21 f yg I i PW r X T V I MKKEYS MESSAGE Legislature Listens to Its Reading V Thursday r URGES PROPER ECONOMY tfavora Retention of Sapronie Court Commission ana Believe u Hoard of Fardons Xccesnary Views in Regard to Taxation Mkkkkkkkickkkkkkkkkkkkkkk k k k k -- WHAT GOV MICKEY SAYS IN HIS MESSAGE Hanon7 full nnd complete should exist between the executive and the legislature There should bo strict econ omy without parsimony we should seek Divine guidance in the affairs of atate The increase in public debt Is caused by undervaluation by the assessors The law should bo changed so that all forms of real and personal property must be listed An experimental farm should be established in Western Nebraska The supreme court commission should not bo abolished Six of the nlrif mAmHAra ahnnM Vrt - MWU1U UV 7C uunea A board of pardons shoutd be k established Educational institutions should receive generous treatment Oil should be carefully inspected k An adequate appropriation should be made for the St Louis k exposition The unfinished portions of the penitentiary should be completed k The Norfolk asylum should be rebuilt k The scope of the pure food law should be broadened k A state accountant should be - employed to scrutinize and verify k accounts of state olllcers kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk In his message to the legislature to day John H Mickey the new gov ernor of Nebraska says To the Members of the Senate and House of the Twenty eighth Legislative Assembly of the State of Nebraska In assuming the office of chief executive of the great state of Nebraska I am pro foundly conscious of the responsibility resting upon me and of the magnitude of the undertaking With mo this is a time for every serious thought The acts of my administration will have more or less effect upon the Interests of every citizen and the possibilities of doing good stand out before me in such promi nence that I trust my mental perception may never be diverted therefrom As between the executive and your honor able body concurrent branches of our state government there ought to be and I have confidence to believe there will be a perfect harmony In our mutual relations You are the law making body and your presence here is proof of the fact that you are leaders of thought and controllers of events In your respective districts Much therefore will depend upon you not only in tho enactment of wise legislation but in co operating with me in the enforcement of the same to the end that the law may be respected and the interests of the people best con served Our responsibilities are mutual and there should be no disposition to shirk on the part of either of us While we are not all of tho same political faith I believe we are all patriots and from our several view points are honestlv looking toward the accomplishemnt of the great est good to the greatest number In the work that is before us we should rise above the exercise of mere partisan spirit and occupy a plane of broad tolpratjon and charity My ambition is to be the governor of all the people regardless of party and to merit their confidence GOD AND AFFAIRS OF STATE Preface to the Recommendations Is on Character of Legislation The necessity for safe guarding the public purse has been pertinentlv called to your attention In the message of my predecessor Very many matters per taining to the public good will be brought to your notice a large portion of them contemplating more or less of expense In the consideration of all these questions your motto should be strict economv without parsimony The stato should be too wise to be lavish and too just to be penurious We should remember too that we are builders for the future Our acts are not confined alone to the present but like the concentric circles formed when a pebble is dropped into the water they extend on and on in their in fluence and effects Legislation there fore should be of that broad unselfish character which looks past the present into the future and contemplates com ing as well as Immediate necessities It is a great responsibility to be permitted to have a prominent part in the develop ment of a young and progressive state so rich in resources and bright with promise as Is Nebraska and I trust that this thought may be ever present in your work Above all we should seek Divine guid ance God -controls the affairs of states and nations just as he does of Individ uals and no people can permanently prosper who are not submissive to His will It Is therefore important that in all our deliberations we should be led by Him for in such leadership there Is the moat perfect liberty begetting a charltv which In itself is the fulfillment of all law I sincerely hope that this legisla ture will achieve distinction for the wis dom of its acts and for the harmony and fraternal olrit which shall characterize all its deliberations I especially chal lenge your attention to a few matters of public policy FRANCHISE ASSESSMENTS Floating Debt Existing Due to Under valuation by Board of Equalization The question of revenue is one which virtually concerns every interest in the state and always presents troublesome phases At present the floating indebted ness of the commonwealth is largely In excess of the amount permitted under the constitution and is rapidly increasing There is no defensible reason for the existence of such a condition It is largely due to the prevalent and perni cious practice of undervaluing all forms of property and franchises which jeuter Into the makeup of the assessors sched ules the result being that the grand as sessment roll is merely a financial shadow of the tangible resources and wealth which It is Intended to represent With a statutory limitation on the number of mills that can be levied the amount of revenue derived from any given assess ment is correspondingly abridged and at present is far below the amount abso lutely required to meet running expenses Another important contributory cause to the Increasing Indebtedness is the fur ther fact that many county treasurers are exceedingly lax In the matter of tax collection Large sums are allowed to encumber the books year after year on which collection ought to be forced and the proceeds turned Into the public treasury for the gene al good At the present time the delfJuent taxes owed to the state aro approximately 2400000 Of thi3 enormous amount only a small per cent outside of the taxes of 1301 and 1902 is now collectible though it Is fre quently quoted as an available asset for tho extinguishment of debt These con ditions are unsatisfactory and should bo relieved It is apparent that the state cannot ignore its obligations Its educa tional philanthropic Jid corrective in stitutions must not ba impaired in their usefulness and the spTrft the consti tution must bo rcspctI ha Rs ton of indebtedness To harmonize- theso divergent necessities is the task devolv ing upon your honorablo body As a first step It seems to mo that tho assessment roll should bo Increased to tho proportions contemplated for it by law ectlon 1 article 0 of tho constitution makes It obligatory on tho legislature to provide such revenue as may bo need ful by levying a tax by valuation so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his her or its property and franchises tho value to be ascertained in such man ner as the legislature shall direct tc The legislature has declared that all per sonal and real property shall bo valued at Its fair cash value and tho plain In tention of the statutes is to impose upon every person connected with the assess ment the duty of enforcing that Idea I recommend that oxlstlng laws be cor rected nn ns tn InsnrA thnf nil forma of 1 real and personal property will be listed ac iuh valuation ror purposes or taxa tion also that the laws governing the collection of taxes -be made more strin gent and effective I further recommend that the duties of the state board of equalization be broadened so that it shall have ample power to raise or lower as sessments for stato purposes in harmony with the full valuation plan and that county boards be given such additional authority as may be needed in order to carry out the same Idea It is Important that these matters re ceive your immedlato attention that the resultant laws may be operative for the coming assessment NEW EXPERIMENTAL FARMS A Station In Western Nebraska and Its Advantages Nebraska Is distinctively an agricul tural and live stock producing state These two Industries with horticulture are the basis of tho major part of the prosperity enjoyed by our people What ever tends to promote these Interests In creases the general weal In the same ra tio In wise recognition of these facts the stato has long since established an experimental farm near Lincoln in con nection with the state university where careful and elaborate tests are mado In the production of grains grasses and forage plants under varying conditions where tho several kinds of live stock which add wealth to the farm are kept for purposes of experimentation where horticulture Is systematically promoted and from which is disseminated from time to time facts and data relative to the work accomplished As has been stated the experimental farm Is located near Lincoln In the humid part of the state where the cli matic conditions are very different from those which prevail farther west in tho arid and semi arid portions of the com monwealth The conditions there in my judgment demand tho establishment of an experimental farm also in connection with the state university and under the management of the board of regents which shall give special attention to tests in agriculture stock raising and horti culture under the peculiarities of soil and climate there prevailing Such an Institution would give an Impetus to the rural interests of that part of the state and would prove an Important factor in the moro thorough development of a section which is sometimes regarded as being handicapped by nature but which is rich in natural resources if agricul tural energy Is directed along proper lines Our congressional delegation has re ceived assurance from the general gov ernment that it will gladly co operate In the work In connection with Its ir rigation and reclamation plans and if Nebraska takes the initiative it is prob able that our station will become the seat of the governments tests and ex periments conducted in behalf of the other states in this same region I there fore recommend that the legislature make an appropriation for the purcnase equipment and maintenance of a farm at some suitable point In the west part of the state to be under the control of the state university and known as an ad junct of the same for the purposes men tioned SUPREME COURT COMMISSION Recommends That the Existing Body be Continued Tour attention is urgently called to the necessity of providing for the con tinuation of the supremo court commis sion The present commission has per formed commendable service and reduced the volume of litigation for years pend ing in the supreme court While the number of commissioners might be de creased I am firmly of the opinion that the number should not be less than six considering the rights of litigants and the Imperative demand of the people that every case should receive fair and full consideration I therefore recommend the enactment of a law similar to the one passed by the last legislature creating the present commission so modified as to provide for six instead of nine commissioners A BOARD OF PARDONS One Is Necessary to Consider Worth of Applications While I have no disposition to shrink from the constitutional and statutory re sponsibility imposed on the chief execu tive in the matter of exercising clemency toward Inmates of the penitentiary yet I believe that the public good would be greatly enhanced by the creation of an advisory board of pardons to which should bo referred all applications for relief from punishment ror penal offenses and matters pertaining thereto Such board should be authorized to hear and weigh all evidence on which the application for pardon is predicated and within a reasonable time to report its findings to the governor with a recom mendation for or against the exercise of executive clemency as each individual case may seem to require I therefore recommend that such a board of pardons be created the details to be arranged by your honftable body LIBERAL TO FREE EDUCATION Institutions of the State Commended to Best Consideration The people of Nebraska are justly proud of their educational Institutions The foundations of these interests have been laid broad and deep and may be properly regarded as the corner stones of that degree of eminence and distinc tion which tho state now enjoys No other part- of our country Is blessed with so small a per cent or illiteracy or has so much to show in proportion to popu lation in the way of good school build ings fine equipments and specially fitted instructors At the head of these in terests stands the stale university with its numerous departments closely sec onded by the state normal The Institutions have done and are do ing for the state a work greater than can be estimated the influence of which will be felt throughout all time These interests should receive the careful at tention of your body and such appropria tions should be made as will insure the continuance of their beneficent work on a scale commensurate with the states development CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS An Amendment to Section I Article XV Hi is Advocated During recent years a number of at tempts have been made to secure needed changes in the organic law of the state by submission to the voters of proposed amendments to tho constitution Under the constitutional provisions all proposed amendments must tts submitted at the general election at which members of the legislature are voted for By the present law such proposed amendments in abridged form are made a part of the regular ballot and a majority of all votes cast must be re corded affirmatlely for each proposition beforo it can be adopted In the greater interest attaching to the election of can diuates the voters lose sight of the im portanc of constitutional changes sd a majority of them fall to vota on the propositions submitted As each failure to vote is in effect a negative vote on the question or questions It becomes practically impossible tp amend the con stitution by such means even In cases where the people are generally agreed that the change should be made lTatnW W - As a correction of this difficulty and a means of securing the needed consti tutional modifications I recommend that your body propose an amendment to section 1 of article 15 of the constitution which will provide that amendments to tho constitution may too submitted to the electors for approval or rejection at a general or special election and I fur ther suggest that the present election law be so changed as to authorize a separate ballot for the submission of such questions CONDITIONS AT PENITENTIARY Meney Needed For Reconstruction and Enforcement By reason of the failure of tho last legislature to make a sufficiently largo appropriation the rebuilding of the cen ter and west wing of tho penitentiary destroyed by fire two years ago Is not yet completed Tho stone Is practically all laid but tho Interior cannot be fin ished and made ready for occupancy un til another appropriation becomes avail able To this duty I trust you will give early attention It is also absolutely imperative that the west wing be equipper with from fifty to seventy five new steel cells tho present cell room being entirely Inadequate to the needs of the Institution At this time three convicts aro com pelled to bunk In one small room the capacity of which Is scarcely equal to tho proper accommodation of two The result Is that these unfortunates are crowded together in an almost barbarous manner and In violation of the prompt ings of humane reason and the laws of health This condition is in no sense a reflection on the management of the pen itentiary but Is unavoidable on account of the lack of room I recommend that sufficient appropriations be made both for tho completion of that part of the penitentiary which is now in nrocess of construction and for the addition of new cells as suggested POOR QUALITY OF OIL More Careful Inspection of the Shipments Is Necessary For some time there has been very general complaint of the quality of oil which Is shipped into rTeoraska for il luminating purposes The trouble seems to be that It Is not properly freed from Its natural Impurities or In other words that it is not sufficiently refined Our present inspection law adequate so far as the points covered by It are concerned was Intended to protect the public from the use of Illuminating oil which might volatilize at so low a temperature as to occasion the danger of explosion It does not provide for a test of these im purities which measure and weigh and the presence of which detract materially from the illuminating power of the oil with which they are compounded I recommend that the oil inspection law be so amended as to include a test for impurities and that a standard of purity bo established ST LOUIS EXPOSITION Proper Representation For Nebraska Desired During tho year 1904 the Louisiana Purchase Exposition will be held in the city of St Louis It Is estimated that not less than 30 million dollars will bo expended on this enterprise The gen eral government and a number of the states have already given it substantial recognition and the other states will undoubtedly do so as their respective legislatures assemble Nebraska should have a part in this grand display or the worlds resources and especially so as the event is intended to commemorate the acquisition of the most important territory ever added to the national do maine a territory from which the state was carved and of which it is the brightest jewel Your bodv should make a liberal appropriation for the proper rep resentation of Nebraska at this exposi tion subject to such restrictions and de tails of expenditure as prudence may suggest More PURE FOOD COMMISSION C iprehensive ODeratlons Are iecessary The food commission law should be made more comprehensive At present its operations are confined to dairy cider and vinegar products and while the com mission having charge of the department has done excellent service in its lim ited sphere it is evident that a broaden ing of the enactment would be of cor responding benefit The public health is largely dependent on the character of food products and certainly it is fitting that a matter so intimately connected with the very existence of our people should be regulated by proper legislation The scope of the present law should be broadened so as to Include the regu lation and control of food products for the use nf mnn SnoVi ntviriimfo iii The Bow of Orange Ribbon J A ROMANCE OF NEW YORJK By AMEUA E BARR t j Auuior or Ftiontl Olivia I Thou and tho Other OreEto Copyright 1880 by Dotfa Mead and Company X CHAPTER IX Continued One Is wanting of the dozen moth er At the last cake baking with the Jlsh of cake sent to Joanna it wenL Back It has not come For it you might go Katherine I like not that my sets are broken Katherine blushed scarlet This was the opportunity she wanted She wondered if her mother suspected the want but Lysbefs face expressed only a little worry about the missing damask Slowly though her heart beat almost at her lips she folded away her work The nights were yet chilly though the first blooms wore on the trees and the wadded cloak and hood were not far out of season as to cause re mark As she came down stairs the clock struck seven There was yet an hour and she durst not wait so long at the bottom of the garden while it was early in the evening And this singular reluctance to leave home as sailed Katherine If she had known that it was to be forever her soul could not have more sensibly taken its farewell of all the dear familiar objects of her daily life About her mother this feeling culminated She found her cap a little out of place and her fingers lingered in the lace and stroked fondly her hair and pink cheeks until Lysbet felt almost em barrassed by the tender but unusual show of affection Now then go my Katherine To Joanna give my dear love Tell her that very good were the cheesecakes and the krullers and that to morrow I will come over and see the new car pet they have bought And while she spoke she was re tying Katherines hood and admiring as she did so the fair sweet face in its quiltings of crimson satin and the small dimpled chin resting upon tho fine bow she tied under it Then she followed her to the door and watched her down the road until she saw her meet Dominie Van Linden and stand a moment holding his hand A mes sage I am going for my mother she said as she firmly refused his escort Then with madam your mother I will sit until you return he replied cheerfully and Katherine answered That will be a great pleasure to her sir A little farther she walked but suddenly remembering that the dom inies visit would keep her mother in the house and being made restless by the gathering of the night shadows she turned quickly and taking the very road up which Hyde had come the night Neil Semple challenged him she entered the garden by a small gate at its foot which was intended for the gardeners use The lilacs had not much foliage but in the dim light her dark slim figure was undis tinguishable behind them Longingly and anxiously she looked up and down the water way A mist was gathering over it and there were no boats in the channel except two pleasure be placed on the market strictly on their lops already tacking to their proper Sfy ufdbTdea SeffSeS i The Dauntlf had bee T The present fee and permit system should of sight for hours There was not the be paid from the general fund and other river - - - o mn aim a splash of an oar and no direct appropriation should be mafl fnr that purpose Governor Mickey Thinks Conditions Favor Reconstruction In September 1901 the main building of the asylum for the Insane at Norfolk was partially destroyed by fire and ren dered unfit for further use At thnt sound at that point but the low I culiar of the turning tide NORFOLK should retain ASYLUM All her senses were keenly on the alert Suddenly there was the sound of oars and the measure was that of steady powerful strokes She turned her face southward and watched Like a flash a boat shot out of the shadow time the institution was caring for about a long swift boat that came like a SSlaSZl rapidly and without hesitation stitutions owned by the state at Lincoln I to her very feet Richard quickly left and Hastings and were there given the if ann fv a few strokes it was car care and attention which their cases t demanded as well as could be done under lled back into the dimness or the the crowded conditions thus imposed central channel Then he turned to Since then an annex has been built to the Institution at Hastings affording ad- tne lllac trees ditional accommodations which have I Katherine Mv love my wife my temporarily relieved the embarrassment I u ffi f0i tit tmo pywI hpnrt beautlful vltel My true g neart It is possible that for a short time the state could continue to care for its un- j Now at last my own nothing shall fortunates at the two institutions named part US aain ivamerme never acain but it should be borne in mind that the I Lincoln hospital is now charged with I have come for you come at all tnuy more tnan its papacity iH justify i risks for you Only five minutes the while the asylum at Hastings has its i o normal capacity filled it is evident I beat can wait Are you ready therefore that prompt and decisive ac- j I know not Richard My father tion should be taken in order to avoid i mnfh the necessity of caring for these suffer- i m muLIler ers in any other way than in a well My husband Say that also be- equlpped hospital The state now has tnVpfi Am T rnt firqf at Norfolk an investment of about 95000 TIirsc in the way of land uninjured buildintrs If one word I could send them and equipments exclusive of the partial i They suspect me not They think you are it will Kill iatner repiesunL a conaiueraDie money value In view of this investment of the grow ing needs of the state proportionate to the growth in population and the cor responding increase of dementia and as a matter of convenience to the North Platte country It seems to me that the institution at Norfolk should be rehabili tated and I recommend a reasonable advise that this and all other buildings ard was wooing her authorized by your body be made as kisses and entreaties nearly lire prooi as possioie to the end that danger to human life and of the destruction of property on account of fire be reduced to the minimum TO HANDLE STATE ACCOUNTS gone my You shall write to them on the ship There are a dozen fishing boats near it We will send the letter by one of them My wife do you need more persuasion She had no time to consider Rich- consent with Her own soul urged her not only by the joy of his presence but by the memory of the anguish she had endured that day in the terror of his desertion She clung to her husbands arm she lifted her An Office Should be Created to Assist face to his she said softly but clear the State Board y i wjh g0 with you Richard With KJitilotlletSSSil2Se oT state ou I wil1 So Where to I care not at business it becomes more and more nee- essary that a state accountant shoulji be a- provided as an adjunct of the board of They stepped into the boat and public lands and buildings whose dutv - it shall be to scrutinize and verify the Hyde said Oars- Not a word was accounts of the various state officers and spoken He held her within his left state institutions and who shall authority over the books and records have of nrm C10Se to 1US 5irp iml Pamau said institutions with a view to reducing covered with his military cloak All afflcerouid tSSSnSJ the PSt TaS behind her She hfl dne service to the state and would serve as vbat as irrevocable For joy or for a check on extravagance in the conduct Borrow her place was evermore at of state affairs I recommend that the - - petition be created her husbands side Richard knew These are the more important points that everv doubt and fear had van- of desired legislation that sugcost itj i ii- ished when hand stole into hls themselves to my mnd During tho ner progress of the session It may be that hand when she slightly lifted her face other matters will arise to which I shall nTlf1 Pirbirfl wi3h to call your attention by special an1 1119Pered Kicnarcl message I trust that the utmost of During that same hour Joris was in fedyalinyomorti BOOd um may at the town council There had been a JOHN H SUCKEY i stormy and prolonged session on tho Quartering Act All the way home he was pondering the question and when he found Dominie Van Linden talking to Lysbet he gladly discussea i over again with him Lysbet sat beside them knitting and listening Until after nine oclock Joris did not notice the absenco of his daughter She went to Joannas said Lysbet calmly Still in her own heart there was a certain uneasiness Katherine had never remained all night before without sending some message or on a previous understanding to that ef fect In the morning Joris rose very early and went into the garden Generally this service to nature calmed and cheered him but he came to break fast from it silent and cross He reached his store in that mood which apprehends trouble and finds out annoyances that under other cir cumstances would not have any at tention He was threatening a gen eral reform in everything and every body when a man came to the door If you are Joris Van Heemskirk I have a letter for you I got it from The Dauntless last night when I was fishing in the bay Without a word Joris took the let ter turned into his office and shut the door It was Katherines writing and held the folded paper in his hand and looked stupidly at it The truth was forcing itself into his mind and the slow coming conviction was a real physical agony to him Through a mist he made out these words My Father and my Mother I hava gone with my husband I married Richard when he was ill and tonight he came for me When I left home I knew not I was to go Only five min utes I had In Gods name this is the truth Always at the end of the world I shall love you Forgive me forgive me mijn fader mijn moeder Your child KATHERINE HYDE He tore the letter into fragments but the next moment he picked them up folded them in a piece of paper and put them in his pocket Then he went to Mrs Gordons She had antic ipated the visit and was in a meas ure prepared for it With a smile and outstretched hands she rose from her chocolate to meet him You see I am a terrible sluggard councillor she laughed but the colonel left early for Boston this morning and I cried myself into another sleep And will you have a cup of chocolate Madam I came not on courtesy but for my daughter Where is my Katherine Truth sir I believe her to be where every woman wishes with her Husband Her husband Who then Indeed councillor that is a ques ton easily answered my nephew Capt Hyde at your service When were they married In faith I have forgotten the pre cise date It was in last October Who married them It was the governors chaplain the Rev Mr Somers a relative of my Lord Somers a most estimable and respectable person I assure you Col Gordon and Capt Earle and my self were the witnesses Twice over deceived I have bees then In short sir there was no help for it And if you will take time to reflect I am sure that you will be reasonable I know not I know not O my Katherine my Katherine I pray you sit down councillor You look faint and ill I protest to you that Katherine is happy and grieving will not restore your loss For that reason I grieve madam Nothing can give me back my child Come sir every one has his ca lamity and upon my word you are very fortunate to have one no greater than the marriage of your daughter to an agreeable man of honorable profession and noble family CHAPTER X Popular Opinion Then Joris went home On his road he met Bram full of the first terror of his sisters disappearance He told him all that was necessary and sent him back to the store And see you keep a modest face and make no great matter of it he said Be not troubled nor elated It belongs to you to be very prudent I will not have Katherine made a wonder to gaping women Lysbet was still a little on the de fensive but when she saw Joris com ing home her heart turned sick with fear Thee Joris dinner will not be ready for two hours Art thou sick Katherine she has gone Gone And where then With that Englishman in The Dauntless they have gone Then he told her all Mrs Gordon had said and showed her the frag ments of Katherines letter The mother kissed them and put them in her bosom and as she did so she said softly It was a great strait Joris Well well me also must pass through it The Dominie Van Linden has gone to examine the records and then if she his lawful wife be in tke newspapers I must advertise the mar riage If If she his lawful wife be Say not If in my hearing aay not ir of my Katherine When a girl runs away from her homo With her husband she went keep that in mind when people speak to thee What kind of a husband will he bo to her Well then I think not bad of him Nearer home there aro worse men I think my Katherine is happy and happy with her I will be though the child in her joy I see not While they wero eating an early dinner Joanna came in sad and tear ful What then is tho matter with thee asked Lysbet with great com posure O mother my Kathcrino My sister Katherine I thought perhaps thou had bad news of Batavius Thy sister Kath erine hath married a very fine gentle man and she is happy For thou must remember that all the good men do not come from Dordrecht I am glad that so you take It I thought In very great sorrow you would be See that you do not say such words t any one Joanna Very angry I will bo if I hear them Batavius also he must be quiet on this matter O then Batavius has many things of greater moment to think about Of Katherine ho never approved and the talk thero will be he will not like it Before from Boston ho comes back I shall be glad to have it over Joanna many will praise Kather ine for she to herself has done well And when back she comes at the governors she will visit and with all the great ladles and not one among them will be so lovely as Katherine Hyde And if Joanna had been In Madam Semples parlor a few hours later she would have had a most decided Illus tration of Lysbets faith in the pop ular verdict Madam was sitting at her tea table talking to the elder who had brought homo with him the full supplement to Joannas story Neil had heard nothing He had been shut up in his office all day over an important suit and was irritablo with exhaustion though he was doing his best to keep himself In control and when madam his mother said pointedly Im fearing Neil that tho bad news has made you ill you arena at a like yoursel he asked without much interest What bad news The news anent Katherine Van Heemskirk What of her he asked Didna you hear She ran awa last night wi Capt Hyde stole awa wi him on The Dauntless She would have the right to go with him I have no doubt said Neil with guarded calmness Do you really think she was his wife If she went with him I am sure she was He dropped the words with an emphatic precision and looked with gloomy eyes out of the window gloomy but steadfast as if ho were trying to face a future in which there was no hope But if she isna persisted madam In a moment Nell let slip the rein in which he had been holding him self and in a slow intense voice an swered I shall make it my business to find out If Katherine is married God bless her If she is not I will follow Hyde around the world until I cleave his false heart in two His passion gathered with its utterance He pushed away his chair and put down his cup so indifferently that it missed the table and fell with a crash Joris tried to put the memory of Katherine away but he could not ac complish a miracle The girls face was ever before him He felt her caressing fingers linked in his own and as he walked in his house and his garden her small feet pattered beside him For as there are in cre ation invisible bonds that do not break like mortal bonds so also there are correspondences subsisting be tween souls despite the separation of distance To be continued Oh Hes All Right Of course every young mother thinks her baby the center of the uni verse There have been several boy babies born in tho little town of A during the past summer This is not intended as a startling piece of news because their arrivals have been duly and appropriately chronicled but it is only stated as the basis of a little joke Some days ago four of the happy young mothers all of whom had fine boys at home met in one of the large shops Tney completed their pur chases about the same time As they were all leaving the place within speaking distance of each other a fresh young assistant in an effort to be pleasant fired the stereotyped question at one of them How is the boy to day In an instant four beaming faces were turned towards him and four pleased voices answered in chorus Oh hes all right thank you The assistant nearly fainted Had She an X Ray Eye They had not been married very long and that complete blissful trust which young husbands and wives have in each other had not yet been broken But one morning wifie meekly re marked I mended the hole in your trousers pocket last night after jou had gons to bed John dear Now am I not a thoughtful little wife Husband dubiously Well er ye os you are thoughtful enough my dear But how the mischief did you discover that there was a hole In my I Docket