4 r _ _ -.ewe. _ . _ _ , TS7t . .p s t m Ilr/ , { itj l i ! i , I Ill iir M gY . . ' l IRGINIA W. JOHNSON. ! ; - COPYRIGHT 1892 BY RAND.McNALLY Co CO. . -yam. - = = - - , - : Ai - - - I1GERNATIONAL PR EG5 ASS 'N "Go away ! " cried Jacob Dealtry through the partition. "Let me never sce your face again. A spy ! " "Olt , grandpapa ! " "A-a thief ! Be off ivitlt you , once for all. " " 11'lrere am I to go ? " implored Dolores. She was stupefied and incredulous of the brusque expulsion. "Return to the convent , if you will. You shall not enter my door again. A spy ! 'A traitor ! " 'The voice of the old man , piercing and sharp , rose to a sort of bowl of menace with these words. Dolores turned away , with Florio under her arm. ' The morning was clear , and the sunshine - shine dazzling , yet the sky seemed about to fall on her head. Was it true that her grandfather had banished - ished her from the Watch Tower for ever ? A crushing blow shatters the prism of a crystaL The shock of brutal , unforeseen - foreseen ejection from her home , by her nearest relative , scattered her ideas in a similar manner. llcr first thntlght was of Arthur Curzon. Where was he ? how could she find him in her humiliation and distress ? Dolores lacked the nerve requisite to haunt the quay in quest of him. Or did some in- stinet of .modest pride withhold her fromn displaying her shame to the world ? Oddly enough , the first and rudimentary comprehension of dread of public opinion in her mind took the form of a natural shrinking from the w ' eye of slender and grave Dr. Busatti , and his yellow , little mother. The recollection of the ladies of the ball , mid of the gentlemen who had been kind to her on that momentous occaSion - Sion , did not trouble her. There remained for her ouly the safe refuge of the convent. The sad and monotonous routine of monastic - astic rule was to be the end of all joy and Happiness. A sob rose in her throat , , She walked slowly toward the town. No one noticed her and she passed other pedestrians as if they had been phantoms. Near the fortifications she paused to gaze down on the harbor with a certain - tain wistfulness. Since her childhood the ships coming and going had always inspired an indefinable longing and restlessness in her breast. Now Arthur - thur Curzon was on board of one of the craft lie would be sorry if lie could see her. Perhaps they might never meet again. Alt , how she loved hiin at this moment ! She loved him with all her heart and souL She realized the joy and the bitterness of time emotion. Tlae corvette Ladislas was steaming away in the distance , bearing the young prince to the Nile. The Italian packet , the Elettrico , was to sail at a later hour for Sicily. Dolores pursued her way until the walls of the convent became visible. ' She halted again , and shuddered , as if she had received the shock of a blow full in her heart She trembled and shrank back. If she entered that portal , she might never be able to again escape. On one side were the i r , 1C1 . 'ttc I ( , ' YOU J.i.DE , YOU DEVIL S IMI' " blue sky , the glancing waves of the sea , the warm sunshine toward which her whole nature yearned ; on the other , ' in the cold shadow of the cloister , was the silent and repressed lot of tale nun. The fugitive recoiled , oppressed with doubt and dread. She hid her face in her hands , weeping , and striving to conquer her own indecision. 'Mien a swift panic of terror seized her impulsive - pulsive temperament She fled back swiftly to the Watch Tower. Fear lent wings a to her agile feet ' 't'he familiar boundary gained , she leaned against the wall , panting , and closed her eyes. Her senses reeled , and a white cloud sensed to envelop and stifle her. The little dog leaped to the ground , and regarded her with anxiety , his tail drooping : t She knocked timidly. 1' "Grandpapa' " her voice was weqk , and hoarse. : : There was no response. The outcasts - ; casts listened intently , the girl b with parted lips and dilating CyCs ; the dog with a sagacicus , . _ , . , c' little head cockedd on one side , and and ears pricked up. The ripple of the fountain alone was audible within the enclosure. "Grandpapa ? Open thegate for inc. You will be sorry if you ref nse' " Still there was no reply vouchsafed by the obstinate old nian. Tlie ap- m peal of Dolores , more { ircl'cing and assured - sured this time , only served to arouse the echoes Jacob Dealtr nave no sign of life. Did lie hear the appeal ? had he slalrt himself up to the toilet. Fear again smote on the heart' of Dolores , a chilling , indefinable dread of the coining night and darkness. She must seek the convent as a shelter , or become a beggar , a fugitive. What other refuge could Malta offer her ? 't'errible alternatives of poverty and friendlessness. She wandered away from the gate , and crept into the ruined temple , where Lieut. Curzon had first found her grandfather lying insensible on the pavement. 11er instinct was to hide herself from the light of day and the scrutiny of her fellow creatures. She was only conscious of a cowardly impulse to put off the fatal hour of return - turn to the convent until evening and % ylien no other course should be possible to her. She crouched in the most obscure corner of the ruin , holding Florio in her arms. The iitth dog whined from tune to time and licked her cheek. Florio evidently realized the full 'peril of the miserable situation. Her glance strayed around , time rude interior of the temple with weariness and indifference. She knew the place well. She had often visited it with her grandfather and Dr. Busatti The altar rose before her and fragments of sculptured blocks lay scattered about on the grouncL If the past appomiled to her at all , iL was when a sunbeam slanted in a golden shaft athwart the entrance , rc- calling to her the night when she had personated time Phwnician maiden in the tableaux. She buried her face in herhands and wept. Hunger and thirst assailed her , and then her faculties became gradually - ually dull , coldly benumbed. Perhaps she slept. A light and jaunty footstep aroused her , a masculine voice hummed a strain of the song , "My Pretty Brown Maid. " Captain Blake looked into the tem- ple. Dolores held her breath , and shrank back further into the shadow. Florio was mute in sympathy. The girl felt overwhelmed with shame. She did not wish to be seen in her disgrace , just then. What assistance - sistance could this stranger give her ? She hated him , with sudden caprice of unreasonable animosity. if lie discovered - covered her retreat , lie would laugh and jest at the whole dilemma. Dolores - I ores could not endure laughter and jesting in her present plight. "What a beastly hole ! " remarked Capt. Blake , aloud , as he lighted a fresh cigar. Then he strolled on. The minutes passed slowly and monotonously. Dolores wished' she had detained , claimed the human syn- pathy of the gallant soldier once he had departed. He had been kind on a former occasion. Why should' she shrink from hiin now ? Hope , expectation - tation , thrilling anxiety of waiting were all aaked in her breast by the incident of Capt. Blake's taking a country walk. If he thus rambled forth from the town , why not another ? Ah , she watched , not for him , but for another ! Surely Arthur Curzon would come before - fore niglrtfuli. If he loved her , , lie must be aware , by some unerring intuition - tuition , of her need of him. Of course , lie loved her. Had lie not repeatedly sworn that he loved her ? She doubted this much needed tenderness no more than she feared the sunshine would be'ivitlxlrawn by some cruel whim of nature from her island home At length her quick ear heard another - other footstep approaching. She rose to her feet with a bound , and Florio rushed out of time ruin with a joyful bark of welcome. Oh , swift divination - tion of feminine coquetry ! Arthur Curzon had sought the Watch Tower , with a new fan in his pocket , to atone for his misdemeanor of the previous night. "Good morning , Doores. " blithely , . 'Good morning , " falteringly. "Were you watching for me here , little girl ? Bless you ! Why , this ruin old temple would serve as a good trystiug place. " "Yes , " said Dolores , with a sigh. She grew pale , and , her eyes sought time ground. , What is amiss , Dolores ? " quickly. She flew to the young man's side , and clasped both of her hands on his arm. arm."I should have soon died ifyou had not come ! " she moaned. "Grandpapa has driven me away. He is in one of his fits of bad temper. He has them occasionally. I did nothing to offend him , except to hide the broken fan. " Arthur Curzon's features darkened , while a gleam of anger shone in his eyes. "Did he dare to strike or beat you , Dolores ? He shall answer for it to me , if he did ! " Dolores sighed. "Oh , no ! Grandpapa has never beaten me , I think. He has struck me with words often enough , though. " She held up her sweet face to him , bathed in tears , for consolation and advice. - t . . . . , , c'-.a.-.tiYM1J-b.NYH.p The young officer heard all , even to the project of retiring to the convent. "Tell me what I am to do , " sobbed the girl , hiding ] ter face on his broad breast. "Ah ! I have no one in the world besides you ! " G Touching assurance of helpless innocence - nocence and faith in his power of protection - tection ! Arthur Curzon was moved by : t , as ' many another man would have been in his place. "Why did you think of a convent ? " lie inquired at length , "You should have come to me , my pet" Dolores smiled faintly. "how could I board your ship ? I am not a pirate , or-a-a laundress. Grandpapa is always urging my return to time convent. " 'Curious ! He is a protestant , " mus- ingly. "It must be to get rid of me , " Dolores - lores aflirmed , ruefully. higally , he took her by the hand , i and led her back to the Watch Tower. i Ills eyes had acquired a steely glitter , while the lines of resolution deepened about his. mouth. "Poor child ! Your grandfather must not be allowed to turn you out j of doors as if you had been guilty of some crime. I iv'ill make him listen i to reason. Later , I shall take you I away , " he said , with resolution. Dolores looked at him , lips and chin acquiring their sauciest curves. Already - ready time terrible cloud of trouble was passing away from her spirit had she not cast the burthen of her trouble on another ? "You will take me iiway if I will go , " she supplemented. "Of course. " The cloud of misgiving , and perhaps apprehension , was gathering now about the path of Arthur Curzon. Change in all relations with the sweet and bewitching creature at his side had come with an almost appalling swiftness , jarring and perplexing to the utmost degree. If time Watch Tower , with time tangled garden , had been a hidden paradise to the supine native , Dr. Busatti , because of the beautiful girl who dwelt there , how much more so was it to himself with his fiery nature of the sailor ? He had not availed himself of a proposed leave of absence , because lie ' preferred to linger at Malta and hold stolen intercourse - course with Dolores ire would not vacate a field in favor of Capt. Blake , or some other airy trifler. The atmosphere - sphere of reverie was roseate , even time possessed no due value spent in softest dalliance , varied by feminine caprices , fierce , little quarrels swiftly i s 'y. , Iflri' (1 i l , 1 ! ' i w 1 "I RASE NO ONE IN THE WORLD BESIDE YOU. " appeased to a seductive ensuing tran- quility. Behold ! Here was time fairy princess thrust forth from her garden to beg her bread on the highway ! Arthur Curzon knocked on the gate , in turn , with an imperious insistence. Jacob Dealtry vouchsafed no response. The two young people looked at each other in mutual dismay. "You see it is no good to knock , ' said time girl , with blanching lips IIer evanescent gaiety had left her with trembling limbs , and her great eyes fixed beseechingly on her companion - panion , who held her destiny in his keeping. ( TO DE CONTINUED. ) A Reniarkablo Feat. An account is given of a remarkable feat accomplished for the Bonsecours Spinning works at Nancy , namely , increasing - creasing the height of a chimney about one hundred feet high by some thirty feet additional , without stopping the works a single day. Owing to time power being augmented , the existing chimney did not give sufficient draft for the greater number of boilers , and one or two alterations were involved -either to build a new chimney alongside - side the old one or to raise the latter still higher. An expert by the name of Bartling offered to increase the height of the standing chimney without - out any interference with the work of the mills , amid , aided by another man equal to the occasion , the contractor proceeded to fix a series of light steel ladders to the chimney by means of iron hooks driven in between the courses of the bricks-erected a pulley at the top of the chimney and a flight of scaffolding alh around , and then , having lowered the cornice surmounting - ing time chimney , , successfully built on to the top at the rate of about four to five feet per day. A 1'lu1n Duke When Queen Victoria was on her way to Florence , divers dignitaries assembled at the station to greet her . While waiting they observed a man of modest appearance , who strolled up and down beside them , and whom they took fbr a journalist and sniffed at as having no right to be so near. A station official curtly ordered him back , and the stranger obeyed with a mild and courteous acquiescence. TLe station official and the civic dignitaries - taries were ready to weep when the train rolled up and the queen , alighting - ing , held out her hand to time stranger with a delighted exclamation. Ho was the duke of Saxe-Meiningen. The difference between genius and talent is that the former is a perpetual - ual , never-failing spring ; the latter is merely a cistern that has to be fiiled up from time to tmmc. A r I YTW ND L P - OF THE PRACTICAL - TICAL POLICY. Selections from Ynrious Autltorltle ; Which Servo to Prove the Wisdom of the I'eoplo ht Calling the Party Back to Power. 1 J . . , E. { + h - t * ' . Aq I The l'olley of Ruin. It is a noticeable fact that Democratic - cratic hopes of improved business are based upon "increased imports" of for- eign-made goods. Of course the more we import the less of that class of goods are made here. We rob workingmen - ingmen of employment they ought to have and ourselves of money we ought to keep in this country. In saying this we do not overlook time free trade contention that if we buy more foreign-made goods we pay for them by increased exports of our own goods , as , for instance , farrt products. But we deny the proposition. Europeans - peans do not buy our food products unless they need them , and if they need them they buy them anyhow , but never more than they need. Food they must have. With us the condition is differ- ent. We produce our own food. The things we buy abroad are mainly manufactured products , as silks , laces , jewelry and other luxuries made by labor paid less wages than paid to American artisans. It is to the interests - ests of the importers to buy abroad ; it is to the interest of American manufacturers - facturers and their employes to make the goods in this country , and it is to the interest of all our people ( save a few selfish people of wealth who are not in active business ) to maintain the American market for American products - ucts and keep our money circulating at home instead of shipping it abroad to settle balances against us created by the ruinous Democratic policy. Just where we are drifting in this respect ms shown in the last letter of Henry Clews , the New York banker , who says : "Owing to the growing demand in the merchandise markets , there is a probability - bility of the fall imports being large , and that probability is strengthened by foreign reports of large purchases by American importers. It is therefore the more important that our exports of produce should be on a liberal scale , so as to obviate the possibility of important - portant exports of specie , that being the only sore spot remaining from the financial dangers through which the country has passed since 1S93. In some quarters there is a little solicitude as to how far the loan syndicate may be depended upon to protect the treasury against liability to export drains of gold after the winding up of the loan contract of last February. There are no open assurances upon this point , but the feeling is almost universal that the syndicate will not retire from its regulation - lation of the foreign exchanges until an understanding has been reached as between the treasury and the large local holders of gold that will protect the government against its former exposure - posure to drain. Such a course seems so necessary in order to prevent an ultimate - mate collapse of the syndicate scheme , it is also so important to financial interests of every kind , and the prevention - vention may be so easily achieved in pursuit of mere ordinary methods , that it is generally regarded as an entirely safe assumption that all needful precautions - cautions against the return of invasions upon the treasury gold reserve will be adequately provided for. This being assured , there remains no cloud in the financial horizon to suggest a mis- giving. " In other words , the country under the present Democratic policy is at the mercy of the syndicate of London and New York bankers who floated the last Democratic loan and made several millions - lions of dollars at the expense of the American people ! "It is , therefore , the more important , " says the frank New York banker , "that our exports of produce should be on a liberal scale" -which , when read between the lines , means that if the prices of American cereals and food products can be kept down low enough to undersell time cheap "markets of the world , " another national financial collapse through the drainage , of gold to Europe may be averted. That is to say , if the American farmer - er will only be obliging enough to take less for his wheat , corn , cattle , hogs , wool and other products , and if the American manufacturer will kindly consent to manufacture less goods , and if the American workingmen will considerately - siderately give up some of their jobs , we may be able to export enough of our products to pay for our heavy imports and thus enable the Rothschild-Bel- mont-Morgan syndicate of capitalists to save the Democratic administration from again precipitating this country into financial stress ! What a cheerful outlook , what a reassuring contingency the country now faces ! With all the elements of wealth and prosperity in our midst , and abundantly able to take care of ourselves , we are now made the helpless wards of the most merciless policy that has ever throttled American industry and thrift.-Burlington , Iona , Hawk-Eye , June 18 , 1895. V Protection In England. We have already , referred to the m tt nor in which the manufactures o : matches in the United Kingdom appeal to their customers to buy only English matches , by placing a little printed slip inside the cover of the box , asking the people to "patronize home industry , use English matches and employ British labor. " Large signs bearing the same views can now be seen throughout the country districts of England. This is exactly what the American Protective Tariff League urges-namely , that the American people should patronize American home industries , use American - can made goods , and employ American - can labor. The English and Anion - can manufacturers thus have precisely the same ideas. Following the plan of the Englsh ! match manufacturers , we find in another line of goods the following announcement - nouncement on the outside of a cover of a package of British goods : IMPORTANT. . Why Support the Mann- . facture of Other Coun = . . tries When You Can Ob- . . tams as good an , Article . . MADE BY HOME INDUSTRY - . . DUSTRY ? . This is the appeal made by a London - don and Nottingham cigarette mamt- facturing concern which finds that its offer to give a "tube to each cigarette , matches and photo in each package" is not sufficient to secure all the trade it desires. Possibly the English dudes prefer American made cigarettes and do not find that they "can obtain as good an article made by home industry" in England. The belief in a policy of protection , however , is taking very generally throughout the United King- dom.-American Economist. The Wort of It. The figures show that the Wilson tariff is a good revenue producing measure. The only trouble is with the internal revenue , which decreased in the last fiscal year $3,543,769. If more revenue is needed in 1896 it should , therefore , be obtained by increasing internal revenue rates. "Let us have peace , " rather than republican tariff tinkering.-New York Herald , July 3 , 1595. 1595.As As the free traders have objected to a comparison of imports for time last fiscal year with that of 1894 as not being fair , why is it fair to compare the revenues raised by customs during the same periods ? "Let us have peace , " says James Gordon Bennett , " rather than republican tariff tinkering. " The Herald - ald has certainly got by far the worst of it in all its tariff arguments , and we do not wonder that Mr. Bennett cries for "peace" rather than for good will toward his countrymen.-American Economist. Idoling Its Record' ' The Wilson-Gorman tariff , whictt was to throw open to the American producer - ducer "the markets of time world , " is making its record. For the ten months ending in April the exports were valued at $ G7G,820,337 , while far a corresponding - ing period under the McKinley law they were $754,499,072. This record was made while the hard times at home were so severe that Americans were economizing in every way , and time producers - ducers were forced to seek every outlet they could for their wares and were willing to dispose of them at a minimum - mum of profit. Wages , too , were nearer those of the pauper labor of Europe than for many years before , aid yet the exports fell off. Time democratic orators certainly do well to leave time tariff question alone.-Mail and Express - press , New York , June 11 , 1895. hard on the Cow. An exchange tells of a man out in the western part of the state who went into his cow stable time other night and by mistake mixed the cow up a nice mash in a box full of sawdust instead of bran. The cow merely supposed that the hard times were the cause of the economy , meekly ate her supper , and the man never discovered his mistake until the next morning , when he milked the cow and she let down half a gallon of turpentine , a quart of shoe pegs and a bundle of lath.-Middleburgh , N. Y. a' . ews. Try an American Week. Speaking of the suggestion made by the American Economist recently , time San Francisco Journal of Commerce commends the idea to its local manu- facturers' and producers' association , ' urging it tQ institute a California week , , or even a California day each month , when the various business houses of San Francisco will display in their shops and on their shelves goods of California manufacture. Keep the ball rolling. Anglomaniac Iavard. Ambassador Bayard dismisses the Trinidad affair with the remark that Trinidad is only a little island and not worth making a fuss over. tindoubt- edly that is the plea of time English who have taken it. Mr. Bayard would i be false to the administration he represents - { sents if he failed to accept the excuses of the British foreign minister in all diplomatic matters.-Buffalo Express. Tin plate. The consul sent by Mr. Cleveland to Cardiff , Wales , reports with great pleasure - ure the fact that the new Americalt tariff on tin-plates has enabled manufacturers - facturers in Wales to Increase wages from 10 to 22' , per cent.-Philadelphia t Press , i 1 , ! , I i The Most ttenaltive 'rbtn ; ; on Earth . ' . This in a state of , Is n human nerve. overstruhmed or weakened , . t F Lot it become . tonfold. . < increased and the sensitiveness is ht nerve ± , Ifostein For weak or ovcrwroum tcr'sitomarh Bitters is the best tonic , exl.tence , since It htvl orates and SeIees them at the rtme time , Ita1OPos suptrluth o o8lcacy In tti spaPeta , constlpa - f rliou tion , malarial nud ] ddney complaints , I muthm and neural _ _ _ aa- _ _ _ _ a. The .trt of Breathing. . It ms perhaps one of the signs of the , times , to those alert for indications , ' . ( J that the art of breathing has become ; I store and more a subject of attention. . . t go.- . , Oculists as well as physiologists deeply into the study in a way hardly ' to be touched upon here. Plrysrcians' i 1 have cured aggravated cases of insom ; nia regular breaths , m by long-drawn , fever-stricken patients have been quiet , _ m l' , mil , stubborn forms of int ligostion ate made ' to disappear. A tendency to consume- i' authority - t tion may be overcome , as some ity has within the last few years clearly - i ly demonstrated , by exercise iwbreatlt- { ing. a Seasickness , too , m ay be sui- i mounted and the victim of hypnotic ; j f inilueuee taught to withstand the ' force of an energy directed ugainst o him. ! , here is a famous physician in Mun . r \ I islm who has written an extensive work f upon the subjectof breathing , lie has , besides fortmmlated a system by which i G'a1 usthmuic patients are made to walls . without losing breath , while sufferers from ivc ahnesscsof the heart are cured. I I AtMeran in the Austrian ' 1' rol , his - % patients ( almost every royal - house of Europe is represented ) are put throuh a certain system of breathing and - 1 , walking. 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