idea of what its final provisions are to be and they now seem to be engaged in the final round of gathering Into their .warehouses every article upon which the proposed new law is likely to increase the rates of duty. The treasury receipts this month have averaged more than a million dollars a day for the business days of the month and It Is evident that the rush of Importations is going to continue up to the very day of the final enactment of the new law. This means, cf course, that the rev enue during the first few months of the new law will be light. Careful es timates made by experts lead to tbc conclusion that much more than a year’s supply of foreign wools have been brought Into the country in the past four months and that in many other articles the requirements for a year are now in warehouses, duty paid. It Is not Improbable that the custom re. celpts under the new law may drop in its first two or three months to a lower point than has been known in many years, perhaps in the memory of this generation. If this proves to be the fact the people should and doubt less understand the cause—the enor mous importations which have been made in view of the expected increase In duties. No other tariff law in the memory of the present generation has offered this “Hurrah for the Dlngley BUI. special advantage In the period of Its preparation to those desiring to profit by advance importations of a large class of art Idas. The various tariff acts which have been passed since the war have been in every case a re duction in general terms, and conse quently have not stimulated the Im portations prior to their final, enact ment as has been the case in this in stance. The Wilson law increased the rates of duty on sugar and it is well remembered that in this particular ar ticle its final passage was preceded by the importation of enormous quantities of sugar by which alone there was caused a great reduction in the revenues under the unfortunate law during its first few months. But there has been no case since the war tariffs, prior to this one in which the pending measure promised a general advance all along the line, and as a consequence no such incen tive to general over-importation in nearly all classes of articles affected by the tarifT. The result will be that Instead of the revenues being reduced by excessive importations of two or three articles, as was the case three years ago, when the Wilson law went Into effect, the Dingley law, when it takes effect, will find many months’ stock of nearly every class of foreign goods In hand and as a consequence, very light Importations during several months of Its early history,. A few examples will indicate to <>—. extent this enormous Increase of im portations during the past few months. The monthly summary of Finance and Commerce Just issued shows the May Importations of dultable cattle to be 46,975 In number against 10,067 In May of last year, while the April importa tions of cattle In 1897 were 62,849 against 13,411 In April of last year. The May importations of caustic soda amounted to 9,570,755 pounds agalnet 4,229,150 In the corresponding month of last year, while the April Importations were also more than double those of April, 1896. The Importations of chic ory root In May were over 3,000,000 pounds against 1,360,000 in May, 1896, while in April the importations were nearly 8,000,000 pounds against 1,280, 000 of the preceding year. The pros pect of a duty on Egyptian cotton has stirred up the importers of that article, the May importations amounung to 2,500,000 pounds against 1,388,000 In May of the preceding year, while the April importations were nearly 9,000, 000 against a trifle over 5,000,000 in April, 1896. *;• The following tables show the Impor tations of dultable and non-duitable goods during March. April, May and June of the present year compared with the corresponding months in last year. Importation of articles free of duty March to July, 1896-97. .. 1896. March .831,016,387 April . 88,396,639 May . 34.788.242 June . 26.180.398 Importation of dutiable March to July, 1896-97. 1897. 84U14.784 60,889,374 86.708.066 41,160,000 articles March ..836,439,ITS 835.236,660 April .30.063,940 60,433,032 May . 32,472,617 42,666,486 June . 31,033,342 43,660,000 Some idea of the loss of revenue of the Dlngley bill occasioned by these large importations will be shown by the increased customs receipts March, April, May and June of 1897 as com pared with those months of the pre ceding year. This comparison will not of course show the entire loss of rev enue to the Dlngley law, because the duty which would have been collected upon these same articles under that law are several millions in excess of the rates which have been collected on them under the present tariff, but even these figures give something of an idea of the shortage in the customs revenues which may be expected under the Dlngley law during its first few months by reason of the importations which preceded its enactment. The customs receipts In the past four months compared with those of the corresponding four months of the pre ceding year, are as follows: Custom receipts March to July, 1896 1897. 1896. 1897. March .813,344,215 J22.833.876 April . 11.815,731 24.454,331 May . 10.V'9,:U 16,895.011 June . 11,351.808 21.660,161 J. H. WILLIAMS. South Amorlcan Ignorance, The imports Horn the United States to the Argentine Republic in 1896 amounted to $11,210.475. The exports from the Argentine Republic to the United States amounted to $6,401,362. These official figures Bhow the differ ence in the commercial balance be tween your country and mine of $5, 000,000 against the Argentine Repub lic.—Carlos L!x Klett, editor from the Argentine Republ'c. at Cincinnati. O. It is surprising how Intensely ignor ant our South American friends are of the actual trade affairs of their own countries. As a matter of fact, during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1896, we bought from Argentina goods worth $9,313,385 admitting almost the whole cf them free of duty, only $379,141 woTth paying any tariff through our customs department. On the other hand, we sold only $5,491,216 worth of American goods for shipment to Ar gentina. Instead of the trade balance being $5,000,000 against the Argentine Republic, it was $3,822,169 against the United States. Japanese Protection. A special dispatch from Berne, Switzerland, says that the Bundesrath has refused to ratify the commercial treaty with Japan, owing to the pro hibitive duty placed upon clocks and watches. And this is the same Japan that so recently protested against certain Pro tective features of the Dingley tariff! REPUBLICAN HOT SHOT. Indications now warrant the asses t!on that the new tariff law wlfl be suf ficient to meet the running expenses at the government after the first few months of its operation. The fact that it will not produce sufficient money to meet running expenses In its early history will be because of the fact that several months’ supply of foreign goods Including a year’s supply of foreign wool, have been Imported Into th« country during the consideration of the bill, and consequently the Imports ol the first few months will be compara tively light and the earnings of the law correspondingly small. The bounty on beet sugar was tht closing proposition of the Republican senators at Washington. All othei work upon the tariff bill had been com pleted. A proposition to pay a quartet of a cent per pound bounty on all beet sugar produced In the United States during five years after the enactment of the pending tariff bill was offered by Senator Allison, and would have been promptly passed but for the threat of Chairman Jones of the Democratic national committee and other Demo- , cratic senators, who announced that they would delay the passage of the bill indefinitely rather than allow the insertion of this provision of the bill It Is well enough that the people ol the United States should understand that It was the Democratic party in the senate, led by the chairman of the Democratic national committee, which threatened to filibuster Indefinitely and thus delay the tariff bill, for which the people are asking, rather than consent to this slight encouragement of the best sugar Industry In which the farmers Iksik foe, hr. rniltafa of the United States are so greatly in terested. "It is in such times as these that demagogues thrive; it is in just such times that they should be shunned. They can lead men astray, but they can not correct a single real or imagin ary grievance under which men suffer. There is too much demagoguelsm abroad in the land; there is too muck false doctrine taught pertaining te governmental functions; there is toe much encouragement of the spirit oi socialism, and all that it implies, in cluding communistic and chimerical schemes for a ‘social democracy,’ so called; there is too much toleration oi disrespect for eburts and constituted authorities; there, is too much clamor for class legislation; there Is too much inculcation of the idea that men can become rich without effort—by the mere flat of the government instead oi earning wealth In the good old fash ioned way; and there is too much at tention paid to cranks, blatherskites, and political adventurers, entitled to no consideration, but who seem to have obtained the public ear, and are seek ing to pull down the pillars of society." —David Bennett Hill. Indications warrant the belief that the new tariff law will be satisfactory to a larger number of people than any other tariff measure ever put upon the statute books in this country. The prosperity already visible among the farmers and the prospect that it la to be continued has been recognized by the financiers of the east, who hav» just Issued orders to their representa tives in the Mississippi valley to return to the liberal business methods which existed prior to the present depression by making farm loans freely at low rates of Interest. Sliver leader* are quarreling among' themselves, Mr. Bryan having indicat* ed great dissatisfaction over the fact that all features of the Chicago plat* form, except that of 1G to X, are being * neglected by the Democrats in many states, while Mr. Towne, on the other hand, is reported as urging that thi* course be followed and all features o! the Chicago platform, except silver, Ig nored. The newk tariff law will thoroughly meet the popular demand.changes made by the conference committee being such as to bring it thoroughly in line with the wishes of the people, especially those features relating to sugar, wool, and other agricultural interests. It is rumored that Mr. Bryan will find himself so- busy in Nebraska during the coming campaign that he will not have time to go to Ohio for those three hundred speeches which he promised. The fact is, the Ohio convention gave William J. a cold shoulder by omitting to do anything for him except to give him “three cheers’’ when his name was brought to the front. Whether Ohio) Is tired of Bryan, or Bryan is tired of Ohio, Is a little uncertain, but them Is, nevertheless, a possibility that they may not pull together in harmony tht% fan. - • £