V -L TW-a T i2& ttfctf 3 1 . .1 CHAPTER VIL (Continued. Ihilcie listened to his with mile In Iter eyea. It was plum to her that he had t gnwisfd the cause f ber sudden blushes. Hi a?gtoo vasity bad bliud ad bim. "Thank yaa," ahe said sweetly, when to paused, as if he had cone through a Wtfiii inance for ber imuraint. And somnhow he divined by ber way of ayisg tbfae two Httle words, that, for MM reason of her own, abe wag not in clined to take the hint he bad wrapped op poetically. Bee!" rising larily and potting on her t- My frieoda are coming; back for M at tart! I had begun to think they had trgr,tten me!" Vho could forget yon!" the young toon said in a low tone, more to himself than to ber. Oh, they could !"-langhing a little. iey ire n In all to each other. Why ahoald they remember me?" Be atood beside her while she drew an tor glove. One of them she could not totton, and alio held it out to him with a wttjr little (texture. Of course he was longer over it than he need bare been! And no one could blame him for lingering Uttle. That round white wriat would a. 'tempted a far stronger man than kalian Carre. : Percj Stanhope, coming up, aaw them, a they atood aide by aide, and a sharp ana; went through bis heart He would Marly have liked to knock the man down; wit be knew that he had no right to do it. t had sense enougt) left to see that. A It was, his greeting ws of the stiffest . Thy atood and talked together for a few minutes, and then Julian Carre went hack into the church for Lord Harvey, they went home aa they had come, across the fielda together. Jan4ng over the gate of the houae, aa they I me within sisbt of it, was Hugh Homing. He had been smoking; but, Wtwn he aaw them, be threw hi cigar tate tlx? road, and weut forward to meet them. After the band-shaking had been gfooe through, he made bi way to Dul- have come down," he told her, "to tajoy myself. I want to forget ail the .fmrtm at life for a while. Will you help "ae, M'isa Levesqne?" i . fiiey cre atanUng at the foot of the hallow atone stepa; and the ahadowa of t the old elm's leu res fell over ber face, and crfept down to the dainty shoulders. I will if I can, Mr. Fleming." well! Then it U a bargain?" .'W-with a laugh. "Well, let ua abake hands on ft aa they do in the North Countrie!" Kf beld out his brond pnlra, and abe put here npua it; and, for u instant, they dung together, and then slowly parted. .And Dulcie, looking into the man's ye. knew that she bad won another over. CHAPTER VIII Toward the mid of April, Lady Ilarrey as to give a dinner party. Invitationa tor it came to The Elms, to lira. Hard' tnge'a delighted surprise. "I don't think I ever saw Berta so ex sdted over anything," Esther said, as the two girl sat over their 1st tea. "She is In a fever of delight We shall hear of toothing for the next fortnight bnt 'What hall we wear? " Dulcie smiled, and sipped her tea quiet ly. A change had of late come over her, ot to be accounted for in any way. She tod lost half her reckless nerve and a (ond rint of her brightness. Snatr-hing up a lace cape, ahe passed t on to the lawn, through the open win dow, while Eatber wtnt away to find a kat for herself. A west wind met her, like a. careee. aa abe emerged into tfce 'pen air. Close beside the gate waa a tall lahnrnum, now in full bloom. Dulcie weal straight to it, and leaned her arms o the low wooden gate poet The goMen VloMaoma bent over her, and lung their perfume at ber with every pasaiug breath f wind. KTerytbing waa very quiet and 'weL To H.li- on other aide of the road waa starred all over with clus ters of elegant spring flowers. Some where, in tbe far blue overhead, a lark was singing. Aa ahe leaned there, a lad paaaod and looked at ber; stopped a (ew aecoada, then Wak. '-Arc .".tU Hum Lruiu.s, if ys,o pleas" "Tea," ahe answered, amaaod that he ajhnuM know ber. "This hi for you, then, and no aaawer, -thank you." , "This" was a small not enrioualy twtat "d. Before ahe could find breath to aak Who neat it, the lad waa ft tramping " kloof the road at a rate that aaade it " wseless for ber to try to follow him, j Something chill crept through th girl's . tsjtaa, aa abe held tbe paper m her hand. Turning her bead to mak sure that Ba ther waa not coming, ahe opened it aad ad: . "Whr are yon so croei? Then three dkya 1 nave waited for yon and yon aerer ' tt jpaat let me know how, anal! wait id bode WB I see you." IT waa no uesn w mm taw wwmr ah knew from whom It csno that It waa Jallaa Cam wto tod aHei. Oail ir ah asked herself wtth a t ehjh. 1 awad always cm to abi to I wear what I waatod to a, in w m n. tatkfT. I hav two asjato ia aw Wy, each araw-f aw a Moron way." Ltor JatoadW pimiatly, and tto a aa? Cbo kMsm. toMtaa: WIS l MDa'jt oatbet.d, and tto aigbt ' i t M them faiat toH at tto f -Am oear Kb aekisea. ft 1 ttatC-T whar tto tjm r 1 fjam ai IV to tor alJ pat gy ) ...,;r,.;-t: ' " -if- 'i 9,1 ening fielda. The black lace had fallen back from her bead and face. Her pret ty, light dreaa, with the vivid crimson bows at the throat and elbows, made a patch of soft color against the green about hef. Julian Carre, looking at her, felt his heart throb fast, etormily, paaaionately. "What ia ia the girl?" he said to him eelf, as he watched her from the shade of the high bridge opposite, "that draws me to ber In spite of all my common sense. She ia not as beautiful as Aurtry Toilet, nor aa Lady Mary, even; yet they are aa water unto wine compared with ber." She had not aeen blm. She was not even thinking of bim. When he crossed the rosd and stood before her she clasped her hands with a sharp cry. The pretty color had faded from check to lip, for ahe thought, when she first looked up, that it was Fercy Stanhope. "Have I the misfortune to startle yon again?" be said, penitently. "Of course you startled me. Where did you come from?" "I waa passing, and I heard your voice. I could not but stay. You do not blame me?" bending forward to catch a glimpse of ber face, under the shade of the boughs to which she bad retreated. "Moat decidedly V "I am sorry for that, but do not make me feel aorry I stayed." "Why should you be glad ?" demurely. "1 have aeen you." Dulcie laughed and glided a step near er. It was nice, after all, to read the love in this too caadid man'a eyea and to know that the grme ahe had taken op for pas time had growr into serious earnest for him. "I have seen you," he repeated passion ately. "Do you knrw. what that means to me? Da you know that day and night your face haunU me, yeur voice la in my ears?" She folded ber allm hards on tbe bar and lifted her face to him. The pearly brow, with those little shining rings of bair about it, gleam !u the light The large, bright eyea met hia unflinchingly. "You moat not blame me for that You know when you told me a week ago that your friend had warned you against ad miring me I bade you take the warning. Could I do more?" "It was too late," Julian Carre answer ed hoarsely. Ton knew that it was too late when you said it" "Did IT the girl said indifferently. She was plucking listlessly at the la burnum Sowers that hung over her bead. The piquant face, the round, white throat, were framed in by their slender golden spraya. Harvey had told him the truth. Hi had slipped "into the depths" without knowing it She was beautiful, and be loved her aa bis frfcnd had foretold he would. She tormented him, ahe mocked at him, she made it no wcret that she did not care a fig for him. But nothing could aller the fact that be loved her. Do you know," lookmg up with ! ,miJ. to find him watching bi-r admiring- ij, j i a. iinruiuge wouiu ue quae Horri fied if she knew that I waa out here at this hour talking to yon?" "What is Mrs. Hardinge to us?" crosa IX. "She ia my hostess at present that ia all." He put out his hands and took bold of hers. They were fell of leaves and yel low buda, and be held them close in his feverish grasp, the soft, white hands and the flowers. "I will go away now if you will promise to see me to-morrow." "You will not be warned, then?" "Nat by you, dearest!" pressing his Hps to the bare, white arms, almost rough ly. With a sudden Jerk she released her hands and atood back from him. "At least yon have warned me," abe aaid, crimson with anger. He had seen ber In all aorta of moods, but never like this berore. Perhaps he liked her all the belter for tbe baughtj tsoiper that would brook aa little. "You will forgive me," he said, pushing open the gate In bis earnestness. "You will not blame me for what I could not bir "Oh, no. I shall not blame you" scorn fully. "It haa been quite my own fault" With a chill bow abe swept past hiss and Into the bona before be could at her. He waited and watched, half honing she might com out to him again, but abe did not. He beard a brilliant raise being played hi the drawing room presently, and by some inatinct be divined that Dulcie waa the player. He turned about at that and atrode home, a man angered beyoad bla patience. "Dulcie," Mrs. Hardinge aaid, coming Into the room where the girl was playing, trying, aa ah would have aaid to her self, t work her temper out at ber finger tlpa, "what is thla that Eatber told me bout your not going to Abbeylanda?" "Nothing; but that I am not going." "Esther will be very disappointed then. Bb says the shall not enjoy herself with out yon. Coo Id you not change your mlsdr 1 would rather not, thank you." "At all rventa, yon need not decide un til to-morrow. I shan't writ till then." Mra. Harding took np a book and lay down on om of the couches, and DnM began playing again. Should sb gal That was the one aues tfM that haunted ber, and repeated ltaelf err and ever again, to ok da of the tsBa she was layiag. ghould abe go, aad tow Mm that not on f th flae ladles of thia world waa aa koaattfnl aa sb waa? It would b rare triamph for bar, and bar yaa danatd at tbe preepect "I hep atsl deto to stay at ad hap awoat, "Bather rebr uBif ml aad yC aasaakww. Cm alwsja Mrpaaw toy." It wm a aaevth to a - ty Dmtf tod w l- "--- wkoM smbjO. 11 it ta as MMarw PVt PMf In one month more It would be Esther Durrant'a wwlding day. A shiver of paiu ahouk the girl aa ahe thought of It Cuuld it really be true that the man she had loved and trusted In with all ber heart would take another woman aa his aife when thoe four short weeks were over? It seemed to ber that It must have bern far more than a month aince thia love and truat hud been crushed aad h iii-i If d out of her life o roughly. The night ahe hud recognized Percy Stanhope's face in Eather'a locket seemed a night wt far U-bind her In a dense shade and horror of pain. "Oh, cruel, cruel T ahe had moaned to herself many a time, thinking of bim. "Oh, cruel ana false!" Yet, had he been so f.W after all? She had told bim abe did not love bim, and he had believed her and had straightway carried to another the love she would not have. Could he have done this if his love had been a real heart-root? That waa tbe question. How would it have borne the transplanting If it bed been such love, strong and deep, aa she had once thought It? "I could forgive bim," Dulcie thought, looking out at the pale April sky, "if he bad only waited a little while. But be did not While I was sitting in old Pere Jacques' salon, listening for his ring at the door, he had gone away from me for ever, had come home here, and was busy winning Esther to love bim, juat as he bad once won me." There was the smart That was the wound to which the proud little beart could not grow reconciled. "I will do the best I can for myaclf," ahe had said to Esther. Was she doing it? Was she not playing with men's hearts aa If they were croquet balls, with out one care for tbe future that lay be fore her? "You have been reaming, Dolcie," ahe said to herself, with a little bitter sigh, "and you will waken up 'oat In tbe cold If you don't take heed." That very night, when the house waa quiet Dulcie sat down to write a letter. It waa a long letter to her Uncle Durer and it told him tbe truth about her posi tion. "I shall have no home here," she wrote, "when once Esther Is married." But she did not tell hiin that the bridegroom would be their old friend Percy Stanhope. "I should be wretched here, though Mrs. Hardinge urges me kindly enough to stay. If you have things so settled now that you can offer me the ahelter of a roof, I will come back to you. I am able and willing to work for the nst." When tbe letter waa written, and in cloaed In its envelope, the girl looked at it for a few minuts Intently. "That shall decide me," she said to herself. "If he says 'come,' I vwll go, and leave all these new friends behind me. If he does not aay 'come,' then " But ahe did not finish tbe sentence. A swift stinging fluah came into ber cheeks, and her lips quivered ominoualy, CHAPTER IX. The day of LjtUy Harvey's dinner party came at lest a brilliant April day, the heavens cloudleas, tbe sunshine warm, the air fragrant with spring'a perfumes. Down in tbe beart of Brierton Wood spring beld high carnival Tbe banks were purple with wild panaies; the moas was emerald green; the young leaves thrilled and quivered in the very testacy of life. Down the long walks went Dul cie, her bat in ber hand, her sleeping skirts rustling over the leaves aud twig. Dulcie flung hersflf down here to rest nd folded her amis under her head for a oillow. Tbe sunshine beat warmly on her uncovered head and face, but she did not nrud that SI'e reveled in the warmth and the quiet, the drowsy, soothing rustle of the tranches, and the ripnle of the flowing water. But after a while ahe be gan to tire f it Animated nature had the strongest charm for Dulcie. Presently she beard a whistle, and a scramble, and a man's voice a voice that she knew as web as ahe knew her owd calling out "Dowrv you brutel Down, Jumbo," and she waj rather pleased than otherwise. He came on whistling, and tramping down the grass with long, heavy strides, and at tbe bend of the bank be saw ber. She bad raised ber&clf on ber eltiow to listen, and her upturned face, with the warmth of tbe sunshine in Its vivid smiles, waa the Crat thing he noticed. Ju lian Carre stopped suddenly, and the whistle died on his lips, with a soft, sin gle note like tbe call of a bird. She was almost at hia feet as he fte-sd, a lovelr, brilliant little creat'nr wha some of tie witchery cf the wild wood In her liibc, listlese grace of limb and polae. He for got tbat she had been angry with blm, and he with her. He knelt down on tbe graas beside ber, and held out both his bends. His eyea sparkled, bis cheeks glowed like a girl'a through lifcir tau. "Now, what good fsirr sent you her to-day, Mlaa Loveaque? I am fabrly afraid to ahut my eyea, lest on opening them 1 should find yon bad been on a vision." "A very aubstaotlal vision!" Dulcie laughed, puttlag on pink palm Into hia larger on. "For th last fortnight I have been look mg forward to this day, or thia evening, rather," he aaid, bringing himself a Utile nearer aad lea a! ng on hia elbow, so tbat he could ae ber face. "Do yon know wbyr "I have not th faintest Idea" Inno cently. It waa not exactly tbe truth, for ahe had, while be spoke, one of those flashes of intuition that make the ordinary wom an so much more than a match for the average man. "Because" very low and tenderly "I know that I should aee you then." She ahot a aide glance at bla face, and wbat ah read there flushed her own a little. "If yon do, I shall be wbat yon took me for J art now a vision, and not myaaif at 11" "How do yon mean? Ton are coming with Mra. Harding, are yon not?" "No, I am net going" very quietly, "Can it be tract I am terribly disap pointed." "I am sare I cannot ae why, Mr. Carre; yon will hav a whole bevy of country ladles to console yon; and besides," with a little smile that bewildered blm, "I should hav looked so 'odd' among ttom all," 1 believe yon Ud laugh Ilk that,'' to aaid moodily, "if yon aaw a man dy ing. I can't arga with you I Yon do nothing tot jost and mock, wife I I tor yenl Ttora, ywa tor It!" UrsswtohlaftuhaakftLaad Dakw rosa, to, Ch had gaoaW him pretty eorrecuy, asm kaw flatrty tow waay baman af nidiaas bat waald to ton aa Ma way to bar. Cto wrenataW tto tod aw faaajto. Bar nlator, at a lime wben bankruptcy and speculation were not tolerated in decent society. She knew be was learning to love ber; but abe had not coin 'ted on his loving ber better than fcimnelf s yet It might come to that some ahe had fancied at times, but that "ouj day ' bad always at'efx-d a V15 .'t cf .'."1 lo, the tkle of hia love wn at tbe full al ready, the barriers all uev e;it, aid f.e felt herself caue! t ij t;.c t; rtc,it, ;i -3 etnuued a little by Ith f..r He did not look at her. He sfood gnaw ing bia mustache and kickbig the toe of hia boot into the ground. What should she aay to him? For the first time in her Ijfe, perhaps, tbe girl felt at a ka for words. Percy Stanh.ne"s wooing bed been nothing like this. She hsd loved him, aud he had read the love in her eye before ber lips could spak it and beca satis fied. He bad been an eloquent, resistless wooer; but this Julian Carre stood like a stone, and waited for her to speak to him. "If he stands there till the sun seta," tie thought, "I alia 11 not be the first U apeak." At laat he turned toward ber. "What have you to aay to me?" "Nothing" in a very quiet little voice. "Nothing!" with rising passion. "Is that all jou ba-'e to offer in exchange for a man's whole heart?" He came quite close to her, and drew the bat out of her powerless fingers, fling ing it on the grass behind blm. It very nearly fell Into the water, aud she gave a little "Oh!" of dismay. "You are awfully silly, Mr. Carrel" "I dare say I am." "May I hare ray bat ple?" lie was making ber checks bnrn ua cirnfortnhly, he stared c.t her o, and He still beld bovh ber bands prtsoaed in one of bia. "I am sure It la time I was at home" reatlcssly. "It is quite time," be answered, coolly. "More than that it la time tbat I waa; but we can't part like thia." "How? I don't understand !" begin ning to quake again. "Oh, yea, you do understand! I have told you I love you. You know very well wbat that moana, I want you to leve me. I want you to be my wife." (To be continued.) Alphabet of Proverbs. A grain of prudence far outweighs a poud of cunning craft Boasters, sometimes bars called, have bragged till angels taigbed. Denying faults will double tbem, without a gain of pelf. Envy shoots at otiicrs, hot sh only wounds beraelf. Foolish fear a danger dreads when there's none in sight God in our poor, feeble banda pots His temple's light He has hard work who has naught in bis ban da to do. It costs more Q right ene wrong than to suffer two. Knavery is a poor trade for a youth to learn. Learning journeys with a man where'er be may turn. Modesty will guard a soul better thia a sword. Ne'er forget to listen well to your heart's first word. One swift bour caught to-day is worth two to-morrow. Proud looks, sometiinsa, are a mask worn to cover sorrow. . Quiet conscience is the saint that gives quiet sleep. Richest be who from poor fields trvpa of good can reap. Small faults left long enough grow up to giant foes. Tbe bongh that lars the weight f fruit lowest bends and grows. Upright walking ia moat sure on th way of sin. Virtue is to Happiness very closest kin. Wise men make their chances; for they are seldom found. You will never hurt th world spreading kindness 'round. Zeal that ia misdirected will crumble to tbe ground. Length of JUptll-s. A python 20 feet In length tbat died In the reptile houae of the Londsa Zoo logical Society waa th largest reptile ever confined there. Ther la a general lmpreaslon tbat pythons reach a length of 40 feet or more, an ttbanrdlty mad manifest when the authorities assart that tbe feui< I&dlaa python till la the fcardcae, and but a trill avar la feet long, la tbe lougeat tnak la cap tivity of which there Is aay record. General Impressions aa ta tto length of these great reptiles are do to th absurd pictures that formerly decorat ed geographies aad ether works used sometimes aa text hooka, ahawtng a picture of r python In tto act of crush ing and swallowing aa Indian bttffaia. That waa a rldlcnloua pletora that was the father of many of tto "frank Jour nalism" picture of tto present day. Tbe Loudon python, which was a real Instead of a fabulous reptile, waa jost over 20 feet In length, it waa buln ed In Malacca and waa prmntod to tbe society by Dr. Hampshlr aa Aug. 29, 1876, and had, tbarafora, II rod rath er mora than twenty yean In England. During that period It hl toaa fad prin cipally with docks, af which M some time awallowed four ar flra at ana dmU. Its food waa offerad ta it one a week, but It aomatttaaa rafnaad to eat for a month together. Tto speci men will be mono tod for tto Trlng fas. aunu New York Trlbnaa, Aa Baay Tletorp. "Ah," tto foad asattor algtod, "yoa aay yon lora my daughter now, bat will yon lora tor wtoa aha la old?" Steadily laoklif tor to tto aya to rcplted: "to wtO narar gat aid. AJ17 ao can aa at a gluea ttoi ato tatoa aftar a."--? ... Tto grww aate af AnatrmBa mato Bata by toadlag laaraa 'tegattor aad aalttaf ttoas with a Mad of aatwal gin. uaaoTato hart ton aaao on ooa ksaf drawUa It to tto giaaag, wUla aa aaaal naator wsJtotf to raoaira, ttoaa h torlda. ta cm fraat aflra WHEAT AND SILVER. WHY THESE PRICES DIVERGED LAST YEA a Cansaal Crop Cosditious Were the t'L. tjut, tiie LjU'in-oi lieirtit !( j Year Jiocuais Karsaal Again. ! Price Fixed hj Rate of fi hanga. The wheat crop of India failed la IS'jti, and over elgbt mllliuLs of tins in habitant of that unfortunate Uul died of BLarvaiiou before another crop was raised. The drouth In that country was ao severe lust it caustd the crop of 11)7 to bu exceedingly abort falling far be low tbe demand for home consumption. In addition to tho failure iu India there , was a abort crop In Russia, a failure lu the Arfeiitine Republic, aud au ex ceedingly abort crop of both wheat and j rye In all the European statca, especi ally AiiHtru-llungary. The United Mates was favored last year with moru than an average crep, and insteitfi of meeting cumpetiilea In the English market and other plaree where tbe world's surplus I disposed of, Ialia, Austria aud other countries that had formerly been our chief competitors had to buy wheat froji the United Ktates. These facta, together with ta attempt uf young Letter, of Chicago, lu coru-r the w iiaat market caused die f I'l'i-v of wheat to advance duriaj tbe past year to a pelnt tbat brought back, to our faruiere the memory of hotter days when wheat raising waa profit nble Industry. The Republican press and orators loudly proclaimed throughout the laud that the advance In the price of wheat waa due to Republican legislatloa, aud Republican Congressmen sought dili gently to Impress upon their constitu ents that credit waa due to them for bringing about the advanced price of w heat and claimed that It was hut she beginning of an era of better prices generally, that would place the nation on the high road "to prosperity. The Republican press claimed that aa wheat waa advancing In price at the same time that ellver bullion was fall ing In price, It furnlahcd complete and conclusive evidence that tbe argument advajicad by tbe Democrats In lsw(J, that thfre was tome relation between tie pHco of wheat and silver bullion, was completely exploded. They forgot, however, t tell the pv ple that the only ground upon" which any silver advocate claimed that a rela tion beiween the price of silver and wheat existed waa that whfat from both gold and aliver aiandard countrie waa being sold In the same market In competition. Under thla condition they claimed that a bushel of wheat from Russia, the Argentine or tho United State would be sold In the om mon market for a like quantity f gold. It must be borne In mind that the os of wheat or any other commodity, that is the aeed, labor, land rent and Inter est on caplul, together with tbe pro U the producer are reckoned In the money of the country where the whiat or other eommodltlea are produced. It Is an undisputed fact that silver In In dia and Ruasla will purchase as much labor and material at the present time as at any tlms In the past Therefore, when the wheat of India er Ruasla la sold In Liverpool for gold that can be exchanged for double th mount of sil ver money that it would command be fore silver was dtmorwMaed, It can ho old for a tower pric In terra of gold and yet return the producer sufficient ilvcr to pay tbem a good prvtflt It la aiho true that in proportion aliver bullion fall In price they can sell their wheat cheaper for geld and tlll get the came return and the sama proflu that they formerly received, and that very dm.lln In the price of allvsr bring tbem additional profit The advantage accruing to ailrer atandard canntrle from a favorable exchange of mony stimulated the production f what la ucb countries and made wheat raising unprofitable undsr th geld atandard while th profits to tbe a II v ar ming countries continued en the la crease. The price of gold that the peo ple of India and Rumla are wllllcg ta accept for thtilr wheat In th Liverpool market la U tbat th American can orrtaln for hi product Th wheat from all countries meeting in th mrkt where tbe sum'us la sold sel's at sens, uioii prke in tbe uontiy eurreat In that market .'via, li gold pne of the wluat of America la fixed la Liver pool by the surplus of wheat af Iadla and Ruasla so long as those countries have wheat to sell. Laat year ths silver atandnrd cona trics ware buysra and not llr of wheat, tone th connection between tbe prlc of mlrr bullion aad whsat was severed for tto Urn being and aa relation between tto two existed. But this year Russia haa a large surplu to ell and India and th Argent! Re public hav a aarploa and th pric of aliver bullion will again 8x tha prlc of the American wheat crop, tocaoa our surplus moat to aold la tto market of the world In competition with th sur plus from llver nalng caaatrlaa. liast year tto rilrar standard osnn trie bad do whoat ta aall aad ttorafara were unabla to purchaa Uvsr from abroad, bat ra tha other toad wr forced to aell mlrtr la tha world' mar ket to bay whoat, taw tto erarnty of wheat, ia ttoaa awatrlaa compelling ttom to to bnyara tnwtead af attor operated to mica Bflrar ta aowa ad tto am Hm H wad whoat fa a. Th Dlogtoy bill had aa mor ta to with tto high rtoa af aim laat yaar thaa It bu with tto tow aria af wtoa thla rear. RopvMtama hjastottaa aa tto moaey qnatioa haa Baata tto frlea of wtoat low, aad will axato K OMttoBa to go lower oooar canadaa af a aar mal crop throaghoot tto warla. TJadar ato fold rtaatord aoOtlaj wfl fsato wtoat Maf a tair arlaa, aat a Ctkv lue atired that wlU create an abaormal demand that must be supplied from tlHa country. Drouth and famla la tber land aad fcood crop in America gave ua a fair prlc for wheat hut year. Tbe rate f sxrbange between gold m;Bty and !lrer money will flx the prl4-e thla yar.-slilvr Halght-Watchman. rlie Teatroy?r of Nations. It 1 luiioiiIl!e to over emphasis tha truth that unury ) the Uuttom canao of tbe world's present trouble, aad this fa't should be auneoncod at tto risk of rffurtitlou by every one wto ea It In hbitory past and history preaaaC Tbia would be a very good oatechlasai What was it tbat overthrew th Bab ylonian empire? Usury and concentra tion of wealth UU the people had ao mind to fight for tome they did aot wn. What had corrupted the Jew wtoa be was led lato captivity? Uaury. What overthrew tbe Egyptian dynas ties? Tbe power of usury, wall kaowa to Moses, who task pals to pre toe bia own people against It What overthrew Rene? Uaary tbe loss of laud statr taken 1 ty for money loaasd to returned aal. diers, to Uapro c their far and homes. What baa ronrJauad te to tto prima cause of the Brttls conilet with tto natives of India? Cury toad to to paid (Interest at leat) by taxatloa, aad the striugeucy of money mad by bad laws to help tbe land rwaer. Wbat caused the war with Egypt when Ab-iaadria was burned? Rotha chlld bonds and the rack tax a th fellaheen ameuatlag to one-half thslr earulugii. (The Retkaebllite furalahd tbe Beet with tobace uaea their chief elty waa bUd by Brittoa guntoata.) What hu caused all the reballlen la Cuba and the Phllltmla Ulaads? 0v rnnirnt reveaun to mu Ooverament expense and th interest dtM a toad Frracb bonds, Italia a sends, Geraaaa bends. Limit E. Uaaaiford, In his ro cat book en Cuba, says: "Tto vast suuia ajiiaasnd by taxes frees th Cu ban, tnulUtudlasu, searching, grass ing, were spent t for developing In tern! resources, bat fer th enrichment and indulgence of a swarm of ever bearing foreigners h had .'latsaed ou CuU a deJit ef $300,000,000, ooaaid erahly over $190 per capita, and la ad dition a system of taxation (lik th Egyptian) which wrung 3.u00.000 an nually from ths Cubaaa." Brary re volt added boaaa te bo a is. "Th Mad rid Government (la 113) after already realising l-tS.OOO.OOO fraja tb sale, at 40 per cent of $120,000,000 ef Cuban bonds of thw serf as of 1M0, In October, negotiated a $14,000,000 lssn wWh some I'arls aad Dutch hankers." This ta a sample of tbe bernaw-and-tax proc tbat became Intolerable as It waa la the tin of King George and hi caiante. The usurer waa la it all tto tta. And ow, when the Island peoples ar Doing liberated, what la to happen to the peo ple of tbe Spanish peninsula? Rev enue from th csleiiles cutoff; big war debt, to b paid te the United State, and old boadi already mor 'ton they can carry, what will the popl th In nocent peopie of Bpaia do? What If they become a rapublle? Will ttou ad the distress? Usury kaowa as form of government It works Just as savagery In a republic as ia a dnapotiam, tocaus It la Itself a term ef datpetlam, holding all cLrfc Institutions under Its dictation and all the money Institutions ara band ed together by a sort ef financial fra masonry- wrld wide brother bsed of tyrant a. Again, what kind ef freodom ds w propose to give th Ipasuab Ulaads? A freedom with aa American toad tax attached. Pasa over te ttoa lalaada ur rasae tery and syndicate Bchemea aad within twenty years w are liable to hav on hand anetaer war fr 1 1 ber t lea a part f a world-wide war far repudiation (?) f dobte whose payment U Impossible. That may be escaped by a virtual liquidation af the terms of paymeat la th aubatltutlon, universally, ef dmpl money for th lmaalbl speete "re demptloo." Wbt we get the referendum form of democracy and other nations get ft also, thea those who ar alive ea earth will ae the dprt trugglaa of th pluto cratic league with th aw bora rpub lira. The "eoaith" th Ort "nd" aad t'-s peace and pleaty of th "thonaaad yean." A. J. Chlttea, la Chlcag ipr t,aa Kbsata Vrosk TaxaUoa la ta aapodlaacy. Thaqoaa tJoa for psopl to dodd la whr thi burden of govramat eipsnaes ahonld to placod. W claim ther I no laher at debt to government for the gifts of aatnr; land, sunlight and air, bnl wa laalat tbat aa attempt te monopolist any of thea can a checked by cor rect system of taxatloa. Th limited bom exemption, with a rvenue sy tern based on land value will dtotro) land monopoly and provide a way which will mak aa opportunity for tto people to own ttolr tooasa. landlord ism will disappear and lastead then will to the happloat aatlon of poapla n der th un. Kp this ao fact ia mladi Land shonld to aa fraa aa air. It it only aa expediency fiaat makaa it to right the chief abject of taxatloa II haa been monopolised aad "down tto mopo)."-;kiflaf 1 Ths War Ta. How that tto war to drawlnf ta a ttoaa, wty tto war tax to rafsajsd at wlU It to esJaaad a a msataa of lock Ing ay a-4 topaoadJng the groenhacka, t- -teiary aotea, aad Uvr cwrtxlloatoa to auto aaoai far aa lam af toaataatoal Alwsrsal Par. Ajatoooy raeatvabla far faraim ttwiTaaaaatoaJwatoBar. M " Prsparaaa M.y f n!, Wi aca atofTii af taaaiV ...,' 1 l