A r itfA id I V p P V n tgawji h jiiwMtf mu iw Aboul Cassem They were talking about the approaching marriage Tn three day3 more said Koram I shall claim her for my bride lcsegs3se3a3aeeaiaBaS e SccmrLe ofDaLixvauscus Copyrfatcd 1391 by Eobt Bosners Sons In truth sire it is as you have t with year life said replied the minister He spoke not with the enthusiasm of apprecia tion but as one who would net dispute his king I trust sire your hop23 may find their fruition I pray that Clin may bear to thee a son and thus make bright and promising the even ing of your life Good Abcul I trust in thy words Ha what new Whom have we here Sire spoke a page the Israelite Judah -is without and would speak with thee Hew cried the king Is it the Judah whom I sent from the Valley of Lycanius The same sire Then send him to me at once By -my life Aboul he cannot have ac complished his mission so soon I dare not hope so Let us hope for the best suggest ed the minister and before further remark could be made Judah stocd in the royal presence Ha Judah do I see thee back so seen Have yon come to bring me word of failure Nay sire replied the Israelite I have come to bring the robber chief tain to Damascus Have you taken him Yes sire Alive Yes sire And have him here Ready to be brought before you at any time He is bound Yes sire Then bring him at once By the host of Pluto I would see the fellow But hold He is guarded Yes sire Osmir and Selim are -with him Are they all It needs no more The prisoner is securely bound and can offer no re sistance Then let him come Ye gods uttered Koram turning to his minister after Judah had gone what manner of man shali we be hold I cannot guess- sire - A giant I think as ugly as a Cy lop But he is bound Aboul he is bound In a little while the dcor opened and Judah entered followed by Osmir and Selim who led a bound man between them Sire spoke the Israelite this is the prisoner But where is Julian demanded Horam This is Julian This cried the monarch taking a step forward and gazing into the face of the bound man before him This he repeatea in a lower tone advancing another step and gazing more earnestly upon the bold open youthful face This is not Julian This is he who hath commanded the robber band said Judah Aye and I am he whom you have called the Scourge of Damascus spoke the prisoner standing proudly erect and gazing full into the face of the king I am Julian the enemy of 3Ioram and the avenger of wrongs done years ago The monarch as he gazed more in tently upon these features and as the tones of that voice fell upon his ear seemed startled by the memory of some old dream And Aboul Cassem was not entirely uninterested The old minister gazed as fixedly and as earn estly upon the face cf the young chief tain as did his royal master and he too seemed puzzled and perplexed Who are you asked Horam I am Julian the Scourge But what else You should know what else most mighty king I have tried to make myself felt by you 3ut urged Horam taking no no tice of the robbers tone why have you sought to harm me Who are you that can have cause for such enmity I am one who knows the bitterness of deepest wrong replied Julian Fa therless and motherless came I from the feeble steps of childhood and I know that Horam was the murderer of my parents Ha cried the king with a start Who were your parents T will not speak their names in your presence Beware robber I may compel you to answer If you have power to extract an swers from dead men you may force answers from me By the gods thou art insolent Then bind my tongue as these slaves have bound my arms No said Horam struggling with his passion I have another plan The secret which you will not speak to me you shall never speak You shall follow your parents with ail possible speed Judah I am here sire You know the deepest darkest dun geon where the most dreaded prison ers are confined I A Story of the EslsI By SYLVANU5 COBB JR CHAPTER VI I Yes sire f It -was near noon and the king of Conduct this man thither Plunse Damascus was in his chamber with him into the very bowels of the deep est cavern where the doors are of iron and the bolts of triple steel and see that he is kept safely there until the morrow You will answer -for him Cnce mere the king gazed into that youthful face and then turned away to a window Sire spoke the minister after the prisoner had been conducted away why do you spare that man for even another hour Why do yon not exe cute him at once Because replied Horam starting up I have a curiosity to know who he is There is some mystery in that face of his It is now near the hour of the council and I have not time to think I must see him again Did you not mark something peculiar in his look Yes sire there is something in his face which is familiar to me or at least it seems so By my life Abcul it must be so Did you mark that bold front that open brow that Jove IIke sweep of ncse and chin and did you mark the deep lustrous eyes and the gentle curl ing of thatsunny hair Yes sire And can you net read its secret No Can your majesty Not yet not yet Abcul but I must I have a strange curiosity and it is a curiosity which has bten strangely and suddenly excited CHAPTER VII At Kassems House Ulin had lost none of her wondrous beauty but she had become pale and the healthy flash of the eye was gone Late in the evening she sat in her chamber with her brow resting upon her hand and ever and anon a deep sigh escaped her My dear good mistress spoke Al bia gliding to the side of the princess and resting her hand affectionately upon her arm T cannot bear to see you suffer so What is it It is nothing Albia Ulin spoke without raising her head and her voice was low and sad Dont tell me that urged the at tendant She got down upon her knees and gazed earnestly up into Ulins face Cn my dear lady you are misera ble and unhappy Why will you not pour out your sorrows to me Perhaps I can help you bear them You know I love you you know that I will be faithful Tell me all and I will suffer with you if I can and I will help you if there is help to be had As I live at this moment so if it should appear to me necessary would I lay down my life for your welfare Will you not trust me Ulin leaned her head forward upon Aibias shoulder and burst into tears Oh Albia you are my friend you are my sister I know you love me and I cannot tell you how grateful I am They why will you not lift the veil from your sorrow and allow me to feel still more for you I had almost resolved to tell you Albia Then make the resolution sure and admit me to your fullest confidence The princess dried her eyes and finally lifted her head from her com panions shoulder Dear Albia I know not how to com mence I am a child a poor foolish child as you will say when I have told you all You will say that I de serve to suffer and that punishment should be mine Nay my lady responded the bond maiden you must not commence in that way Tell me first all the cause of your sorrow and leave it for me to base my own judgment Come trust me and 1st me give you all my sym pathy A few moments the princess was si lent and then she said with a low tremor in her voice Dear Albia when I said that I would marry with the king I did not think what I was doing That strange dream so wonderfully repeated led my father to broach the subject and I did not refuse When he talked of my being queen and of my giving birth to a king to a king of Damascus I thought it might be my duty to offer myself I did not then know Horam But now I have learned new things I dread the fate which I have courted I fear and loathe the man whose wife I have promised to become When I first promised to give myself to Horam I felt that I could perform the duty without the sacrifice of any real vir tue or comfort of life But oh how changed it has all become Not only does my whole nature shrink from the sacrifice but it seems as though a fate worse than death were involved in the ordeal Last night I dreamed that Ho ram was my husband and that he meant to kill me He did not plan to drown me as he did poor Helena but he declared that I should be thrown alive into a den of wild beasts It makes you shudder Albia Oh how terrible And yet my dear girl I dreamed that I felt a relief when I knew that death was coming even though it was to come so dreadfully Just thinkwhat a state of mind that must be Oh it xaaaa i iii immaraaw Is horrible Dear Albia I know net what to do Have you told me all whispered the bondmaiden winding her arm about her mistress neck and kissing her upon the brow Have I not told you enough re turned Ulin covering her face with her hands Not if there is more to tell dear lady You have trusted me this far trust me with all You have told me that ycu dread the king and I do not wonder at this You cannot have for gotten that I spoke against the union from the first It seemed to me un natural But lady there is something more Nothing more which I dare to tell AJbia Nay do not ask me I have tcld ycu all that I can tell And now I ask you what can I do The fatal hour is nigh at hand in the which I have promised to give myself to the king There is one thing you can do my mistress one thing alone which I can see Speak Albia You can flee Flee repeated Ulin in a startled whisper There is but one other course open to you And that Marriage with the king Oh Albia this is dreadful That same thought of flight has entered my mind before but can I leave my fa ther If you become the kings wife you must leave him Think of it lady But whither can I flee I have thought of that said the bondmaiden and I think I know where you could find safety Some miles from Damascus among the hills where the Pharphar winds its water in a mummuring channel lives an old hermit named Ben Hadad His home is in a cave which the hand of nature has fashioned in the solid rock and his life is given to deeds of charity and good will I have seen him and I know that he is good and kind And how came you to know this old man asked the princess with some surprise I know him through an old woman named Ezabel who has been often in the city and who was well acquainted with your mother This Ezabel used to come often to our house and once Ben Hadad came with her a white haired old man whose just and tem perate life is lengthening out far be yond the span of years usually allotted to man Your mother gave him money to be expended in charity and he told her if she ever could find use for his aid it should be freely given I know that he will befriend you If you wish to flee I will go with you and to the last of my strength and my life I will help and sustain you Think of it my mistress I will think of it Albia and on the morrow my mind shall be made up You may retire now It it late and we both need rest To be continued Good Eaongn for Ulm Two brothers recently visited the of fices of a firm of American machine agents in London One was at the head of an important English manu facturing firm the second was an en gineer who had lived in Pennsylvania for some years The latter pointed out to his brother machine after ma chine that he ought to have You know Tom he at last declared em phatically if I were in your place Id throw every bit of your old machinery on the scrap heap and have an up-to-date plant right through Youd double your output and halve your expenses Tom listened carefully and put his hand to his chin in reflective fashion Well Dick he said at length you may be right I wont say that youre not But why should I change The old machines were good enough for fa ther and they were good enough for grandfather so I am thinking theyre good enough for me Centuries of Imprisonment To be sentenced to imprisonment for the term of ones natural life is hard enough but to be consigned to a dun geon cell for a couple of thousands years is Indeed harrowing Yet foreign judges not infrequently impose sen tences of several centuries without it being considered anything remarkable Not long ago an Italian adventurer L was convicted of 63 distinct forgeries He was sentenced in each case with the result that he will be free in the year 20S9 A couple of years ago a young man was arrested in Vienna who upon his own showing should have been sentenced to 2500 years im prisonment A total of 400 charges was brought against him and he was convicted and sentenced on ail of them But the judge was a merciful man and in passing sentence he threw off 1000 years in consideration of the mans youth Flower of England The flower of England is the rose and this choice dates back to the Wars cf the Rases when that branch of the royal family known as the house of Lancaster chose a red rose for its badge and the rival branch the house of York had a white rose Previous to that date the badge of the English royal family the Fiantagenets was a sprig of broom from which indeed they took their surname as the found er of the family Fulke Marcel the earl of Anjcu having expiated a crime b a pilgrimage to Palestine and be ing scourged there with broom twig3 ever afterward HE IS EEMIMSCEKT SOME FOURTH OF JULY BY UNCLE SAM TALK Tells Hott HI Zttaaajarj from Wasn lnctoa to McKInley Have ZnrarlaUly Succeeded with Protection Lam and FaUod with rree Trade It will be conceded by all that the Fourth of July was a most appropriate day for a good talk with Uncle Sam The hearty and hale old gentleman has been too busy of late to grant an interview to any one but a representa tive of the American Economist begged an Interview on the Fourth and It was granted I found him surrounded by a noisy pack of boys with their firecrackers and pistols Dont you mind the noise I asked Bless you no he replied They cant make too much noise on my birthday This is the one hundred and twenty sixth Fourth of July Ive cele brated and in three different cen turies There have been most wonderful changes since your first celebration I remarked Well I should say so Sometimes I can hardly realize it But it has all come about so gradually and so natur ally that I have been ready for any thing I get reminiscent on a day like this and cant help going back and making comparisons Just think of it there is not a person living that was alive on that Fourthof July when the old liberty bell rang out in Philadel phia Those were stirring times I tell you During the Revolution from 1776 to 17S1 and during the Confederation from 17S1 to 17S9 I was an unruly kid like a boat without a rudder but in 1739 I got into long pants and my manager whom the people selected for me was one of the greatest men that ever lived I realize more and more wnat a general what a statesman what a president Washington was Perhaps my most important birth day anniversary was the Fourth of July 17S9 It was on that day you know that my congress passed its first bill and Washington signed it the same day a Protective Tariff bill How well I remember the preamble to that law Whereas It is necessary for the support of the government for the discharge of the debt of the United States and for the encouragement and protection of manufactures that du ties be laid on Imported goods etc therefore be it enacted etc And how frail it worked All my early managers praised the act and called attention repeatedly to its splendid results Washington Adams Jefferson Madison and Monroe were all good Protectionists And there was no material change in the law till 1S12 when the duties were nearly doubled to provide money to carry on my second war with Great Britain Then came the Tariff of 1S16 and with it widespread ruin But I thought the Tariff of 1SI6 was a Protective Tariff I ventured to remark It was intended to be Protective but it was not I have always found that a Tariff that is not Protective enough is not Protective at all Its either one thing or the other There is no such thing as high and low Pro tection Its either Protection or no Protection Well the people got pretty tired cf the first Free Trade period but after all it was perhaps a good lesson for in 1S24 the boys gave me a Tariff that was a Tariff My how things did hum It was such a success that in 1S2S the boys increased the duties But Im too happy today to more than fust recall them in passing In 1860 the boys got back to Pro tection again and with the exception of three years it has lasted till now and I can tell you I never want to see Free Trade again How came the boys as you call them to pass a Free Trade law In 1894 In the face of the success of the McKInley Tariff Oh the people got restless and then the election of 1892 was in some respects like that of 1344 Then it was Polk Texas and Free Trade in the South and Polk Dallas and the Tariff of 1S42 in the North Well they worked Cleveland the same way and then though I suppose I ought not to say it the Democrats did some pretty tall lying in 1832 Why the McKInley law was the best Tariff law wed ever had and everybody was prosperous and happy But the people gave me Cleveland again for a mana ger He had not done much harm the first time I tried him though I dis charged him because I found a better man In Ben Harrison But what wa3 worse they gave me a Democratic Popullstic Mugwump Free Trade Congress and then things began to go to the demnition bowwows Gosh all hemlcck but things did change fast I lost 10000000000 in twenty four hours and things went from bad to worse till In 1S96 the people gave me Bill McKInley for a manager and Ive kept him ever since Renewed the contract last March for four years So youre sure of three more happy July Fourths Well Uncle this little Tariff his tory is all very interesting and now I I want to ask one or two questions Well fire away Who do you consider has been your best manager as you call the presi dent Well now thats a hard question to answer Washington and Lincoln were great men and had great ques tions to solve but let me tell you I like Bill MciKnley about as well as any cf em He aint quite as obstrep erous as Andy Jackson and he dont weigh as much in pounds as Cleveland but hes a mighty good man Hes a safe level headed man and thats what the people like The Free Traders say he is a little shaky on the Tariff I hinted What Bill McKinley shaky on the Tariff Dont you believe it for a sec ond Hes more of a Protectionist than he was in IS90 and he was a mighty good one then It was sad about Dingley though How I wish he could be here today and see what his bill has done for me How he would rejoice over the exports and the balance of trade the surplus the bank clearings the railroad busi ness and the immense earnings of the people The McKinley bill was a good one but the Dingley law has proved to be the best Tariff law the boys ever passed Still I said the apers say that parts of it may be repealed and that the Tariff will soon be removed from so called trust made articles and with the heip of Republicans too Dont let it worry you my boy It wont happen for four years anyway I acknowledge the people get restless sometimes and contrary like but there aint no signs of it this year They wont forget that Gorman Wilson abortion and they will be slow to give up their jobs again Why just think of it my people are earning from 20 000000000 to 30000000000 a year from 566000000 to 1QO000000 a day and that is not our total income either Thats too great a snap to throw away You dont hear any one complaining do you Theres plenty of work good prices and plenty of money to pay the price No the Free Traders are just filling space Im sorry to admit it but there are always some fault-find- Andy Jackson who was my manager ers ail malcontents in my big family in 1S32 said we were the happiest and most prosperous country in the world Wish he could see us now Why was such an effective Tariff so soon repealed Uncle Sam I asked Why Just because a lot of the boys down South got a notion they wanted to go it alone I wasnt going to have that so the whole thing was compromised In 1S33 and good times j flew out of the window Youve read cf those times of course and I dont - T need to say anything about it It was awful and it got worse every year t Why horses only fetched 50 cents and cows less I remember the boys had i so little money they would tear a bill into halves Quarters and eighths so there would be enough to do business with That lasted till 1S40 when the people gave me William Henry t rison for a manager and a Protective Congress In 1S42 Protection began asain to bring prosperity and in 1S46 i my manager Polk although he wa Free Trader had to acknowledge in resources and wealth and the py condition of the people and in ress and greatness we were ahead of all other nations But there was trouble ahead I dont want to say anything against any of my boys but some of them down South were headstrong The question of slavery began to bother me too Weil in 1S44 the people elected Polk for manager and with him a fellow by the name of Dallas and I must admit that there was a little double dealing during that campaign Its all past and -gone now but it orought Free Trade again and iTee Trade brought hard times I donc like to think of those times from 1S46 to 1S60 If it hadnt been for the gold discovery in California and the famine abroad I dont know what we would have done As it was we had to send our gold to Europe about as fast as we could get It The old people can remember those times They were awful awful awfuL Always black sheep in every flock But its a great people a great coun try and a great day And Uncie Sam went off with a bunch of fireworks in one hand and patting the Eagle with the other F C UNCLE SAM REMINISCENT masm im tHja52 I shrill 111 m m vP wmsggffism9 - 1 S V T I ZrZ mTfc BJ7 7J 1 I- A VlYrVS CjJimiTZ a WXmgB8t that qf vj i iiis fsa i2ii was JiW twmfnY v -v Im sorry to admit it said Uncle Sam but there are always some fault finders and malcontents in my fam ily always black sheep In every flock But its a great people a great coun try a great day Happy Vacation Days These are the very happiest vaca tion days the American people have ever known Few indeed are those who cannot plan a joyful trip to the sea shore or mountain with well filled purse thanks to Protection and full employment at high wages A man will resent being told he is a fool no matter how often he may so designate himself TO FOOLISH MOTHERS Soma Caaitlc bat llopcfal Itrmarlcs from a Kantu Sa A girl of sixteen passed the Gazetts office this morning dressed to kill says the Emporia Gazette She had on red fiiligrea stockings patent leather shoes a i hAt a bustle of great price a tailor made skirt a tucked and frilled shirt waist and she carried a 750 parasol Here hair was frizzed and frumped and bedecked and she wore jewels and all manner of stuff that a sixteen-year-old girl has no more busi ness wearing them than she has to go naked One rig Is about as vulgar and cheap and tawdry as the other Of course the child who Is being rushed Into womanhood by a fool mother doesnt move in the best crowd of girb and boys of the town She cant get in Her father makes plenty of money but her mothers fool notion of dresn bars the child Another girl passed the 3treet a few minutes after th first girl passed the office Girl number two is the daughter of a family that counts Its wealth with six figures She wore a simple gingham gown that she made herself and a pair of plain 3 shoes Her hair was done up neatly and sim ply a3 a girls hair should be There were no rings on her fingers or bells on her toes She was a pretty quietly dressed sweet faced innocent school girl with her head full of the fine dreams and fancies that come to every girl Her name is found in the list of those present at the entertainments given at the best homes in town Her mother is responsible for the childs graces Her mother keeps her girlish and in doing so the mother retains her ycuth She is one of the handsomest women in town Her face reflects a clean hearL The girl doesnt hear ma licious gos3ip in her home She doesnt know everything on earth or in hell which word is here used rev erently and she doesnt gad the streets She is a good cook a good housekeeper and has the making of a woman as useful as her mother is -It is all a matter of ideals in this old world Often people think because a girl doesnt conquer the world as she promised to in her high school essay that she has forgotten all about it But when a woman brings up a clean wholesome family in this generation of vipers she has been reasonably true to herself and her aspirations even if she doesnt strip the laurel tree for her millinerv t Machine In Agriculture In 1S55 it required on the average four hours and 34 minutes of the time of a laborer to do the ploughing har rowing cultivating etc that went to the producing of a bushel of Indian corn and the price of that laborer was nearly 30 cents on the average To day machines have changed conditions Their use has reduced the necessary time of the laborer to about 34 min utes and the cost of it to about 10V cents The wages are however much better now than in 1S55 In 1S30 the time required to produce each bushel of wheat was over three hours it is now about 10 minutes the cost has been reduced from over 17 cents to about 3 cents Before the introduc tion of machines the time devoted to producing each ton of hay wa3 about 35 hours it is now 11U hours In 1S50 the corresponding cost was over 53 it is now about 4129 These and many other comparisons of the sort are to be found in a report by Mr Holmes printed by the Department of Agriculture in Washington Contrast of Temperature The British Meteorological Council has just published charts showing the remarkable weather conditions which prevailed over the North Atlantic ocean and adjoining lands in the win ter of 1SSS S9 At sea the weather was extremely boisterous for a period of six weeks while a great difference of temperature prevailed between the two sides of the ocean On February 16ta the thermometer at Fort Logan Mon tana was 61 degrees below zero while on the same day at Liege Belgium it was 705 degrees above zero a differ ence of 1315 degrees and over exten sive regions on two sides of the At lantic the difference in temperature amounted to 103 degrees Color ot Butterflies change their color ac cording to the heat of the atmosphere This interesting fact has been discov ered by M iandfuss of Zurich Swit zerland who subjected 40000 butrer Jegrees of the sans heat On one oc casion it being unusually cold in Swit zerland a butterfly common there took on the appearance of a butterfly from Lapland On the other hand butterflies which were subjected to a higher de gree of solar heat than the normal looked as if they had been born and raised in Corsica or Syria One result of these novel experiments is the pro duction of butterflies of an entirely new type some of them being of be wildering beauty Counter VfatAmerlcan Vfldotr The countess of Strafford retired from society entirely on the death of Queen Victoria but will resume lavish entertainments as soon as the period of mourning is ore1 Her ladyship previous to marrying a title was the enormously rich widow of Samuel Col gate a fcoap manufacturer of New York The earl was killed by a train in England and his estate went to a brother the countess having meantime expended a large amount of money In rehabilitating the Straffocd family mansions 1 S J