'' ' " t CHAPTER I. Around the boose the wind was shriek Ing with mournful vehemence, now and then Hinging great drops of rain against the window pane. The moon, which half mi hour before wai shining with exquisite brilliancy, now lay hidden behind banks of heavy clouds; and the fitful gusts of wind that swept round corners and moan p1 through the pine branches betokened a storm before the morning, while np from the sea came the sad monotonous roar of ifie wares aa they thundered against the giant rocks. "There la thunder in the air," said Lady Jlry, looking up thoughtfully. ' I.aay Mary looked older than Bhe really ana; but her face was still beautiful in I)ite of years of trouble and 111-hoalth. np was a tall, stately woman witn se verely aristocratic features and the dis tinguished air which cannot be acquired. She was knitting placidly. Occasionally she raised her head to cast a glance of unaffected tenderness upon a lad of about hfteen who was bending over a book at a tnfl table near. He was Lady Mary's p!w, the son of her dead brother, and the last of bjs name. In IfeU yooUj; fui earl all her hopes were centered; and 'e lavished upon him a mother's love who had never been a mother. 4 Snfed expression passed over her .fate aa, he storm developed. On just such a ojh.t as this ber brother, Lord Wriothesley, the father of the lad before her, had been thrown from his horse and brought home, to, the Towers lifeless. On such a night two long years back her true love, to whom she. was to have been mar ried on that day week, was drowned off St. Wi Head. Alas, for such storms as these) They boded no good to the old race to which she belonged, and which seemed to be now fast drawing to its 'clone. lBgii") i f'nat a nightr said Lady Mary, with a nervons start "I like saW the lad, holding bis head , erect, aa teut enjoying the warfare without -What a aea there most be on j io-nijhtr". . - 3ts-" i pushed back his chair and walked 'toward the window nearest to him. Half ' way across the room, h,owevr, he came to a standstill. His faes turned pale, and his eyes wore an eager, strained expres sion s though he were listening for Something. At the same moment Lady Mary cried out abruptly: . IVWbat was that?" ' She, too, had risen, and now moved nearer to the boy. Her tall figure was drawn np to its fnlt height; her fine eyes hone brightly. All the petty tremors that a ad shaken her a few minute before were now gone, having given place to a sudden feeling of strength and courage. She stood calm and self -possessed, al though anxious. Above the storm they bad beard a shrill, wild cry, which even now, though faint and walling, was strong enough to pierce the riotous war of the gale and the daah- lug of the rain drops upon the gravel with out. It was the cry of a child in sore dis tress. It sounded more plaintive and weak every moment, but it seemed to be coming nearer to the house. "Summon the servants; it is some poor ereature in distreaar cried Lady Mary, making a rapid movement toward the bell. "No, no; I will go myself," said the boy, walking to the window that opened on to a long balcony. "Id this storm, Fulke la this rain? Oh, no, darling!" she entreated; hut be was not listening to ber. Lord Wriothesley pulled open the ease ment with a vigorous hand, and there, shivering in the darkness, stood a forlorn looking little thing that made Lady Mary and ber nephew shiver. It was a child a mere babe. The cloak that had been wrapped round it bad fallen back, and now the pretty, rounded, uplift ed arms were wet with the rain. The soft yellow locks that should have been some mother's tendereat pride were tangled and wet The small face looked ghastly, and tears fell from the little one's eyes, while gasping sobs came from her lipa. The next violent gnat of wind dashed the poor little waif against the aid of the open window. The tiny baby bands clutched convulsively at the wood work; hut no cry escaped her lipa thea. Her strength seemed gone. "It la a child a child r cried Lady Mary, la a compassionate tone, harrying to the window. The little oee, however, bad caught sight of Wriotbealey, and held oat bar arms to him. Aa be ran eagerly to ber and carried her Into the warm room, she clung to Una affectionately, and ottered a childish algh of relief that west straight to the boy's heart The little wet arms claaped his neck, the frightened face was pressed against bis shoo Id er. Bhe was too young to re son: bat she knew that she was safe she waa with frienda. The rain do longer made her feel cold, the bowling wind ed to drag at her dock, and, better than all else, the awful darkness waa gone. Lady Maty took her from Fsike, placed ber on the hearth rag dot to the cheery fire, and shook the rata from ber hair. Her dothes were foaad to be wringing wet. a a amid waa hastily summooed elothes war produced it for the tiny vis itor's aae, borrowed, ao doubt, from the good wesnnn at the ledge, whoa babies seemed to swarm aO over the place. Her pretty hair was dried, aad shoae bow la the lamplight Ilka threads of gold; aad her hrge. grave, wistfnl cyan melancholy eye for a tiny mortal who atoM not kave been mare than foar yoaas aid lighted ay a slsatamrhr retty face. Waea Lady Mary qasetloasd bar aa at her name, she would say nothing beyond a attaint asoaosyllabia that ao aae seals' onderstasd. "Mg" It sounded Haw; bat the met eallghteaed Eagttah Mat eoaid make little of that "I eeafaav It is tee aar as." said Lady Mary, who waa t child oa her lap with aa afcw sak. "Wear, dear, how af tea aad her seer "I think she must be a stranger's child," said the boy, who wan kneeling on the hearth rug ami staring at the baby, whose solemn caze delighted him. "The ser vants know every soul in the village; but they don't know her." i "Nan-iia."' said the child, glancing round ber inquiringly, and then up into the face of Lady Mary, who laughed and kissed the earnest eyes. "That doesn't tell us much," she said. "See haw she laughs now! What a pretty rogue it is! I wish I could make out ber uame." "Perhaps she hasn't an earthly one. She may have dropped from the skies." rejoin ed Fulke, laughing. "If go, we shall have to give her a name." "It should be a marvelously pretty name to suit ber," said Lady Mary, gazing ten derly iuto the little one's charming face. "Why, there, you have christened her!" cried Wriothesley. gayly. "She shall be called 'Marvel,' even though it be for this night only. Marvel" bending toward the child "do you like your new came, baby?" 2:.. i !,--. ' The child nodded her bead sagely, and tea wriggled off Lady Mary's lap and toddled up to the boy. As he took her in his arms the door was opened, and the maid who had undressed the little wan derer again entered the room. 'If you please, my lady, we found this locket pinned Inside the child's dress." As sb? spoke, the girl held out a fist gold locket, very plain, and rather battered. There was surprise in Lady Mary's face as she took the trinket. She looked at it seriously for a moment, as if heitatlng, and then opened It Inside was the pic ture of a young man with a handsome. aristocratic, but reckless looking face, and with a displeasing expression of mockery in his light-blue eyes; the mouth, bow ever, was beautifully formed, and the brow was broad and open. Having dismissed the maid. Lady Mary glanced thoughtfully from the picture to the child, and then back again. No, there was no likeness. The morning broke bright with sunlight, j and as calm and clear as though the pre-: vlous night's storm had never been; but; it brought to the Towers n anxious moth er crying for ber child. Day after day, week after week went by, but still the child remained as alone in the world as though she had Indeed, aa Fulke had sug gested, "dropped from the sky." At last Lady Mary's secret belief thst the child had been purposely abandoned was declared by common consent to be the correct solution of the mystery not cru elly abandoned, perhaps, but designedly placed within Lady Mary's reach by some one who was aware of the clemency and love that adorned her life and endeared her to all the villagers for miles around. CHAPTER n. The years passed away swiftly; and, as by degrees servanta left or died or got married, and others who were stranger to that part of the country took their places, the event of that wild night was almost forgotten, and the child came to be considered as one of the family. She was at first an amusement, then a joy, and at last a comfort to Lady Mary, whose health did not improve as time ware on. She took the little one into ber inmost heart, and cherished ber there without detriment to the love she bore Fulke. In a marvelously short space of time, aa it seemed to her, the boy sprang into early manhood, obtained his commission to the Hussars, and quitted the home nest. Lady Mary took great pains with the girl's educstion. A governess taught ber all the English that a girl should know, and three times a week masters came from town. Marvel accepted thea all, and waa docile aad obedient. Imbibing their knowledge with little trouble to her self; but the delight aba felt la learning she reserved for such leasooa aa were giv en to ber by the rector, with whom she waa a special favorite. He was unmar ried, a student and a book-worm a strange man who hitherto bad bean ab sorbed la himself; bat the child took hold of bran and dragged him whether he would or not into the warm sunlight of her own young Ufa. The first knowledge of the world's pain. the first touch of anguish, came to her through Pulke. Ha sailed for India, and suddenly it seemed to ber aa if the whole earth had become empty. What a void his going left! He started foil of hope and pride, aa a young soldier should, leav ing behind him a sad old woman whose every desire waa bound up in bin and a slender, mournful child, who waa hardly to be consoled. It waa early morning, of a perfect Jose day; nine o clock had oaly lost been struck, with quite a reprehensible waste of time, by the slow old clock la the cor ridor. Marvel had come upstairs with ber auntie's breakfast sod "the post," and was now waiting while Lady Mary sipped her chocolate and dipped into ber eorre spondeace. She was very feeble aow, aad quite unequal to rising before as The girl was gating oat of the window, when an agitated voice withia the room roused her from ber musing. "Marvel, come to me! He is to be hers on the nineteenth; I have bad a definite line from bias the nineteenth 1" cried Lady Mary, la ber eager, feeble way, "The nineteenth r said the girt. "Why, it la quite close! It sounds Uke to-morrow; aad, after all these long years oh, H la laeredible!" "Noa sense, dear child! Why, wa have been looking forward to It for the last sis months." "I know; and yet It never seemed Im possible until now, when it Is so near. Wonder" -she hesitated, and thea went aa "I wonder if be will be ehangedT Greatly, I meea. It all seams aa wag agal When be went, I was only twelve; aow, I am seventeen, aad ha moat be twenty -eight quite old it sounds, doesn't itr "Qalte young, dearest," said Lady At thst moment one of the servants opened the door, sud, with a little cour tesy to Lady Mary, addretwed Marvel. "Mrs. Bunch says. Miss Crmen. that she would be very much obliged if you could come to h.-r to the still-room. She would have conic to you, but " "I shall tie there in a few minutes,"" said Marvel. Mrs. Hunch was the hoiisekceier, and of late Marvel had given all the house hold directions. The servants Indeed, every one culled her "Miss Craven," that being the Wriotbealey family name. The poor child had no name of her own, so Lady Mary had lent her one. Marvel made a sign to the girl, who withdrew. "Would yon like to speak to Bunch now about his rooms Fulke's?" she ask ed. "He will have the old suite, I sup pose; but years make things look dingy, and I think the rooms would require " "Everything!" cried Lady Mary, with U touch of her ol imyylsivenen, "I would have nothing 'less" than perfection. What is it not his home-coming? What then should we spare? See to It dearest. It is his e.wn house, remember; and vhy should he Now that I think of It, Marvel now that he has come to man's estate surely a better suite should be as signed him! The west wing has some nice roomseh?" "They would be strange to him," ob jected the girl, tenderly. "Let him have the old ones those he has been picturing to himself when first he comes; they will seem more like home. Afterward he can manage as he likes." She went nearer to Lady Mary, and, stooping over ber, kissed ber. "Do you know," she said, slowly, with a pretty childish regretfnlness in her tone, "I don't like those words of yours 'man's estate!" Oh, auatie, I wish he were a boy again!" CHAPTER III. It was one of the Honorable Mrs. Ve rvain's musical evenings, and nearly ev ery one worth knowing io town was pres ent. It was considerably after midnight when a young man, entering an antecham ber, added yet another to the already numerous assembly. He made his way to where he saw Mrs. Verulam standing in what looked like a cloud of yellow net relieved here aud there by a gleam of yellow topaz. "At last!" she said, giving him her hand. "I had ceased to hope I had quite given you up." 'I had given myself up, for the marter of that," returned Lord Wriotbealey. "But I knew how to wait and, as yon see, all things have come to me." "So embarrassed as all that?" said she, arching her pretty brows. "A man ao rich is jingularly ungrateful wen he wears a countenance as dissatisfied as ; yours," she said, iaugMng maliciously ana leaning toward him with an affected air of sympathy. "Who Is she then? Can I help you to look for her?" "Whom should 1 be looking for? Have I not fonnd you?" "That suffices, my good cousin. I shall let you off the rest," retorted she, mak ing him a little moue. "We have loved each other too well and too long for that Yet one more question. Why are you not at the Towers just now? You were due there on the nineteenth eb? "Business, bos hies, business thst most hateful of all things! I fancied myself sure of my leave, or I shouldn't have nam ed the nineteenth when writing to Lady Mary; but the fact la the colonel can t let me off until the day after to-morrow." Something in Wrivthesley's face pus sled Lady Verulam. He was not attend ing U what ahe waa saying, and be was looking over ber shoulder at some object behind her. He did not actually start, but an indefinable light gleamed from bis eyes. It waa a light not to be mistaken by so clever a student of human nature as Lady Verulam, aad it betrayed blm to ber. "Ah, so the lady la here to-nigbt, after all!" she said, slowly, turning her bead and looking toward the end of the room, where stood a small group of four or five people. The party had only just entered, and the central figure stood out from the others rather prominently. She was a tall wom an, slight without being thin, clad la an exquisite brocade of an aqua-marine shade. The other members of the group were men, and they seemed to follow her and bend over her with an assiduity thst bespoke an eager desire to plea. Ho it Is Mrs. Scarlett?- said Mrs. Ve rulam, turning again to ber cousin aad speaking somewhat excitedly. "My dear Fulke, I can hardly congratulate you. "Certainly not it is far too soon, he retorted, with a laugh, purposely misun derstanding ber words. "Ah sor she asld, coldly. "It Is of course well to understand how things are oing. You knew Mrs. Scarlett la In dia r "For a month or six weeks a mere mo ment out of one's Ufa in fact I made ber acquaintance lust before leaving, "You both returned to England la the same ship, did you not?" "Yea." "Another six weeks! Why, you art qalte old friends! I have heard that a sea-voyage ripens friendship as swiftly aa an Italian sun." "So have I. It baa, however, hardly ripened the friendship yon speak of. As yet Mrs. Scarlett and I are mere ac quaintances." "She does not look like any man's ac quaintance,'' said Mrs. Verulam, vague ly. "Her male friends should be all In all or not at all to her, I should fancy her alsves or nothing." "You dislike ber?" said Wrtotheatey, glancing quickly at kia cousin. "I won der yon asked ber here." "As to thst one moat follow the fash km; and she is the fashion aow. Her fame traveled from India faster than aha did, and though we know she wsa orig inally only the daughter of a petty coun try squire, still we are all very eager to get ber to come to our houses. "Her fame?" said be. aaastkraiagly "As the cleverest beauty of her timet By the bye, who Is that with ber now?" An aid man bad joined the group round Mrs. Scarlett and was shaking hands with her. "The Duke of Dawtry," said Wriothse- lay. "Of course-I shoatd have known.' Mrs. Verulam waa alient for a few mo ments, thea added presently: "Consider ing who she wss, I must do ber the Justice to say she baa made very good running In a abort time alone, too very Uttie help was gives her." "You forget she married wall," said Wriothesley, who was keeping his brow clear by aa almost superhuman effort "Oh, that poor old Mr. Bcarlattr re turned Mrs. Verulam, saruggmg shoulders coatetnptuoualy. "Ha waa society l-ejotid. By this means she wss enabled to make ber bow tu the world he took the theater for ber. as it were; the bell rang, the curtain went up, and, lo! there she was before it must be con fessed a very appreciative audience! Khe has proved herself a hnge success; but to aspire to a duke!" She paused to look at Wriothesley, and it seemed to her that, though his face was impassive, he was not unmoved. He bowed very low to her and crossed the room to where Mrs. Scarlett sat en throned amidst her courtiers, lie stood on the outskirts of her little court, until presently, one after another of her admir ers having moved away, he felt himself almost alone with her. As Wriothesley approached ber Mrs. Scarlett who very seldom gave any man her hand in greeting receivtd him with a smile. "You are late," she said. Her voice was low, clear. Her eyes rested on him thoughtfully for a few moments; aud theo, apparently satisfied with whatever knowledge she had gained, ahe turned them away from him. "Those are kinder words than you bave said to me for many a day; they at least permit me to hope that you have missed me," he said. ' "It is you who have missed something," she said "more than you know." "Not more than I know," he replied, looking at her earnestly. "You I miss al ways; and these last Interminable hours in which I have lieen kept from you, in spite of all my efforts, have been worse than death." "How you squander your talents!" she continued. "Have you no thought for the morrow? If you expend your entire stock of sentiment now, what will you bave in the future?" "You, I hope," be returned, prdptly. "You are bold," she said, presently, yet the boldness of his wooing seemed to please her. She drew her skirts aside as if to grant him a seat beside her. "No; do not let us stay here," he en treated "let me take you to a place where one can breathe In comfort. The con servatories are, comparatively speaking, cool." "So I have been told ever since I came. It is the cry on every lip The rooms are purgatory, the conservatories paradise. Come, let us enter therein T " He bent over ber; bis eyes sought and met hers. He was very handsome, and, suddenly, almost without ber knowledge, as it were, she found (he had risen and waa moving with biin across the room. (To be continued.) THE CARE-FREE VIENNESE. They Barely Take Life Berioaaly, Un ices at a Funeral, "The native Viennese la a Jolly, good- natured, shift! em creature," writes Ed ward A. Stetaer in the Woman's Home Companion. "No people on the earth are ao jolly, or so easily and so oath amused. Oo to the Prater, the largest public park n Europe, and from a hundred differ ent beer-gardens cornea the noiae of tooting brass bands and stamping feat aad beating drum. Merry go-round awing old and young, aad dime mcse- ums and music balls are aa full of peo ple aa they are empty of decency. Oo to the theaters on any night and yon will find tbero crowded by an enthusi astic audience, the galleries filled by noisy students and working -giria. The oo art theaters, which present only le gitimate dramas aad opera, have also their numerous devotee. Oo to the coffee-bouaea, of which there la one on every comer, and yo will find than fail, especially io the afternoon, with marc bants with their nosea la the BAwapapera, and clerks sipping tbsfr Mocha, and oAcara Brooking their ci gar, and cue-puhlag nd card sfcof flJng youths. At night those coffee-houses become the rendearvooa of the lower e lament. I bave never aeea the Viennese serious, unless It be a a funeral, and 1 suppose that even out of that he nan agws to gat some fun. Tat be la sassUy excited, and although loyal and law abiding bis good-ciat ure may qtocaiy turn Into a fiery passion, and a Vien nese riot la a aerioua matter for tba poHce" The Old-Faah towed Soldier. Tba day of tba dashing old aoidier, who did amusingly cool aad brilliant things, seems to have goo by. Oooi tba soldier la still expected ta be, bat tba chance of doing brilliant things hi reduced to a minimum. To UlnstnUe tba way of the oM-faataooed soldier, an Engilah exchange tails of an rxaiott of Private O'Bhangpnaaay, wba wa la tba Indian mutiny, Sbaugh. aa they called him, waa on of the foremost ho an attack oa a pie, or a palace, or aome other gorgeous bmUhnc. and had sot got far Into It before ha came In front of a great mir ror. Instantly be stopped before It, and though tba batten war wtletltng past blm began to admire himself and twirl Ma moatactia. "Bedad. Bhaogh," ha eakl to himsatf. with a gru, "ye'ra a fotne agar of man." Jost then a bullet aaabed to the mirror, breaking tba glass ktto a thoo- sand plem. and obtttantls aba tioa of Shaogb's feasors. "Arrah. there!" ha caTlad angrtty, taming back, "ya'T sbpiled the fotn rfcnr tihat I bad of Lnat Wanwm Bridge. The lancegt wmn brides ta the wortd Is situated at Oalvaston, Tax. It to nor than ttaee miles long, i apans tha Oaivsaaoa Bay, front north to sooth, tt la bwOt mainly of wool and bag an draw. It to also on of If not tha widest bridges fa Ajnerica, al lowing tha passage of throe raMetoa at on tint. Qaits NssrL Digga-Bian. th baa-, glad taa) Btgw-Tbat ao? Of wbai dM be d1 Digaa-Toa ataa what dM ha dm," I MpposaT WWathai WhteaaaNWtorbbttf? Ta) GOLD'S DEADLY ..Oil. ; GOLD STANDARD CONTRACTION PARALYZES tNTERPRISE. Prospects of Future Credits Are ie-struycd-W Have Come to the 1'lace Where the Hoad lirantheal in Which direction Shall We Mover Peienttflc Reform or Drstrurt iou. Whatever credit device may le in vented, whether government or Imuk currency, mJeenialil ' tu gold, or private checks, bills of exchange or other prom ises to pay, the volume of the circula ting medium must u!;imately (Upend ujkju the volume of tuii)e. clothed with every money function. Money redeem able in other money Is simply a form of credit. Credit Is limited by the means of payment or redemption. Siuee pre historic times ami up to the year ISTIJ, the fabric of credit. Including fum uey redeemable in -oln, rested on ldh gold aud silver. That pail of the founda tion ulilcb consisted of silver 1ms leeu removed, aud Ibe silver coin, which forme! at least one-half of the banc, lias been converted iuto credit money to lie redeemed In gold. In round num bers, the gold coin, silver coin and pa per money of the world are aliont eitial to each other. The pyramid was firm and substantial while gold and silver were the base, anl constituted two thirdK of the fabric; and wlrlW? pajwr, the apex, represented only about rmi lliinl. It now stands: Gold win, one third, for the apex; ami silver and pa per, two-thirds, for the base; but tb pyramid is reversed, with the apex at the bottom. The load of credit resting rn gold must be greatly reduced to correnpond with the gold standard, and that i the procptsa now going on, which ha pro duced the current financial "siiueejsc,"' and to which ttse authors of the ruin point as an "object lesson." The hope of relief by Increanlng debts, or Issuing more currency re deemable In gold, la vain. The Inflation ef prices, by Issuing paper redeemable In gold without ewsld for redemption. must end In panic and collapse. It would be like attempting a permanent cure of delirium trvmenn by an In creased indulgence In strong drink. The grasp of gold contraction can only be temporarily relieved by credit device, as a natlent la sometimes revlvd rhn ufferlng from the effects of alcoholism, by a cocktail In the morning, only to be unk to a stilt lower depth of depress ion by the inevitable reaction later In the day, Banks are the storm center of paulca. The snucexe of lXJ.'l, to force the gold standard, pumped the wind out Of fi,5W,000,0JO of bank cred its, based on ITjOO.OOO.noO of reserves. But the "object lesson" has not silenced the demand of the gold trust for more credit and less money. The alternative of scientific money, of mafwlBl other than gold and sliver. or the restoration of the automatic rule, la presented to the creditor class. The revolution which they bave Inaugur ated to destroy tbe automatic rule, must either be arrested by the reetora tlon of stiver, or by the Invention and establishment of a better system. The preliminary effects of the gold standard contraction have paralyzed enterprise and destroyed the prospect of future credit. It Is now destroy ing existing obligations, and when It deadly work shall have been fully ac complished, all bonded debts will nave been liquidated by liquidation and bankruptcy. If blind greed la to be tbe only guide of the money powers in the future, as It has been In the past, tbe horrors of universal ruin and the dlaor- ganlxatlon of society may be rea 1 1 ted before tbe work of reconstruction can be began. Tbe bop still exists that there Is sufficient Intelligence In the masses to dlreet their dormaftt, energies In a mighty effort to 'freak the chains of contraction, with which fraud and avarice have bounrt the limbs of enter prise. If this nope can be realised, tno civilisation of tbe nineteenth century will escape the abyss of degradation and want In which all preceding civil l- xatlons bave perished. Sliver Knlgbt Watcbman. Past the Theoretical fttace. Direct legislation is no longer a the ory to be considered at soma future time, bat baa come up before tbe peo ple to bo settled. Snail we bar a government by tha people aad for tba people, or a government by and for tba money changers? Delegated govern ment ha proven a failure, and wa thould assert our right to bave a voice in the management of tbe government Coder the present system we elect a man to a legislative office, and thea ba III not do a thing that ba la In- m meted by bis constituency to do, and tbe bigger rascal be Is tbe more chance be stands for re-election. Under the In Illative and referendum tba people eould have last such laws aa they wanted. Tnere wouia be no power tbove tbe people. Ton will not hare to give np your other Idea for tbls one. If you are a free-silver Democrat yon can continue so to ne. it you are a ;old standard advocate and believe ihata majority of tbe people want mon omctalllsin, you cannot object to this principle. Legal Tender. A Hesse r far Trsats, Prof, franklin Olddlngs of Oolumbia College knowa bow to bold hla Job. Ba has corns oat frankly la defense of trusts. "Trust," aaya Professor Oid lings, "cannot forea oonsnmari to pay extortionate prices. Pssol will do without tba things tor which too high t price la charga." la eanni sating upon tbls utteranea tha Now Tork lournal remark editorially: Trm will defeat tbemserrsa If oaly tha pss pie will adopt taa plan of eaapalgn suggested by burning candles Instead f la rape, eating ewy for wheat, walk th:g cniidren go um-dvicated Instead of buying school ljks, using Dint and Meet instead of mBtcbes. and possibly U-iiig buried in sacks so as to escspe the extortions of the National Oaakut Company." Iinplicltvof Governments. The United Htates has been disgraced I for the last twenty years uj tun uuuu.u dealing of leading politicians and gov ernment otiielala on tbe silver question. All parties have claimed during that time that they were la favor of bimet allism while they were working and plotting for the single gold standard. Mr. iage was the first aoldlte In this ceiintry who declared that It was the jn.licy of the administration to more thoroughly commit the country to the single gold standard. He has since procured another face and attached It to the other side of bin head, so that b can look lotli ways. He now ttays that he is an Internationalist liimetallist. On the principle that misery loves com pany It may lie pome satisfaction to know that the Hritisb government l equally fabte In its dealings with tha people a N this government. In IS!; the House of Commons passed! a resolution urgently recommendiug the adoption of an international agree ment to secure a par of exchange be- j tween gold and silver. Everything at that time In government circles worw a bimetallic aspect, ami the rose-coloredV falsehood so familiar In this country n Hie subject of bimetallism bloomed a brilliantly In Ixindon as In Washing ton. When Jie tent came by the ap pearance of the Wolcott commission a shilly-shally game waa played -for a time, ami finally the commllon waa illMiutesed.aud tbe government of Oreat Britain proceeded In ItH relentlexs poli cy f forcing India to a gold bauls and Influencing other governments to pro ceed to crush the masses by contract ing the circulating medium to the nar row IlmltH of gold. The people of Great Britain are not tTiKennlTjle to the miseries which tba gold standard Inflicts. The labor organi zation snd wealth-producing organisa tion of Oreat Britain nre foremost In Intelligence and courage of any Indus trial organizations In tbe world. They feel keenly as tbe people of the United' States do the double dealing of Repub lican and Democratic administration. A monster protest has been presented1 to Lord dafbibary by the wealth-producers of Oreat Britain. It shows that the conditions on both sides of tbe At lantic are the same. Of course It will have no-more effect than a like petition' of tbe laboring masse of this country wonld have had upon either Harrison or Cleveland, or than it now would have If presented to the present occu- lnt of the Executive mansion. It will tie seen bjr this protest that Lord Salis bury Is as dependent upon tbe money powers a trie cniet executive or me Uulted States. Gold monopoly Is aa I ocr ful In England aa It Is In the fulled States, and It Is the enemy of tabor tinder every sun snd In every land. Why It Costa More It l said that In the matter of carry- Ing the malls that tbe railroads charge thirty mil Ion of tax money for their service to the government, but render the same service to express companies for three millions. Why? All Con gress men ride free on railroad passes, though they are paid 20 cents per mile In cash by Uncle Ham for mileage, and are generally, In both parties, elected by ralfroad campaign funds, and of tea. ar owners of stock In some of tba roads working for the government. Tha eoeamon people are Ignorant of government details, and sweat and grunt It out. and throw up their hats for the party. The poor devil are so easy fooled that no man In politic thinks It worth bis while to help tbem. What Oar Money Bests On. "Onr money rests on gold," says tba Portland Oregonlan. Yes; why does It? Simply to perpetuate a paternal debt system which feeds upon produc tion like a weir-wolf. Our money will likely continue to rest on gold so long as tbe people support tbe idea that the government should encourage debt making, protect debt owners and oth erwise meddle In business affairs. But tha money of no people capable of real self-government would have to rst on gold or any other product. In short, under tba form of government which would bant serve tba whole people money would ba simply a repreaeouv tlve of value. Bast Oregonlan. A Obeetlr Record, During the month of March In ana ctty of St. Louis, there were 22 acci dental deaths, 2fi suicides aod two mur ders. That la what makes prosperity for tha coroner and furnishes proof that tbo present system to lb beat tzust man can have. How many peoplo could commit suicide, think you. If tbey ware employed by tha public at wage that would s ruble thara to lira weU and never feel th (aar of want? Thst Is what socialism would guaran tee to every person, Db yau think that would deprive lit of any laeanttva ta lira and grow wtoar aad betterV-Ap-peal to Reason. Prosperity With a Tea awes Tbey are still cutting down wage la New England, Tha Boston Manufac turing Company, of Waltham, Mass., will reduce th wagaa of 1,600 em ployes 10 par cant on tha 28th Inst, and a strike may result. Tba Carnegie Company have notified their aareral thousand employes of a 10 par east re duction In wagaa. Mow Tork OHy haa about 187,000 worker Mia and taa ap neas for chartty are mora urgst than ever before, AsasaaaitiM Means! r la Nasarsgaa. Ta foTgfaat of Nloaragaa, aa a reveaa aaaara. haa assaasad a mo nopoly af taa trad la laad la balk aad bars or awiaafaatarad, aad alaa ta capa aaa cartrMfaa far haattag , Maty, a Utue sadly. fi,Beae aa the lag mils Instsatf af tateoboalng. vwlrara.