R u 1 y in r if THE MAID sf MAIDEN UANE Sequel to Tte Bow of Orange Ribbon A liOVE STORY BY AAEliA E BARR Copyright 1900 by Amolia E Barr CHAPTER XV Continued Your own way you will take until into some great trouble you stumble And then my own way I shall take until out of it I Btumble I have told Rom what he must do Like a man ho must say I did wrong and I am sorry for it and so well I think of those he has wronged as to be sure they will answer It is for given And forgotten That Isdifferent To forgive freely is what we owe to our enemy to for get not is what wo owe to ourselves I think it i3 cruel father to ask Kern to speak truth to his own injury Even the law is kinder than you It asks no man to accuse himself Ilight wrongs no man Till others move in this matter you be quiet If you talk evil words will you say and mind this Arenta the evil that comes out of your lips Into your own bosom will fall All my life I have seen this But Arenta could not be quiet She would sow thorns though she had to walk unshod and her fathers advice moved her no more than a breath moves a mountain In the same after noon she saw Madame Jacobus going to Doctor Morans and the hour she remained there was full of misery to her impetuous self adoring heart She was sure they were talking of Rem and herself and as she had all their conversation to imagine she came to conclusions in accord with her sus picions But she met her aunt at the door and brought her eagerly into the par lor She had no visitors that day and -was bored and restless and locging for conversation I saw you go to the Doctors an hour ago aunt she said I hope the Captain is well Jacobus is qulio well thank God and Doctor Moran and Cornelia I have been looking at some of her wed ding gowns A girl so happy who deserves to bo so happy I never saw What a darling she is It is now the fashion to rave about her I suppose they found time enough to abuse poor Rem And you could listen to them I would not have done so No not if listening had meant salvation for the whole Moran family You are a remarkably foolish young woman They never named Rem People so happy do not remem ber the bringer of sorrow He has been shut out in the darkness and cold I am ashamed of Rem I can never forfgive him He is a disgrace to the family And that is why I cajie hore to day I wish you to make Rem understand that he must not come near his Uncle Jacobus When Jacobus is angry he will call heaven and earth and hell to help him speak his mind and I have nearly cured him of a habit which is so distressing to me and such a great wrong to his own soul The very sight of Rem would break every barrier down and let a flood of words loose that would make him suffer afterward I will not have Jacobus led into such temptation I have not heard an oath from him in six months I suppose you would never forgive Jacobus if you did hear one That is another matter I hope I have a heart to forgive whatever Ja cobus does or says he is my hus hand It is then less wicked to blaspheme Almighty God than to keep one of Lord Hydes love letters One fault may be forgiven the other is unpardonable Dear me how religiously ignorant I am You look extremely handsome when you are scornful Arenta but - Ill WJS tea Right wrongs no man It is not worth while wasting your charms on me I am doing what I can to help Jacobus to keep his tongue slean and I will not have Rem lead him into temptation As for Rem he is guilty of a great wrong and he must now do what his father told him to do work day and night as men work when a bridge is broken down The ruin must be got out of the way and the bridge rebuilt then it will be possible to open some pleasant and profitable traffic with human beings again not to speak of heaven You are right not to speak of heaven I think heaven would be more charitable Rem will not trouble Captain Jacobus For my part I think a msn that cannot bear temptation is very poorly reformed If my uncle could seo Rem and yet keep his big and little oaths under bonds I should believe in his clean tongue Arenta you are tormenting your self with anger and ill will and above all with Jealousy In this way you aro going to miss a great deal of pleasure I advise you not to quarreL with Cor nelia She will be a great resource This afternoon something Is vexing you I shall take no offense You will regret your bad temper to morrow To morrow Arenta did regret but people do not always say they are sorry when they feel so She sat In the shadow of her window curtains and watched almost constant streams of visitors and messengers and tradespeople at jDoctor Morans house fM i I fSiff The door flew open and i and she longed to have her hands among the lovely things and to give her opinion about the delightful events sure to make the next few weeks full of interest and pleasure And after she had received a letter from Rem sno resolved to humble herself that she might be exalted Rem is already fortunate and I cant help him by fighting his battle Forgetfulness is the word For this wrong can have no victory and to bo forgotten is the only hope for it Be side Cornelia had her fall share in my happiness and I will not let myself be defrauded of my share in her happi ness not for a few words no cer tainly not This reflection a few times reiter ated resulted in the following note My Dear Cornelia I want to say so much that I cannot say anytaing but forgive me I am shaken to pieces by my dreadful sufferings and sometimes I do not know what I say even to those I love Blame my sad fortune for my bad words and tell me ycu long to forgive me as I long to be forgiven Your ARENTA That will be sufficient she re flected and after all Cornelia is a sweet girl I am her first and dearest friend and I am determined to keep my place Well then if I have to eat humble pie I have had my say and that takes the bitter taste out of my mouth and a sensible woman must look to her future I dare warrant Cornelia is now answering my letter I dare warrant she will forgive me very sweetly She spent half an hour in such re flections and then Cornelia entered with a smiling face She would not permit Arenta to say another word of regret she stifled all her self reproaches in an embrace and she took her back with her to her own home And no further repentance em barrassed Arenta She put her ready wit and her clever hands to a score of belated things and snubbed and con tradicted the Van Dien and Sherman girls into a respectful obedience to her earlier friendship and wider experi ence Everything that she directed or look charge of went with an unmis takable vigor to completion and even Madame Van Heemskirk was delight ed with her ability and grateful for her assistance The poor Arenta she said to Mrs Moran very helpful she is to us and for her brothers fault she is not to blame Wrong it would be to visit it on her And Arenta not only felt this gra cious Justice for herself she looked much further forward for she said to her father It is really for Rems sake I am so obliging By and by people will say there is ro truth in that letter story The Marquise is the friend of Lady Hyde they are like clasped hands and that could not be so if Rem Van Ariens had done such a dreadful thing It is all nonsense And if I hear a word about it I shall know how to smile and lift my should ers and kill suspicion with contempt Yes for Rems sake I have done the best thing So happily the time went on thu it appeared wonderful when ChHtmas was close at hand Every preparation was then complete It was a very joy to go into the Moran house The mother with a happy light upon her face went to and fro with that habit ual serenity which kept the tempera ture of expectant pleasure at a degree not too ex ting for continuance and Corneal knowing her lover was every day coming nearer and nearer 1 was lurt as baDnv as a cirl loving nnA well beloved ought to bo Her beauty had increased wonder fully hopo had more than ronewed her youth and confident lovo had given to her face and form a splendor of color and expression that captivat ed everybody though why or how they never asked she charmed be cause she charmed One day the Httlo bevy of feminine councillors looked at their work and pronounced all beautiful and all fin ished and then there was a lull in tho busy household and then every one was conscious of being a little weary and every ono also felt that it would bo well to let heart and brain and fingers and feet rest In a few days there would likely be another English letter and they could then form some idea as to when Lord Hyde would ar rive The last letter received from him had been written in London and the ship in which he was to sail was taking on her cargo while he im patiently waited at his hotel for notice of her being ready to lift her anchor The doctor thought it highly probable Hyde would follow this letter in a week or perhaps less During this restful interval Doctor and Mrs Moran drove out one after noon to Hyde Manor House A cage from Madame Van Heemskirk asked this favor from them she wish ed naturally that they should see how exquisitely beautiful and comfortable was the home which her Joris had trusted her to prepare for his bride But she did not wish Cornelia to see it until thebridegroom himself took her across its threshold An old womans fancy it is she said to Mrs Moran but no harm is there in it and not much do I like women who bustle about their houses and have no fancies at all Nor I answered Mrs Moran with a merry little laugh Do you know that I told John to buy my wedding ring too wide because I often heard my mother say that a tight wedding ring was unlucky Then both women smiled and began delightedly to look over together the stores of fine linen and damask which the mother of Joris had laid up for her sons use It was a charming visit and the sweet pause in the vivid life of tho past few weeks was equally charming to Cornelia She rested in her room till the short daylight ended then she went to tne parlor and drank a cup of tea and closed the curtains and sat down by the hearth to wait for her father and mother So still was the house so still was tho little street that she easily went to the land of reverie and lost herself there She thought over again all her life with her lover recalled his sweet spirit his loyal affection his hand some face and enchanting manner Heaven has made me so fortunate she thought and now my fortune has arrived at my wishes Even his delay is sweet I desire to think of him until all other thoughts are forgotten Oh what lover could be loved as I love him Then with a soft but quick move ment the door flew open she lifted her eyes to fill them with loves very image and vesture and with a cry of joy flew to meet the bliss so long afar but now so near O lovely and be loved O my love Hyde cried and then there was a twofold silence the very ecstasj that no mortal words ean utter The sacred hour for which all their lives had longed was at last dropped down to them from heaven Between their kisses they spoke of things remembered and of things to be leaning to each other in visible sweetness while Love breathed In sighs and silences Through two blent souls one rapturous undersong The End HE FOOLED ALL FRANCE Impostor Made Paris Believe He Was Ambassador From Persia Toward the end of the year 1714 a certain Mehemet Rizabecq who called himself ambassador of the king of Persia and the bearer of his com mands disembarked at Marseilles He was received at two leagues from Paris by the c o de Breteuil usher of ambassadors and the Marshal de Matignon On the 24th of January 1715 he made his solemn entry into the capital with great pomp He declined the royal carriage gen erally used on suoh occasions and entered on horseback preceded by the finest horses of the kings stables superbly caparisoned and accompan ied by trumpets and bands of music The ambassador richly arrayed in the Persian costume was attended by a numerous train of domestics and preceded by a herald bearing the Per sian standard The presents which he offered to the king were very in considerable After passing a short time in France during which he concluded in the name of his pretended master a treaty of alliance with Louis XIV he sailed from Sweden and Denmark and was never heard of later Rizabecq according to the Memoirs of the Reign of Louis XIV was a Portuguese who had never seen the prince he represented nor even visited a single province of Persia The gov ernment paid the expenses of his ex cellency which amounted to 1000 livres a day Mirror Chinaman Good House Servant A friend of mine has at last solved the servant girl problem said a Philadelphia man He doesnt em ploy a girl at all No he doesnt have his wife do her own housework he has a Chinaman Charlie thats his name has been there jiow for a cou ple of montns and my friend swears that never again will he employ a ser- vant girl Charlie cooks washes irons waits on the table does all the dusting and cleaning and even tends to the baby when occasion demands FEEE EAW MATERIAL AN INDEFINITE TERM NOT GEN ERALLY UNDERSTOOD In the Seven Billions Vorth of So called Raw Materials Annually Pro duced Domestic Labor and Wages are Represented to the Extent of Six Billions Says the Clinton Iowa Daily Age The president thinks that cutting off the tariff on trust articles would not curb the trusts and might ruin lesser manufactures To prevent ruination of that kind all that Con gress would have to do would bo in connection with cutting off tho tariff on trust articles to also cut off the tariff on foreign raw material With the great majority of manufacturing Industries in this country free raw material would enable them to pro duce their wares at a reduction of at least 25 per cent and leave a good profit for the mill and bettor wages for the laborer The editor of the Daily Age should first know what raw material is and what it means before he echoes the worn out fallacy that has been explod ed times without number First we will tell him in the words of Henry C Carey what raw material as he uses the term is All the products of the earth are in rn finished commodity and raw mate rial Coal and ore are the finished commodity of the miner but the raw matrial of pig iion The latter is the finished commodity of the smelter yet only the raw material of the puddler and of him who rolls the bar The bar is again the raw material of sheet iron and that in turn becomes the raw material of the nail and spike It has been said only the trees in the wild forests the ore and the coal of the unmined earth and the ered product of the sea are raw material All else is more or less fin ished product on which labor to a greater or less degree has been ex pended But let us call all unfinished products which enter into the produc tion of a finished product raw mater ial In other words let us call all fuel all food and the basis of tex tiles and finished iron and steel raw material coai and wood lumber and logs iron and copper ore wool and cotton and raw silk chemicals and so on through the list All these our Iowa contemporary would have us put on the free list Well to begin with every one of them which we do not produce at home is on the free list now In 1902 we imported articles in a crude con dition which enter into the various processes of domestic industry to the value of 328506597 Of this 259 G69G66 worth or nearly SO per cent came in free of duty These articles admitted free of duty by the Dingley law number fully 500 and even more if we consider different kinds of material It would take several news paper columns to name and describe them The per cent of all free im ports in 1902 was fifty three or more than half of our entire importations Our importations of so called raw material in 1902 SO per cent or which came in free amounted to 328- 000000 while the average under the Wilson Gorman law was less than 200000000 Moreover it may be stated that the importations cf manufacturers material during the present fiscal year of 1903 will exceed 500000000 in value Now let us consider the protected raw material The census gives the value of our manufacturers in 1900 as 13041287498 and the cost of materi als used as 734S144755 Suppose we had imported the whole of that 7350000000 worth of material What would such an annual importation mean Simply a loss of wages and income amounting to fully 6000000 000 a year And when the farmer has no market for his wool or the miner for his ore and coal or the lumberman for his lumber or the millions of work men for their product how are they going to be able to buy the products cf others That condition of things was just what brought the disasters of 1894 95 96 and 97 till the Dingley law came to the rescue and brought the opportunity to do our own work That is all there is to this question of protection to the finished article or the so called raw material It enables us to do our own work and with the resulting wages and incomes both in the factory and on the farm we en large the consumption and the in- creascd demand fcr all commodities bring increased production and more business for the railroads the mer chants and personal service If so caPed free raw material did onablq some of cur manufacturers to produce their wares at a reduction of 25 per cent in cost it would make 30000000 poor farmers and their families and throw out of work millions of laborers now earning from 2 to 5 a day Fully three persons are engaged in producing our so called raw material to one engaged in producing tho last finished product Now shall we throw three men out of employment to bene fit one even were that one to be bene fited But the one would not be bene fited for his market would be gone We advise our Iowa friends to look into this matter of free raw material thoroughly instead of the superficial glance they throw at it with a con clusion based on an argument as falla cious as an empty wind bag When it comes to competing in the foreign market it should be remembered that all materials that enter into products to be exported are 99 per cent free a feature of our tariff law that free traders rarely consider when talking about- free raw materials and tho mancets of the world American Economist What Canada Wants To suppose that Canada Is yearning for reciprocal relations with the United States in order that she may receive an increased quantity of manu factured exports from this country is to cherish a delusion Canada wants nothing of the sort What she wants is to become industrially independent and self reliant to encourage and build up her own industries The Hamilton Spectator negatives the assumption by the Buffalo Express that the Cana dian government desires to negotiate a reciprocity agreement with tho United States and says Canada is now importing many GULLIVER AND THE LILIPUTIANS more millions of dollars worth of American made goods than the people of this country want to see And it is a reduction of that importation not an increase that the people of Canada want The preferential of 33 1 3 per cent in favor of imports of British origin may be removed before long but it will not be removed because Canada wants to trade more extensively with the United States It will be because Canada wants to do more of her own work and to decrease her imports in competing products Free Hides Free Wool Free Every thing Free hides would be followed by free wool Free wool would be fol lowed by free manufactured goods made of wool Thus the whole sys tem of protection would fall The people of the United States have reached that point where they must either stand by protection or free trade There can be no middle ground Reciprocity on competitive goods is only another method of tariff ripping and tariff reduction and it is advo cated for that purpose by those who advocate it Reciprocity with Canada is advo cated solely in the interest of the agricultural implement trust which is perfectly willing to trade off the in terests of the farmer in their own country to advance their own in Canada We are not surprised that Mr Rob erts wwho bears the responsibility of editing the morning paper should ad vocate free hides and reciprocity in competitive goods inasmuch as Mr Roberts intimate friends know that he has practically become a free trader Des Moines Capital Reaping the Benefits Canadian advocates of free trade or a low tariff tell the farmers of the Northwest that protection is a policy intended solely for the benefit of the manufacturers in the Eastern pro vinces The low tariff advocates of the United States used to tell the same story to the Western farmers They said there were no manufacturing in austries in the West and never could be The protectionists on the other hand told the Western farmers that the ultimate effect of protection would be to cause the establishment of fac tories in the West as well as in the East The farmers of the West gave their support to the party advocating high protection and they are now reap ing the benefits of the policy Indus trial Canada KNEW WHEREOF HE SPOKE wr Disputants Had Referred Their Case to Good Judge Threo men woro traveling In tho amoking compartment of a Pullman car when one in roferrlug to Tho Pit commended Its realistic phases A neighbor criticised the book on tho point where Jadwin is described as figuring out commissions and said that any big operator would havo car ried tho data in his head The third gentleman was appealed to and agree ing with tho second thought that The Pit was wrong on that point But persisted tho first did you ever carry wheat on margin Oh yes replied number three Largo quantities Very largo How many bushels One hundred and Then number one and number two looked at number three and asked him his name Joseph Lelter he replied New York Times Had Had His Rest Yoakum of Frisco as he is known In the railroad world is ono of tho workers They say he never tires One day a friend called at the Broad street office to see him It was about 4 p m He found the president lean ing back in a big chair reading a newspaper and smoking In sur prise he asked what was up You see Ive worked pretty hard for the past ten years said Mr Yoa kum and I think I need a long rest The next day the same friend drop ped in again Mr Yoakum shook hands in his hearty way but said Glad to see you but Im up to my eyes in work I havent much time I thought you were going to take a long rest exclaimed his friend Thats all right I took it yester day said the president New York Times One Oculists Advice So you have been trying to doctor your own eyes -remarked the oculist as the patient removed the bandages displaying an aggravated case of con junctivitis In many cases you can cure yourself but if you dont know what treatments to avoid you are liable to do yourself injury Old housewife remedies are all right in their place but I would advise you not to use tea leaves They often give relief but they bring on other compli cations In fact the tea leaf eye is well known to the profession The lid is puffy flabby and lifeless If you wish to reduce the inflamation in your eyes use hot water with a cloth That is enough Yes you may add salt if you wish but it is not necessary in most cases Salt is merely an an tiseptic and has no other virtue for eye lotions Ended the Argument Among those who were on the re viewing stand at the unveiling of the Sherman statue was the young son of Lieut Col J Wray Cleveland with several of his boy friends As Gen Roe and his staff rode by the boys began discussing the positions their fathers held in the parade My father is a Lieutenant said one Pooh My father is a Colonel said another Humph said young Cleveland My father beats both for hes a Lieuten ant Colonel From the silence that followed it was evident that he had scored New York Times Place for College Men President Loudon of Toronto uni versity was a visitor to Wall street one day last week He was shown the sights by one of his old friends not a college man but rather a dis ciple of Schwab What good does it do a man to go through college anyway he said flippantly The biggest men down here are not college men No said the white haired sage unconscious of both bull and irony if they were they would probably be working somewhere New YorL Times Howll They Know It It is proposed in Boston to run a special car late in the evening for the convenience of intoxicated men But even Boston drinkers may be puzzled to read the label on the dipsomania special when it comes along Public Baths New York with 3437202 inhab itants has only one public bath but has three others under way London with a population of 4536063 has thirty eight JEAN KATE LUDLUMS most successful novel That Girl OF Johnsons - - begins in these columns next week From first to last a story of great inter est and power