ft K y X i - M mn K ofD V Copyrighted 1891 byEobert Bonners Sons HaiaHHHMBKIMHanHBBI CHAPTER XVn Continued Ulin bowed her head upon her hands and could the instinctive promptlngB of Tier heart at that mo ment have been read they would have revealed a secret not much to be won dered at I think said Ezabel after a pause that you have had some opportunity to study Julians character I have seen enough to assure me that be Is a noble generous man returned Ulin raising her head And added Ezabel If you could know him better you would And your impressions strengthened But he will not be here long As soon as he re covers from his wound he will leave us If I am not mistaken ventured our heroine Julian is at home in this place Most certainly he Is my1 daughter From his earliest childhood he knew no other home but this And he was on his way hither when he overtook me in the hands of the Arabs Yes And will my presence cause him to leave you I think not lady But you will give yourself no uneasiness on that ac count If Julian feels that ho had bet ter be away from you he will go for his own sake And remember the truly noble soul finds joy in the gen erous sacrifices which it may be called upon to make I hear Ben Hadads voice He is calling me She arose and left the chamber and when she returned sne was followed by Ben Hadad Now that Ulin saw the hermit by tho light of the day she was awe struck by his venerable appear ance All that could be noble and honorable and lovable in old age seemed combined in him and as he bent his gaze upon her and extended his hand in welcome she felt her heart go to him with all its trust and confi dence My child he said in tones of ten derest solicitude Ezabel has told me your story and I have come to bid you an affectionate welcome to my cave Rest here and feel that you are at home Your mother paid me for this long ago Come follow me to where the air is fresher and where the sunbeams can greet you The maiden thanked Ben Hadad as well as she was able and then rose to follow him He led her to the main cave where she found Hobaddan and the slaves This is my home said the old man as he led the maiden to a seat and here have I lived more years than go to fill up the allotted age of man All these trees and shrubs I have trained up from the tender sprout and these vines I have taught to clothe the gray old recks And I have been most fortunate in my life I have been able to protect many who needed pro tection and my days have been length ened out to protect more Ulin was touched by the deep pathos of the hermits Words and for a whole hour she sat and listened to his conver sation At the end of that time he led her back to the cave where Ortok the black slave had prepared dinner She did not feel hungry but she sat down with Ben Hadad and Hobadden and Ezabel she and Albia and partook with them Thus passed three days and Ulin had become so used to the place that it already seemed like home She had learned to love the hermit and she had learned to love Ezabel and she had learned to respect and esteem the stout hearted Hobaddan and to con verse with him freely Once she asked the lieutenant what had become of Julians band Would they not be seeking him And he explained to her that he had communicated with them that they knew of their chieftains safety and had gone away into the mountains of Lebanon where comfortable abiding places for them were plenty When Ulin retired to her own apart ment she sat by herself with her head bowed upon her hands taking no no tice of her serving maid At an early hour she retired but it was a long time ere she slept and when she did sleep she was troubled with strange dreams She dreamed of the unfortu nate Helena and awoke with a cry Df pain And then she dreamed a more pleasant dream a dream of something that had haunted her waking thoughts a dream of the Scourge and Damas cus CHAPTER XVIII Something More Than a Dream On the following morning -when Ulin entered the main cave Julian was there to greet her She extended tier hand to him and smiled as she spoke The youthful chieftain was somewhat pale but his large lustrous eyes burned with a deened intensity and the white brow offered a strange rontract to the waving mases of golden aair The maidens smile faded away when she met the earnest gaze that was fixed upon her and her hand trebled before she withdrew it He spoke to her a few words of cheer ex pressed his gratitude that she had found a place of safety and hoped that the future might have no more clouds for her 0 my mistress cried Albia when she and Ulin were alone how noble a man he is Who asked the princess Starting out from a deep reverie A Story of the st By SYLVANUS COBB JR Julian I mean returned the maid quickly and with enthusiasm Does he not look handsomer than ever Ulin bowed her head and made no reply Is he not beautiful to gaze upon pursued Albia without seeming to no tice her ladys abstracted mood Hush Albia say no more now I am busy with my own thoughts Pardon sweet mistress I meant no wrong I thought we owed him so much and he has suffered in our behalf that you might Albia say no more I know you meant well You mistake me if you think I am not grateful There say no more I love you and would not hurt your feelings Go out into the grove and walk awhile Ulin bowed her head again as she spoke with her hand upon her brow upon her brow for a moment and then pressed upon her bosom And thus Albia left her When the freed girl reached the grove in front of the cave she found Julian and Osmir in close conversa tion and before they noticed her she had heard enough to excite her cu riosity and with a freedom that was natural to her she asked them what had happened Osmir thinks said Julian with a smile that one of the Arab robbers has followed us and tracked us to this place but I laugh at him I may be mistaken rejoined the other but still I think I am right I have seen the fellow twice once by the river at the entrance of the wood and once further away It was one of the rascals wno escaped us And if it is the Arab what can he want asked Albia If it be one of those fellows re turned Julian he may wish to join our ranks Oh added Osmir he may hope to steal something Very likely assented the chieftain However he concluded after a brief pause we may as well keep a sharp lookout Selim and I are on the watch said Osmir and if we catch the rascal well secure him Albia fancied that Julian had thoughts which he was not willing to express in her presence but she did not mean to fret herself and before she rejoined her mistress she had al most forgotten the circumstances At noon and again in the evening did Ulin meet Julian but they did not converse freely together She could not meet the gaze of those lus trous eyes without trembling and she sought to avoid that which so much moved her If he had approached her and spoken freely with her on some subject of general interest she would have joined him readily but he did not do so Morning came again and again the maiden met the man who had saved her from the Arabs This time he greeted her in few words and soon turned away to speak with Hobaddan He did not seem well He looked paler than on the day before and there was an expression of pain about the mouth and eyes Ulin was uneasy Perhaps his wound was giving him new trouble As soon as the morn ings meal had been eaten she sought Ezabel and asked her if Julian was suffering from his wound No replied the old woman I do not think it is his wound I have noticed his appearance and have asked him what it meant but he puts me off with a smile and a blessing and tries to assure me that all is well I do not like to see him suffer He is like a child to me and I love him ten derly Ah the world little knows what a noble generous soul dwells within that manly form If I thought he was suffering from my account said Ulin I should be most unhappy How on your account said Eza bel quickly I mean in consequence of the wound he received while fighting for my de liverance I hardly think it is that Some thing beside the wound troubles him It may be that the short captivity in Damascus worries him He may have heard something there that gives him unpleasant thought At noon Julian did not appear when the rest ate their dinner He was out by the river Late in the afternoon Ulin ir t Ezabel again and the latter seeme i and dejected JulL going co leave us ex- claimed tnj woman in answer to an inquiry from Ulin Leave us repeated our heroine with a start Yes so he told me only an hour since - When will he go Early in the morning But he will shortly return I fear not I asked him that and he only shook his head Does he give any reason for his going away None that you need to know my child In fact he gives me no reason directly I am left to draw my conclu sions from accidental remarks When Ulin retired to her chamber she was in a frame of mind not eas ily analyzed She spoke to Albia con cerning the chieftains unexpected de parture and the girl expressed the opinion that he felt himself to be in the way What do you mean by that asked Ulin Well replied Albia I think Ian feels that there are enough dwell ers in the hermits cave without him I may be mistaken but his manner for a day or two past has seemed to indicate that he was not perfectly at ease here The princess asked no more ques tions but busied herself with her own thoughts As the sun was sinking from its dally course Ulin wandered out into the grove alone and as she approached the spot where she sometimes sat with the hermit she saw Julian seated upon a bench beneath an orange tree At first she thought of turning back and retracing her steps but an im pulse which was no result of her will but rather an instinctive emotion as though some secret force led her on and almost before she was aware of it she came so near that the youth heard her stop and looked up He started when he saw her and a flash of joy like a quick passage of sun light was upon his face In a moment however the look was gone and a shade of sadness succeeded The maiden could not now have withdrawn even had she been so disposed in the first place Following the strong im pulse she aavanced to the shadow of the orange tree and placed her hand upon Julians shoulder and it thrilled the youth like an electric shock Kind sir she said scarcely able to speak above a whisper when she commenced Ezabel tells me you are going away Yes lady Julian replied rising as he spoke I have so determined And you go soon In the morning This is sudden sir No lady no more so than my movements are apt to be CHAPTER XIX Ulin and Julian Ulin hesitated and trembled and finally sat down upon the bench from which the chieftain had arisen In a few moments she had recovered her self so that she could speak without faltering Good sir I have one question to ask you She went on hurriedly as though the old impulse still led her You had not planned to leave the cave so soon I had planned nothing about it lady But if I had not been here with my servant you would have remained longer Lady do not ask me such ques tions I must ask them sir for I want to know If I thought that my pres ence here had caused you to leave your old home I should be most un happy When I came here I did not know how near and dear this place was to you If one of us must go let me find some other resting place Julian started and trembled like an aspen A moment it was so and then he turned upon the maiden a look so earnest and so deep and so -full of tumultuous feeling that she shook be neath it Lady he said speaking almost in a whisper you shall know the se cret which I had purposed never to reveal to mortal being The words are forced from me Let me speak them now and then let them be for gotten When I heard that the king of Damascus had shut up a fair maid en within the Palace of Lycanius and that he meant to make that maiden his wife I felt my heart grow sick within me and I resolved if the fair one was held against her will that I would set her free I led my brave men to the palace and overcame the guard which the king had set Heaven was opened but in the blessed realm I was offered no abiding place I saw the loved spirit of light within the cave which had been the home of my childhood but my love I dared not speak How could I the enemy of Damascus and the branded robber tell my love to the daughter of the kings prime minister Lady I dare not trouble you more To be continued THE INDISPENSABLE MAN Prudent Business 3Ien Now Get Rid of That Pomposity Some of the most successful busi ness men in this country make it a rule to dispense with the services of any man in their employ no matter how important his position may be as soon as he comes to regard himself as indispensable says Success This may seem harsh and even unbusiness like but if we look into it we shall find that there is wisdom in this prac tice Experience proves that the mo ment a man looks upon himself as ab solutely necessary he usually ceases to exercise to the fullest extent the faculties which have helped him to rise to that indispensable point He becomes arrogant and dictatorial and his influence in an organization is bound to be more or less demoraliz ing Many concerns have been seri ously embarrassed by the conduct of managers superintendents or heads of departments after they had reached positions where they thought no one else could take their places This undue appreciation of ones own im portance is as disastrous in its re sults as utter lack of self esteem It is really evidence of a narrow mind and ignorance of general conditions for the man who is up to the times thoroughly posted in regard to the world wide trend of the twentieth century will realize that there are few people in the world no matter what their talents or ability who cannot be replaced It is a very rare charac ter indeed that is imperatively nec essary and the man who actually reaches this point does not brag of it nor act as if he considered himself indispensable mmi HEARS 001 Leon Czolgosz Is Sentenced to Die in Electric Chair SAYS HE HAD NO ACCOMPLICES Slurdorer of McKlnloy Tells Judgo No Ono Else Was In Plot Dramatic Scene In Court Falter While Making Ills Statements to Judge History of the Trial Monday Sept 16 Czolgosz ar raigned in court before Judge White charged with tho murder of President McKinley on Sept 7 He refused to answer the indictment Monday Sept 23 Czolgosz placed on trial Pleaded guilty to charge Plea not accepted and trial proceeds Tuesday Sept 24 Czolgosz is found guilty as charged Thursday Sept 26 Judge White who presided at trial sentences pris oner to be put to death in the electric chair at Auburn prison sometime dur ing the week beginning October 28 Czolgosz Receives Sentonco Czolgosz was sentenced to death by Justice Truman C Yhite in the Su preme court at Buffalo Thursday ex Judge Titus his counsel hold up n hand to support him He did not need tho proffered aid but straightened himself up of his own effort It was with a feeling of relief that the assassin heard tho words Remove tho prisoner pronounced by Judge White He heaved a great sigh as he waB manacled and was led away Tells of Ills Life Stand up Czolgosz please said Mr Penny turning to tho prisoner Nudged by bailiffs the prisoner stood up the center of all attention in the crowded room In answer to questions put by Mr Penny Czolgosz said undor oath that ho was born in Detroit that ho was educated in the common and church schools that he had been a Catholic that he was a laborer and that he had lived in Cleveland and in Buffalo The court clerk then asked tho ques tion for which all had been awaiting Judge Titus asked that the prisoner be permitted to make a statement in exculpation of his act Czolgosz leaned heavily on a chair He then spoke saying he alone com mitted the crime No one had any thing to do with his crime but himself he said Judge White Before the passing of sentence you may speak on two sub jects First you can claim that you are insane second that you have good cause to offer that judgment should t II 1 HHHf BRINGING CZOLGOSZ INTO COURT FOR SENTENCE MADE IN COURT afternoon The assassin took advan tage of the opportunity to speak but he confined himself to taking upon his own shoulders the blame for the great crime of having murdered the presi dent of the United States He advanced no reason in justification of his mon strous deed Not a word did he utter of anarchy of his enmity to govern ment or of the motives which prompt ed him to the commission of his crime Hull Cleared By Police Greater crowds gathered for the sen tencing of the assassin than came for any one session of the trial itself Be fore 1230 p m a crowd had gath ered in the corridor in front of Justice Whites court room By 1 p m the corridor was jammed Capt Regan then appeared on the stairs with a squad of 100 uniformed officers and cleared the hall It was a case of first come first served after a line was formed and the tickets of admission issued for the trial were worthless It took less than ten minutes for the single file to fill the court room and then the doors were closed to be opened only upon the arrival of offi cials counsel and others connected with the days proceedings Dramntic Scene in Court In a hush that was like the silence of death Justice White pronounced the prisoners doom Physically tottering under the ordeal but sustaining him self by sheer force of nerve the mur derer heard the words of death pro nounced was shackled and quietly sub mitted to be led away In no brazen fashion did the pris oner face the court Swaying from side to side boyish looking trembling with nervousness but held up by nerve he stood leaning on the chair in front of him Falters In His Words Falteringly hesitatingly he spoke after having been asked each question several times He acted almost as if the words were being wrung out of him it took him so long to find utter ance and he spoke so rapidly when the first word left his lips Jn response to a question His voice was hardly heard ten feet away although every ear in the great court room was strained to catch the slightest sound from his lips His face paled at no time during the proceedings It was flushed with the emotion it was costing him so much strength to master As the prelimin ary to the pronouncing of sentence many questions were asked by the dis trict attorney Czolgosz evinced the utmost willingness to answer all these questions but his utterance seemed to smother in his throat Lawyer Offers Aid It was only after an effort that each reply was blurted out As he stood his breast heaved his eyes blinked rap idly and once he almost reeled so that FROM A SKETCH not be pronounced against you third that you wish a new trial Given Liberty to Speak These are the grounds specified by statute You are now at liberty to speak Czolgosz I have nothing to say on those things Judge Titus then consulted the pris oner Judge Titus I think he ought to bo permitted to make a statement in ex culpation of his family your honor Judge White The defendant may speak in exculpation of his father and brothers and sisters If that is what he means to do it is proper Says He Did it Alone Czolgosz No other person had any thing to do with it No other person knew of this but myselr my father Romovo tho prisoner Considerable eurprlso was expressed that Justice Whlto did not pronounce tho customary appeal to tho Almighty DISTRICT ATTORNEY PENNEY From a sketch made at Buffalo in concluding his sentence and may God have mercy on your soul The court quit at the middle of the customary formula In pronouncing the sentence Manacled and Led Array The hush as the solemn words were pronounced was like the silence of tho tomb For several moments the silence was unbroken The click of handcuffs put a startling termination on tho strain Like a great sob tho emotion of the court room welled up and were lost in the shuffling of feet The final scene of the historic trial was con cluded Manacled to detectives who had brought him into the court the assas sin was conducted away Between tho wall of bailiffs policemen and specta tors the murderer passed He looked not into a single eye Justified by him self or not his deed lay heavy on his head A groan of execration followed him down the broad court house stairs to the jail tunnel below POWERS OF HERD1TY Some Remarkable Stories Told of Its Mysterious Influences Doctorsdlsagree as to the influence of heredity Some hold that a great deal hinges upon it others believe the con trary Some of the authentic stories told to exemplify this mysterious bond between ancestors and descendants are very curious There was a loan col lection of old portraits exhibited in London lately and a young girl was among the visitors She was an or phan and wealthy but without near relatives and was often heard to com plain of the loneliness of her position As she passed through the gallery one particular portrait attracted her atten tion and she went back to it more than once Her companion saw in it noth ing but the commonplace painting of a middle aged man in the costume of tho latter part of the last century It is such a nice kind face said the girl rather wistfully I imagine my father might have looked like that had he lived As most of the pictures were ticketed the visitors had purchased no catalogue but before going away MiS3 B bought one at the entrance and made a last visit to the portrait for which she had felt so strong an attrac tion To her astonishment she found her own name opposite to its number and learned on inquiry that the orig inal was one of her direct ancestors Another occult coincidence or psycho logical phenomenon happened a few years ago to a southern statesman and financier whose family has always been of rank in his native state This gen tleman was overhauling old documents and letters which had been stored in a I REMOVING HANDCUFFS FROM CZOLGOSZS WRISTS IX COURT or mother or no one else knew nothing about it I never thought of the crime until two days before I committed it and never told nobody about it Judge Lewis He says he did not make up his mind to do it until a few days before its commission Judge Passes Sentence Justice White Czolgosz in taking the life of our beloved president you committed a crime that shocked and outraged all the civilized world After learning all the facts and circum stances in the case twelve good men have pronounced you guilty of murder in the first degree You say that no other person abetted you in the com mission of this terrible act The pen alty is fixed by statute and it becomes my duty to impose sentence upon you The sentence of this court is that on October 28 at the place designated and In the manner prescribed by law you suffer the punishment of death musty chest for years and intended tc publish whatever might be of historic value and interest To his surprise he unfolded a letter yellow and time stained which was written in his own peculiar handwriting or seemed tc have been written by him although the date was two generations before his birth The signature of the surname which was the same as his own was s markedly characteristic that he could scarcely believe his own hand did col pen the letters Montreal Herald and Star Fewer Strikes In France The statistics of the strikes in Franc for June have just been published Id all the month gave birth to 57 whils the total for the first six months of th year was 306 The same period in 190C yielded 475 which shows an agreeable falling off in the discontent of fca working classes V1 j 1 A S i i u