H jf I INTERNATIONAL PRCS * ASSOCIATION. H If \ CHAPTER XVI. ( Continued. ) 1 JJE Indeed , in this particular winter , aft- I * er the nndnE anstostog of the treas- tm 1 $ < ure , the Desprezes had an anxiety of a HI W very different order , and one which lay E j\- nearer their hearts. Jean-Marie was I J % Plainly not himself. He had fits of hec- H i'Mt 'tJc activlty , "when he made unusual ex- M \jk ertionB to please , spoke more and fast- I % .m * er' and redoubled in attention to his H g % lessons. But these were interrupted by H \i spells of melancholia and brooding < H ff\ silence , when the boy was little better KiJP 'than unbearable. i | 1 % "Silence , " the Doctor moralized R \A ' 'you see , Anastasie , what comes of si- J Kj ' fv Jence. Had the boy properly unbo- Hj t somed himself , the little disappoint- HifiStf tment about the treasure , the little an- 41 I noyance about Casim 'ir's incivility , fiu / 'would long ago have been forgotten. J H fi As it is , they prey upon him like a j Ihf disease. He loses flesh , his appetite d $ Is variable , and , on the whole , im- I % .paired. I keep him on the strictest JL regimen , I exhibit the most powerful I , ijg tonics ; both in vain. " HfSfc "Don't you think you drug him too III much ? " asked madame , with an irre- , I 1 * I ipressible shudder. I J "Drug ? " cried the Doctor ; "I drug ? ' I m Anastasie , you are mad ! " I [ I Time went on , and the boy's health K > & still slowly declined. The Doctor &J2 * * * blamed the weather , which was cold Mm. anii boiBterous. He called in his con- MWfrere from Bourron , took a fancy for I \ him , magnified his capacity , and was I , Jfr , .pretty soon under treatment himself ft s | it scarcely appeared for what comM - M\ \ \ plaint. He and Jean-Marie had each Wi \ medicine to take at different periods of lWi the day. The Doctor used to lie in a& \ wait for the exact .moment , watch in M | .hand. "There is nothing like regular- K * "ity , " he would say , fill out the doses , 1 -and dilate on the virtues of the & draught ; and if the boy seemed none w , the better , the Doctor was not at all J& v the worse. J if Gunpowder Day , the boy was partic- I vfiularly ; low. It was scowling , squally I fh\ • weaneHuge ; ' broken companies of I r clouds sailed swiftly overhead ; raking I % .gleams of sunlight swept the Tillage , I C .and were followed with intervals of I V darkness and white , flying rain. At I Jb times the wind lifted up its voice and I * t f I bellowed. The trees were all scourg- I w\ \ * ns themselves along the meadows , the I • -last leaves Hying like dust. I T\ The Doctor , between the boy and the I \ -weather , was Jn his elements ; he had a L \ .theory to prove. He sat with his watch ' Hr 4 * V : out and a barometer in front of him , j i waiting for the squalls and noting their : Hk effect upon the human pulse. "For the ; R true philosopher , " he remarked de- m * lightedly , "every fact in nature is a ' K toy. " A letter came to him ; but , as its Mpr .arrival coincided -with the approach of ; | Jjy , another gust , he merely crammed it ' • jS * * ntas pockets , gave the time to Jean- Kim .Marie , and the next moment they were • Bl ; both counting their pulses as if for a Hfiswager. . TV CHAPTER XVIL K * \ ffsr T alghtfall the Wm J& $ ' w \ tempest Ifc be _ B * > tf - B W\ sieged the hamlet , I W iffli apparently from to A H l \ every side \ % if Wm / \ te M vrith. batterie of vy Mm 'fa ? $ \ M cannon' tlie houses I Wh * Q § "ssJ * $ shook and groaned ; um- An iO live coals , were II * - ' \ blown upon the | M floor. The uproar Is ' -and terror of the night kept people Hjg long awake , sitting pallid faces giving sar- - - Mr- Pl It was past twelve before the Des- I f * " ' , prez family had retired. By half-past une , when the storm wras already some I v -past its height , the Doctor was awak- | r aned from a troubled slumber , and sat WW' ) UPA - noise still rang in his ears , but n % -whether of this world or of the world Jot ' sf dreams he was not certain. Another W/ \ clap of wind followed. It was accom- | jfcr ' panied by a sickening movement of the He whole house , and in the subsequent lull C Desprez could hear the tiles pouring H J' like a cataract into the loft above his B * "head. He plucked Anastasie bodily out mJF' &i bed. KT * 'Run ! " he cried , thrusting some into her ii • ' " R wearing apparel j "the M\ 3iouse is falling ! To the ga\x < jn ! " I V She did not pause to be twice bidden ; Wjs&v : S xe vras ao'wn ie stair iQ sn instant. P She had never before suspected herself H of such activity. The Doctor mean- K. while , with the speed of a piece of pan- B iomime business , and undeterred by Kg t 'broken shins , proceeded to rout out We Jean-Marie , tore Aline from her virgin - H ' -gin slumhers , seized her by the hand , H. and tumbled downstairs and into the R garden , with the girl tumbling behind B , -aim , stillTiot half-awake. If The fugitives rendezvoused in the ar- f bor by some common instinct. Then He came a bull's eye flash of struggling JS moonshine , which disclosed their four * R Bgures standing huddled Irom the wind It in a ruffle of flying drapery , and not I * jfc without a considerable need for more. -A.t the humiliating spectacle Anastasie V clutched her night-dress desperately W * * bout her and Turst loudly into tears. Fv , The Doctor flew to console her ; but I 16 -she elbowed lilm away. She suspected I 1 | everybody of being the general public , WC 3rad thought the darkness was alive | l -with ej-es. K > \ Another gleam and another violent I > .gust arrived together ; the house was I seen to rock on its ioundation , and , ' lust as t&e light was qnce more H * eclipsed , a craBh which triumphed over the shouting of the wind announced its fall , and for a moment the whole gar den was alive with skipping tiles and brickbats. One such missile grazed the Doctor's ear ; another descended on the bare foot of Aline , who instantly made night hideous with her shrieks , j j By this time the hamlet was alarmed , lights flashed from the windows , hails reached the party , and the Doctor an swered , nobly contending against Aline and the tempest. But this prospect of ' help only awakened Anastasie to a more active stage of terror , "Henri , people will be coming , " she screamed in her husband's ear. "I trust so , " he replied. "They cannot I would rather die , " she wailed. "My dear , " said the Doctor reprovingly - ingly , "you are excited. I gave you some clothes. What have you done with them ? " "Oh , I don't know I must have thrown them away ! Where are they ? " she sobbed. Desprez groped about in the dark- ness. "Admirable ! " he remarked ; "my velveteen trousers ! This will exactly meet your necessities. " "Give them to me ! " she oried fierce ly ; but as soon as she had them in her hands her mood appeared to alter she stood silent for a moment , and then pressed the garment back upon the Doctor. "Give them to Aline , " she said "poor girl. " "Nonsense ! " said the Doctor. "Aline does not know what she is about. Al ine is beside herself with terror ; and at any rate , she is a peasant. Now I am really concerned at this exposure for a person of your housekeeping habits ; my solicitude and your fan tastic modesty both point to the same remedy the pantaloons. " He held them ready. "It is impossible. You do not under stand , " she said , with dignity. By this time rescue was at hand. It had been found impracticable to enter by the street , for the gate was blocked with masonry , and the nodding ruin still threatened further avalanches. But between the Doctor's garden and the one on the right hand there was that very picturesque contrivance , a com mon well ; the door on the Desprez' side had chanced to be unbolted , and now , through the arched aperture a man's bearded face and an arm sup porting a lantern were introduced into the world of windy darkness , where Anastasie concealed her woes. The light struck here and there among the tossing apple boughs , it glinted on the grass ; but the lantern and the glowing face became the center of the world. Anastasie crouched back from the in trusion. "This way ? " shouted the man. "Are you all safe ? " Aline , still screaming , ran to the new-comer , and was presently hauled head-foremost through the wall. "Now , Anastasie , come on ; it is your turn , " said the husband. "I cannot , " she replied. "Are we all to die of exposure , ma dame ? " thundered TJoctor Desprez. "You can go ! " she cried. "Oh , go , go away ! I can stay here ; I am quite warm. " . The Doctor took her by the shoul ders with an oath. "Stop ! " she screamed. "I will put them on. " She took the detested lendings in her hand once more ; but her repulsion was stronger than she. "Never ! " she cried , shuddering and flung them far away into the night. Next moment the Doctor had whirled her to the well. The man was there and the lantern ; Anastasie closed her eyes and appeared to herself to be about to die. How she was trans ported through the arch she knew not ; but once on the other side she was re ceived by the neighbor's wife , and en veloped in a friendly blanket. CHAPTER XVIII. EDS .were made ready for the two women , clothes of very various sizes for the Doctor and Jean-Marie ; and for the remainder of the night , while madame dozed in . and the bor- - - out on - jjr -j- d " derland of hyster ics , her husband sat beside the fire and held forth to the admiring neighbors. He showed them , at length , the causes of the accident ; for years , he explained , the fall had been impending ; one sign had fol lowed another , the joints had opened , the plaster had cracked , the old walls bowed inward ; last , not three weeks ago , the cellar-door had begun to work with difficulty in its grooves. "The cellar ! " he said , gravely shaking his head over a glass of mulled .wine. "That reminds me of my poor vintages. By a manifest providence the Hermit age was nearly at an end. One bottle-1- I lose but one bottle of that incom parable wine. It had "been set apart against Jean-Marie's wedding. Well , I must lay down some more ; it will be an interest in life. I am , however , a man somewhat advanced in years. My great work is now buried in the fall of my humble roof ; it will never be completed my name Trill have been writ in water. And yet vou find me * * - * v ii. i > j ii wii iwi'tiwii iiTTir iifwt ' . iiiiiii > ] Wi' minn > < liiWMLimiti ii iiuiiij 9 calm I would say cheerful. Can your priest do more ? " By the first glimpse of day the party sallied forth from the fireside Into the street The wind had fallen , but still charioted a world of troubled clouds ; the air bit like frost ; and the party , as they stood about the ruins in the rainy twilight of the morning , beat up on their breasts and blew into their hands for warmth. The house had en tirely fallen , the walls outward , thereof roof in ; it was a mere heap of rub bish , with here and there a forlorn spear of broken rafter. A sentinel was placed over the ruins to protect the property , and the party adjourned to Tentaillon's to break their fast at the Doctor's expense. The bottle cir culated somewhat freely ; and before they left the table it had begun to snow. For three days the snow continued to fall , and the ruins , covered with tar paulin and watched by sentries , were left undisturbed. The Desprezes mean while had taken up their abode at Ten taillon's. Madame spent her time in the kitchen , concocting little delica cies , with the admiring aid of Madame Tentaillon , or sitting by the fire in thoughtful abstraction. The fall of the house affected her wonderfully little ; that blow has been parried by another ; and in her mind she was continually fighting over again the battle of the trousers. Had she done right ? Had she done wrong ? And now she would applaud her determination ; and anon , with a horrid flush of unavailing peni tence , she would regret the trousers. No juncture in her life had so much ex ercised her judgment. In the mean time the Doctor had become vastly- pleased with his situation. Two of the summer boarders still lingered behind the rest , prisoners for lack of a remit tance ; they were both English , but one of them spoke French pretty flu ently , and was , besides , a humorous , agile-minded fellow , with whom th6 Doctor could reason by the hour , se cure of comprehension. Many were the glasses they emptied , many the topics they discussed. "Anastasie , " the Doctor said on the third morning , "take an example from your husband , from Jean-Marie. The excitement has done more for the boy than all my tonics , he takes his turn as sentry with positive gusto. As for me , you behold me. I have made friends with the Egyptians ; and my Pharaoh is , I swear it , a most agree able companion. You alone are hipped. About a house a few dresses ? Whai are they in comparison to the 'Phar macopoeia' the labor of years lying buried below stones and sticks in this i depressing hamlet ? The snow falls ; ; I shake it from my cloak ! Imitate me. Our income will be impaired , I grant < it , since we must rebuild ; but moder ation , patience , and philosophy wil- < gather about this hearth. In the mean while , the Tentaillons are obliging ; the : table , with your additions , will pass ; : only the wine is execrable well , 1 i shall send for some to-day. My Pha- ' roah will be gratified to drink a decent ( glass ; aha ! and I shall see if he possesses - ] sesses that acme of organization a ( palate. If he has a palate , he is per- . feet. " "Henri , " she said , shaking her head , ] "you are a man ; you cannot understand - , stand my feelings ; no woman could ] shake off the memory of so public a \ humiliation. " j The Doctor could not restrain a tit ter. "Pardon me , darling , " he said , "but really , to the "philosophical intelli gence , the incident appears so small a trifle. - You looked extremely well " "Henri ! " she cried. ( to bs contivijbd.i Narrow Escapes. Adam Yandever , one of the original settlers of Tallulah , Georgia , was a famous hunter and trapper. The his torian of Georgia relates several of Mr. Vandever's hairbreadth escapes , from which we select the following : At one time Mr. Vandever was en camped on a lofty mountain in Union county. To make an observation of his surroundings he climbed upon an immense boulder which stood upon the brow of a precipice. Just then he heard the howl of a wolf in che woods below. He stepped to the far side of the bould er , hoping to get a better glimpse of the enemy. As he moved , the great rock , which chanced to be delicately balanced , began to roll , and an instant later it was plunging over the preci pice. Fortunately an oak tree drooped over the boulder , and in that moment of peril the woodsman gave an up ward leap and grasped one of the branches and hung suspended in mid air while the great stone went crash ing down the mountain side. "I felt my hair turn white , " said the old gentleman afterward , "when I real ized how near I'd come to going along with that rocking stone. The limb I hung too wa'n't over-stout , and when I swung back from over the cliff and dropped to the ground I felt as weak as a baby. Trobably an Old Time Pugillst. Parts of the skeleton of a prehis toric animal "were found on the farm of Alexander Graham of Liberty town ship , Ind. , the fragments indicating that the animal's jaw was probably four feet long. A part of tiie jaw is in good condition , as are some of the teeth , which are about a foot long , but most of the bones were so far de composed when uncovered that they crumbled. Clmgtiscnvenu Chastisement is the work of the Holy Spirit. When we sin the Holy Spirit lashes us through conscience and scourges us , and we cast ourselves upon our knees and suffer more keenly somUmes than in any bodily agony. Rev. H. A. George. ' WASHINGTON WISDOM INSIDE FACTS ABOUT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. An Intcrentlnf- Talk With the As-lit- ant Secretary of Agriculture A Cool ay for Bryan and HI * J'ree Sliver JLsaorlateg. ( Washington Letter. ) Mr. Bryan , the late candidate for the presidency has been in Washington the past few days and has discovered some rather troublesome facts about the growth of our currency and espe cially the growth of the gold supply of the United States and of the world. Mr. Bryan , it will be remembered in his speeches last fall asserted that the 42 million dollars necessary to keep pace with the growth of population in the United States could not be pro duced since the suspension of free coinage of silver , and quoted Senator Sherman in support of his theory that this amount was necessary to be added to the currency of the country each year. He was undoubtedly right in his quotation of Senator Sherman but it is now apparent that he was both in accurate and misleading in assuming that this amount of currency cannot be and iB not added to the circulating medium of the country by means of its present facilities. The coinage of the mints of the country in the year which ends with the present month will be in round numbers 100 million dollars , three-fourths of it gold , while that of the calendar year 189C was 99 million dollars. Add to this the fact that the money in circulation today is $138,000,000 more than it was a year ago and it will be seen that Mr. Bryan's statements in this , as well as in many other things , were to say the least , misleading. The director of the mint estimates that the gold mines of the United States alone will this year turn out over 60 million dollars , which is greater than in any j-ear except 1S53 when the California gold mines were at their zenith. The Retaliation Jlusraboo. Recent statistics show that Japan has sold to people of the United States in the past decade goods amounting to 313 million yen , the value of the yen being about equivalent to the dollar , while she has bought from us goods valued at only 78 million yen. This simple fact disposes of all the hum- buggery which the free traders are in dulging in about the alleged probabil ities that Japan will retaliate upon the passage of the new tariff bill , by shutting out American goods. The shrewd Japanese are not likely to sus tain this assertion which freed trad ers are now making that there will be retaliation against the United States on account of our new tariff. Japan has been especially pointed out as like ly to take a step of this kind but her financiers and statesmen will not take a step which would close the markets of this country to the products of her own people 'when those markets are four times as great as those which our own goods supply in that country. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Talks. ( No man in public life is more closei i ly allied to the farmer and his interests - ] ests than is Asst Secy , of Agriculture ] Brigham , whose record as master of ' the National Grange has brought him ] In close touch with that important element of the population. In a talk with your correspondent a day or two ago he made some interesting sugges tions. "The cause of the agricultural de pression , " said he , "is not easy to name in a word. Tariff for revenue and free raw material are probably responsi ble to a considerable extent Under these principles the duties have been taken from wool and lowered on other agricultural products , thus operating directly upon the farmers of the Uni ted States by reducing prices. The general revision of the tariff has in- John Bull Gets Hurt. terfered with other great business in terests of the country and checked production. The effect of this has been to throw labor out of employment ; the men who once had money to buy farm products have been living only by the greatest economy , and the surplus of farm products has accumulated in the farmers' hands. " "What about the attitude of the ad ministration , Mr. Secretary , and its desire for speedy tariff action ? " -administration has been earn estly advocating the early passage of a measure that will correct the evil results of the Wilson low-tariff free- raw-material law a measure which is expected to give adequate protection to the agricultural interests and with a tendency to remove the present exist ing depression. There has been less delay than in any previous legislation ol tie kind. Even the opposition has not been captious in its efforts to delay the passage of the measure , but has ttiite generally recognized the fact that * yy y. y < * ' 'Jl. ' ' " > * * * r- * e * mr * . - * - * * * / : * Jf , * " * * • " ' T'i 1 Tir mi i i inn hi iinii.iM-uiami.mj the people rejected the 'tariff-for-reve- nue-only * Idea and condemned the pol icy which compelled the farmers and some other Industrial classes to pro duce the so-called 'rad-materlal' in di rect competition with the cheapest labor of the world , whilst other inter ests were protected. The wool-grow ers and wool-buyers are waiting with some Impatience the passage of the bill regulating- duties upon imported wool und woolens. Wool is now ready for market , and this suspense is very detrimental to both seller and buyer , as they do not know just what rates of duty will be fixed. The farmers are very earnest in demanding adequate protection on all farm commodities grown here in competition with sim ilar products grown abroad and some times imported into this country , and the administration is fully committed to this policy of giving ample protec tion to agricultural products. The farmers of Ohio are not so much in terested in the duty upon hides as are those who live in the great west , but they believe it to be a matter of justice and equity that there should be some protection to the men who grow hides as well as to the men who manufacture from them. " " ' 'What do yon think about the re vision of the tariff schedules in the senate ? " "The new tariff bill as ft passed the house is believed to be more in the interests of agriculture than the bill as amended in the senate committee. Now that the measure is under discus sion in the senate the representatives from the agricultural districts are ex pected to see that it is properly- amend ed before it becomes a lawIt i3 very cheering to note the breaking up of partisan lines on this question. The old tariff-for-revenue-only slogan , so long relied upon by the leaders of one of the great political parties , has large ly lost its influence , and the represen tatives of agricultural districts , with out fear of the old-time leaders , do not hesitate to support measures calculated to give some portion of the protective system to their constituents. I believe that no party which- advocates free raw material and protected manufactured goods can ever again secure a strong following among the agricultural classes. " "What do you say , Mr. Brigham , in regard to the delay in the return of prosperity ? " "It is hardly fair to expect benefits from a protective system before the law has been enacted. People should not forget that we are still living un der the Wilson low-tariff-free-raw-ma terial measure and that at present the only advancement or improvement in conditions is the anticipation of the good effects of the new measure. Prog ress on the bill is much greater than has been expected by those well in formed and familiar with tariff legis lation , and the measure will undoubt edly soon become a law , and not by the votes of one party alone. But the hue and cry against the delay in the coming of prosperity is not properly chargeable to the ignorance of the farmer and workingman on this sub ject. They are pretty well informed. This cry comes principally from the cheap politicians who are striving to • make capital out of the matter. There , is no sense in asking for this promised prosperity before the passage of a bill which will cut off the enormous im- ( portations of foreign stuff , and give the country a chance to right itself. When the remedy is tried and fails it is time enough for people to say that we are mistaken and unable-to bring prosper ity. " G. H. WILLIAMS. A Warnins : From the TVe-st. Recently a leading member of the house of representatives who has busi ness interests in the west made a trip through Indiana and Illinois , and he returned to Washington with a word from the people , concerning the de lay in the passage of the tariff bill , which should be heeded. The honor able gentleman said , in speaking of the situation he found in those great and progressive industrial states of the middle west : The universal cry of the people is for relief from the dangers which threaten in the way of an overstock ed market. The slight impetus that has been given to industry in this country by the assurance that a tariff bill will soon be passed will be re tarded by the fact that the increased importations are crowding out Ameri can goods and filling the markets with cheap importations. These goods are rereaing the west They are in bond , in warehouse , in transit and in store , inundating a market that has- already • suffered from under consumption as a result of the idleness and low wages that followed the free trade policy. I say the goods are cheap. They are cheap and trashy. The mills of the foreigner are running day and night rushing out the cheapest possible fab rications for the American market. I have heard some Democratic repre sentatives say that the Importations of "cheap" goods would be a source of gratification to the workingmen of the : country. This is the usual Democrat ic illustration of the beauties and glories of free trade. I have yet to hear the first Democrat explain what satisfaction it would he to the Ameri can workingman who is out of em ployment because his factory is shut down , and who stands in idleness without a dollar in his pocket , to Team that the shoddy imported goods are selling at lower prices than they could be produced by the mills and factories of the United States. The Senate's Good "Work. The United States senate started nobly on its work of revising the Dingley tariff and we trust there may be no let or hindrance in the continu ance of the good work. Senators ap preciate the u2cesstty for prompt ac tion. , , * • J -j ° t " * il H * * r * * * * M * * * * ° * ' * * * " * * * * ' ' ' ' • • - ' ' • ir 'i 1 1 i ii m I -I 1 1a i i B i | wt- Howie Sew Fact * About Oar. Currency * > Mr. Bryan's visit to WaHhlBgton wa somewhat embarrassed by the Bimul- tnneous announcement of the director of the mint that the gold production of the United States in 1896 was * $53" ,0SS. - * 000 and is likely to be over $60,000,000 in 1897. This figure for 1S9C is greater j than for thirty years , and if the pro- j' duction for 1S97 exceeds 60 millions , as i is expected , it will be the greatest in f the history of the country , with the single exception of 1853 , which reached" 65 million dollars. The total coinage of the mints of the United States in the fiscal year just about to end will be in round numbers 100 million del lars. That of last year was In round numbers 99 * millions. In the same con nection it may be remarked that the money In circulation in this country is $138,149G12 greater than the circula tion one year ago. Add to these Inter esting facts one other , namely , that j the gold production of the world this j year is likely to reach 250 million dollars - 1 lars , or far more than any other year { in history , and makes a very unpleasant - f ant combination for the advocates of free and unlimited coinage of Bilver. Tlie "Stop Thief" Cry. "Stop thief ! " is the popular cry of certain - I tain classes of people at certain times. I Somebody in Washington with a good H memory has just brought to the surface - face the fact that the gentlemen in the senate who are now loudly shouting B about the alleged advantages given to the sugar trust by the new tariff are H the very men who framed the sugar I schedule of the Wilson bill , which , 1 brought such scandal upon the Dem- I ocratlc party with reference to the I sugar trust , whose stocks advanced 55 B per cent in value while these very men H were framing the sugar schedule , ' whereas the recent advance over which H they are screaming is only 6 per cent H m Protect This Little Fellow. H TIMELY TOPICS. M The wings of the Democracy are not H 'Happing together" very much these M lays. H The growth of manufacturing industries - H tries in the south is producing its ef- H feet in developing a protective sentiment - H ment One-third of the membernhip H from that section in the present con- H grecs has supported high protection or j H refused to vote against it. H It will not be easy to induce the Ohio j H workingmen who have been on half H wages under the Wilson tariff law to H vote to put a free-trader into the senate H in the place of Senator Hanna , especially - H cially when that action would make t H certain that the Democracy would j H control that body for the next two H years. H The recent developments in congress | in which a large number of Democrats | have abandoned the free-trade theory H and supported high protection , coupled H v.'ththe fact that a large number of H Democrats in every state where there H are campaigns this fall have refused to H support the silver issue , are rapidly H disgusting- Populist leaders and deciding - H ciding them to dissolve the partnership H existing between those two parties , and H it is probable that fusion between Populists - H ulists and Democrats will be impossible H in the future. | A slow but steady gain in business | with an advance in prices , an increase M in the number of hands employed and | growth of new orders , and an increase | in the amount of work done are pointed - | ed out by "Dun's Review" in its last H issue as a renewed evidence that business - H iness 13 improving. A study of the j H newspaper sentiment of the country as H expressed in the publications of a'l H sentiments shows a concurrence in the | belief thus expressed that there is a H marked and general improvement ini | the business situation. M Senators Jones , Vest , and Mills are H good ones to arraign the Republican H party because of a slight advance in H sugar-trust stocks incidental with the H adoption of the sugar schedule. It- was • j H these very men who framed the schedules - H ules of the Wilson law and sugar stock H advanced 55 per cent in value while H they were doing it , whereas these H stocks have increased 6" per cent since | the Republicans have been considering- | the present bill. H The t riff bill is making splendid H progress , despite the fact that the H mossback Democrats are taking up a M good deal of time in scolding the | younger generation of senators for H theh- protection votes. Not only is the H bill making good progress , but the H changes made are proving extremely H satisfactory , especially those relating H to the tariff on pottery , tea , and rice. H and the elimination of the proposed III * * H crease In the beer tax. H