IMa I 356e Bordmacr J 5 GMtfrned By HALL CAINE J SYNOPSIS Rachel Jorgenson was tne only daugh ter of the governor 01 Iceland She fell In love with and married an Idler Ste phen Orry Her father had other hopes o her and In his anger he disowned her Then orry deserted her and ran away to sea Of this union however a child was born and Rachel called him Jason Ste phen Orry was neara rrom In the Isle of 21a n where ho ws naln married and another son was born Rachel died a broken neartett woman but told Jason of his fathers acts- Jason swore to kill him and If not him then hl3 son In the meantime Orry had deserted his ship and sought refuge In the lle of Man and was sheltered by the governor of the Island Adam Falrbrother Orry went from bad to worse and marled a disso lue and their child called Michael Sun locks war born The woman died and Orry gave their child to Adam Fair brother who adopted him and he be came the playmate of the governors only daughter Greeba Time passed and the governor and his wife became estranged their five sons staying with their mother on account of their jealousy of Sunlocks who had become a favorite with the gov ernor Finally Stephen Orry confesses his misdeeds to Sunlocks who promised to go to Iceland to find Raehel If possi ble and care for her and If she was dead to find her son and treat him as a brother He bid good bye to his sweet heart Greeba and started on his journey Meantime Jason had started on his journey of vengeance and his ship was wrecked on the Isle of Man He saved the life of his father unknowingly Orry died and on his death bed was recog nised by Jason THE BOOK OP MICHAEL SUN- LOCKS J CHAPTER I He had always stood somewhat In awe of these great persons and his spirits rose visibly at the loss of them for he had never yet reconciled him self to the dignity of his state Its wonderful how much a man may do for himself when hes put to it he said as he groomed his own horse next morning His sons were not so easily appeased and muttered hard words at his folly for their own sup plies had by this time suffered curtail ment He was ruining himself at a breakneck pace and if he came to die in the gutter who should say that it had not served him right The man who threw away his substance with his eyes open deserved to know by bit ter proof that it had gone Jason heard all this at the fireside at Lague and though he could not answer it he felt his palms itch sorely and his fists tighten like ribs of steel and his whole body stiffen up and silently measure its weight against that of Thurstan Fairbrother the biggest and heaviest and hardest spoken of the brothers Greeba heard it too but took it with a gay Hghtsomeness knowing all yet fearing nothing What matter she said and then laughed But strange and silly enough were some of the shifts that her fathers open handedness put her to in these bad days of the bitter need of the islands poor people It was the winter season when things were at their worst and on Christmas Eve Greeba had a goose killed for their Christmas dinner The bird was hung in one of the outhouses to drain and cool before being plucked am while it was there Greeba went out leaving her father at home Then came three of the man who had never yet been turned empty from the Gov ernors door Adam blustered at all of them but he emptied his pockets to one gave the goose to another and smuggled something out of the panto for the third The goose was missed by the maJ wliose work it was to pluck it and its disappearance was made known to Greeba on her return Guessing at th way it had gone she went into the room where her father sat placidly smoking and trying to look wondrous seren and innocent What do you think father she jgaid someone has stolen the goose Im afraid my dear he answered treckly I gave it away to poor Kin xade the parish clerk Would you be lieve it he and his good old wife hadnt a bit or a sup for their Christmas din ner Well said Greeba youll have io be content with bread and cheese for your own for we have nothing else In the house now Im afraid my dear he stammered I gave away the cheese too Poor dafe Gelling who lives on the moun tains had nothing to eat but a loaf of bread poor fellow Now the rapid impoverishment ot the governor was forcing Greeba into the arms of Jason though they had yet no idea that this was so and when sold his tithe charges by auction in England and they were knocked down to a Scotch factor a hard man un troubled by sentiment and not too proud to get his own by means that might be thought to soil the cloth of ing that bluster as he would while th When the news of this transfer reach ed the island the Manx clergy looked black though they dared say nothing but the poor people grumbled audibly for they knew what was coming It soon came in the shape of writs from the Bishops seneschal served by the Bishops sumner Then the cry of the poor reached the governor at Cas tletown No powers had he to stay the seizure of goods and stock for arrears that were forfeit to the church courts but he wrote to the bishop ask ing him to stay execution at a moment of the islands necessity The bishop answered him curtly that the matter was now outside his control At that the governor inquired into the legality of the sale and found good reason to question it He wrote again to the bishop hinting at his doubts and then the Bishop told him to mind his own business My business is the welfare of the people the governor answered and be you bishop or lord or both be sure that while I am here I will see to it Such is tne penalty of setting a beg gar on horseback the bishop rejoined Meantime the Scotch factor went on with his work and notices were served that if arrears of tithe rent were not paid by a given date cattle or crop to the value of them would then be seized in the bishops name When the word came to government house the gov ernor announced to Greeba his inten tion to be present at the first seizure She tried to restrain him fearing trou ble but he was fully resolved Then Jthe crisis came that loosened the ties encouraged the people to resist the which held Greeba to her father it came as a surprise to all three or them The one man in the island who had thu far shown a complete indifference to the sufferings of the poor in their ihour of tribulation was the Bishop of Sodor and Man This person was a fashionable ecclesiastic not a Manx mana Murray and a near kinsman of theLlord of the island who had kept the see four years vacant that the sole placeof profit in the Island might thereby be retained for his own family iBlany years the Bishop had drawn his stipend tithe and glebe rents which f were very large In proportion to the diocese and almost equal in amolnt to the emoluments of the whole body of the native clergy He held smal ujsgwnerce with his people and the bad seasons troubled him little until he felt the pinch of them himself But when he found it hard to gather his tithe he began to realize that the island was she1 sent word by Chaise AKHley to her brothers at Lague begging them to go with their father and see hint through but one and all refused There was mischief brewing and if the gov ernor had a right to interfere he had a right to have the civil forces at the back of him If he had no light to the help of Castle Rushen he had no right to stop the execution In anj case they had no wish to meddle When old Chaise brought back hit answer Red Jason chanced to be a Castletown He had been at govern ment house oftener than usual since the clouds had begun to hang on it Coming down from the mountains with his pipe in his mouth his fowling piece over his shoulder and his birds hang ing from his belt he would sometimes contrive to get up into the yard at the back fling a brace of pheasants into the kitchen and go off again without speaking to anyone Greeba had been too smart for him this time and he was standing before her with a look of guilt when Chaise came up on his errand Then Jason heard all and straightway offered to go with the gov ernor and never let wit of his inten tion Oh thank you thank you said Greeba and she looked up into his bronzed face and smiled proudly and her long lashes blinked over her beau tiful eyes Her glance seemed to go through him It seemed to go through all nature and fill the world with a new glad light The evil day came and the governor was as good as his word He went away to Peel where the first seizure was to be made There was a great crowd already gathered and at sight of Adams face a great shout went up The bishops factor heard it as he came up from Bishops Court with a troop of his people about him Ill mak short shrift o a that the noo he said When he came up he ordered that a cow house door should be broken open and the cattle brought out for In stant sale for he had an auctioneer by his side But the door was found to be locked and he shouted to his men to leap onto the roof and strip off the thatch Then the governor cried to stop and called on the factor to desist for though he might seize the cattle there would be no sale that day since no man there present would take the bread out of the mouths of the poor Then they shall try the milk said the factor with a hoarse laugh and at the same moment the bishops sene schal a briefless advocate stepped out pushed his hot face into Adams and said that governor as he was if he sumner should then and there summon him to appear before the church courts for contempt At that insult the crowd surged around muttering deep oaths and the factor and seneschal were both much hustled In another moment there was a general struggle f people were shout ing the governor was on the ground and in danger of being trodden under foot the factor had drawn a pistol and some of his men were flourishing hangers By this time Red Jason had lounged up as if by chance to the outskirts o the crowd andnow he pushed throuel eer and the riffraff of the church Courts were going off up the road with best foot foremost and a troop of the people like a pack of hounds at full cry behind Then the remnant of the crowd com pared notes and bruises Man alive what a boy to fight said one Who was It said another Och Jason the Red of coorse said a third Jason was the only man badly in jured He had a deep cut over the right brow and though the wound bled freely he made light of it But Adam was much troubled at the sight I much misdoubt me but well rue the day he said Jason laughed at that and they went back to Castletown together Greeba saw them coming and all but fainted at the white bandage that gleamed across Jasons forehead but he gave her a smile and bade her have no feai for his wound was nothing Neverthe less she must needs dress it afresh though her deft fingers trembled woe fully and seeing how near the knife had come to the eye all her heart was in her mouth But he only laugh ed at the bad gash and thought with what cheer he would take such another just to have the same tender hands bathe it and stitch it and to see the troubled heaving of the round bosom that was before him while his head was held down Arent you very proud of yourself Jason she whispered softly as she fin ished Why proud said he Its the second time you have done as I have bidden you and suffered for doing so she said He knew not what reply to make scarcely realizing which was her ques tion tended So feeling very stupid he said again But why proud Arent you then she said Be cause I am proud of vou They were alone and he saw her breast heave and her great eyes gleam and he felt dizzy At the next instant their hands touched and then his blood boiled and before he knew what he was doing he had clasped the beautiful girl in his arms and kissed her on the Jipsand cheek She sprang away from him blushing deeply but he knew that she was not angry for she smiled through her deep rich color as she fled from out of the room on tiptoe From that hour he troubled his soul no more with fears that he was unworthy of Greebas love for he looked at his wound in the glass and remembered her words and laughed in his heart The governor was right that there would be no sale for arrears of tithe charges After a scene at Bishops Court the factor went back to Eng land and no more was heard of the writs served by the sumner But wise folks predicted a storm for Adam Fair brother and the great people were agreed that his conduct had been the maddest folly Hell have to take the horns with the hide said Deemster Lace Hes a fool that doesnt know which side of his bread is buttered said Mrs Fairbrother The storm came quickly but not from the quarter expected Since the father of the Duke of Athol had sold his fiscal rights to the Eng lish Crown the son had rued the bar gain All the interest in the island that remained to him lay in his title his patronage of the bishopric and his governor generalship Kis title counted for little for it was unknown at the English court and the salary of hifc governor geneialship counted for less for not being resident in the island he had to pay a local governor The pat ronage of the bishopric wa the one tangible item of his interest and when the profits of that office were imperiled he determined to part with his trun cated honors Straightway he sold them big and baggage to the crown foi nearly six times as much as his father had got for the insular revenues When this neat act of truck and trade was complete he needed his deputy no more and sent Adam Fairbrother aa instant warning with half-a-3-ears salary foi smart money The blow came with a shock to Gree ba and her father but there was no leisure to sigh over it Government house and its furniture belonged to the government and the new governor might take possession of it at any mo ment But the stock on its lands was Adams antl as it was necessary to dis pose of it he called a swift sale Half the island came to it and many a brave brag came then from many a vain stom ach Adam was rightly served What was there to expect when jacks were set in office With five hundred a year coming in for twenty years h was as poor a3 a church mouse Aw money in the hands of some men was like water in a sieve Adams six sons were there looking on with sneering lips as much as to say Let nobody blame us for a mess like this Red Jason was there too glooming as black as a thundercloud and itching to do battle with somebody if only a fit case should offer Adam himself did not show his face He was ashamed he was crushed he was humiliated but not for the reason attributed to him by common report Alone he sat and smoked and smoked in the room at back from whence he had seen Greeba and Michael Sunlocks that day when they walked side by side wifti great strides lifted the governoj into the paved yard and when he said td his feet laid the factor on the broa within himself Now God grant that of his back and clapped his pisto this may be the end of all parting be- hand under one heavy heel Then th tween them and me He was thinking hangers flashed around Jasons face of that day now that is was very very and he stretched his arms and laid ou far away He heard the clatter of feet about him In two minutes he ha helow and the laughter of the bidders made a wide circle where he stood an and the wondrous jestslof the facetious in two minutes more the factor and hi auctioneer 4 passing through sore straits Then he I men with seneschal sumner action - When the work was over - ami the M ir m j - - - ef t house felt quiet and so eo empty Greeba came in to him with eyes large ffnd red and kissed him without saying a word Then he became mighty cheer ful all at once and bade her fetch out her amount books for they had their own reckoning yet to make and nov was the time to make it She did at she was bidden and counted up he J fathers debts with many a tear drop ping over them as if trying to blot them out forever And meanwhile he counted up his half years smart money and the pile of silver and gold that had come of the sale When all was reck oned they found they would be just fifteen pounds to the good and that was now their whole fortune Next morning there came a great company of tne poor and stood in si lence about the house They knew that Adam had nothing to give and they came for nothing they on their part had nothing to offer and they had nothing to say but this was their way of showing sympathy with the good man in his dark hour The next morning after that old Adam said to Greeba Come girl there is only one place in the island that we have a right to go to and thats Lague Lets away And towards Lague they set their faces afoot all but empty handed and with no one but crazy old Chaise AKiJ ley for company To be continued A STRANGE TRADE Nobody has ever been able to ex plain the mysterious fascination of counterfeiting said an old federal offi cal at the custom house There is without a doubt something about the work aside from its possible profits that draws men into it and keeps them there at the sacrifice of almost every thing that would appear to make life worth living Once a counterfeiter always a counterfeiter is an axiom ol the secret service and it is borne out by facts Yet counterfeiting would seem on the surface to be one of the least at tractive branches of crime It involves an immense amount of hard work ac companied as a rule by exposure and privation and there is not a single case on record in which a maker or shover of the queer retired in peace with anything like a competence In deed there are very few instances in which a counterfeiter ever made as much as 5000 out of the operation They are almost invariably caught or driven to cover before they succeed in floating enough of their wares to pay them ordinary day wages for the time they have put in The engraving of a treasury note Is a long and tedious operation Even in the government bureau at Washington where every modern labor saving appli ance is at hand and the work is dis tributed among a dozen skillful oper atorsone doing the vignette another the lettering another the scrolls and so on It takes several months to nish a plate One man doing the whole thing and working under cover in con tinual dread of discovery would easily be occupied two or thiee years at the same task And you must bear in mind that an engraver competent to turn out a dangerous replica could easily be earning from S to 12 a day at honest employment In other words he puts all the way from 7500 to 10000 worth of work into the undertaking and when the plate is at last ready for the press he has no assurance whatever that a dozen of the bills will ever actually be passed The chances are about two to one that the job will land him in piison - But in spite of all this continued the officer some of the best engravers In the country have turned counterfeit ers and persisted in it to the bitter end It is veiy btiange The same rule ap plies to all grades of bogus money mak ing None of It ever pays as a business proposition Some time ago an Italian was arrested here in New Orleans for manufacturing spurious quarters He turned out a cleverly made white metal coin but had shoved less than 10 worth when he was caught and given u term behind the bars The fake quarters were first cast In a mold and afterward- touched up or sharpened as it is called technically by hand The reeding around the edges was also hand work and very tedious I calcu lated that he could not finish over eight coins a day working hard for at least ten hours Just think of It Only 2 a day for highly skilled labor and even then hjdidnt reap that amount as net profit The cojns had to be passed the object being of course to secure good money in change That necessitated making some little purchase with every piece so at best not more than 20 cents was actually realized on the transaction In short the Italian was obliged to pui in one day counterfeiting and the bes part of another day shoving all foi a beggarly 160 and meanwhile ha waj constantly jeopardizing his liberty He was a man of considerable ability and ought to have been able to have earned 3 or 4 a day as a pattern maker or designer -Almost every one of the famous bank note counterfeiters has had op portunities to quit crooked work with full assurance of no future molestation on the part of the authorities You see the government is generally only too willing to make terms with such dan gerous fellows But it is no use Not one of them has ever stayed straight six months after alleged reformation They cant resist the fatal fascination New Orleans Times Democrat Philadelphia Press The most con siderate wife I ever heard of said the Cornfed Philosopher was a womar who used to date all her letters a weel or so ahead to allow her husband tinu to mail them i MMiMBMBWBBBBiBBflWiWSSHSBmEBBBBi5jJe8iMWBKBgg AT EVENTIDE At eventide to me sometimes seems That ere the morrows sun shall rise once more Perchance tis but a fancy born of dreams My new born soul beyond the skies shall soar And the imprisoned spirit its bonds In twain The life beyond shall seek and not in vain And Night dark Night shall come to us at last And end the closing of the setting day When Death the grim gray messenger his net shall cast And from this vale shall summon us away To join the throng of those who went before And in the unknown world to live foi evermore Horace Wyndham in Cape Argu3 THE LIFE OF A MM It is a question Prof Kirkhoffer said quietly between this and that Saying thus he looked down at the two objects between which choice had to be made This was a man a brown skinned man of the upper Asian steppes He lay prone upon the desert sand his eyes unseeing eyes wide open motionless save for an occassion al twitching of the limbs as the fever shiver shook him silent except when his parched lips moved in the inarticu late manner of delirium The profes sors gaze did not linger upon this pit eous figure It traveled to that two loads of clay tablets evidently of ex treme antiquity and closely covered with a strange cuneiform character which had just been carefully strap ped by his companion to the backs of two kneeling camels Seeing we are now reduced to two beasts only he went on his eye shift ing for an instant to the body of a third camel which lay dead some twen ty yards oft seeing also that we are In a waterless desert probably twenty-four hours ride from the nearest well and that this man is a dead weight on our hands You dont dream of abandoning the poor chap Dick Harding broke in The professor glanced uneasily over his smoked spectacles Harding was a puzzle to him a man of distinguished scientific attainments and capable of strong scientific enthusiasm yet oc casionally betraying a vein of senti mentality altogether out of place in connection with scientific explorations Kirkhoffer had had inconvenient ex perience of this peculiarity more than once during the year spent with Hard ing in the remote fastnesses of Thibet You wouldnt leave him here to die the Englishman persisted The professor rubbed his forehead thoughtfully He is bound to die soon in any3 case I dont see that at all If we can keep him alive till we get out of this Impossible my friend He cannot walk and these two camels cannot carry him in addition to you and me and the tablets Then leave some of the tablets be hind The professor fair gasped for breath Leave leave behind some of the tablets he stammered Leave the records of a civilization to which the Arcadian Is a thing of yesterday to be swallowed up by the next sandstorm Give my great discovery the greatest of the century maimed and imperfect to the world Harding you must be mad What is the life of a Khirgiz Tartar besides these priceless things Kirkhoffers short sighted eyes then bleamed angrily behind his glasses his voice was thick with passion Whats a Khirgiz Tartar he growl ad like a wild animal Hes a mar anyway Harding re torted Suppose I refuse to leave the fellow Then the professor became all at once ominously cool I shall be forced to remind you that I am the head of this expedition and you are my salaried assistant Also that these animals are my property I go and they go with me You can join the party or not as you please Harding grew pale That is the choice you offer me Then I say you are a blackguard And I say Indifferently you are a fool Come will you mount No furiously The German shrugged his shoulders Have it your own way he said And i gathering up the long leading rem which he had fastened to the head of one camel he prepared to seat himself on the other But here Harding sprang upon him suddenly No you dont he cried You shall leave me one you brute though it were a hundred times your property Stand off the professor cried Hardings answer was to close with him silently and there ensued a trial of strength whereof the issue seemed for several minutes doubtfuL The men were not ill matched Kirkhoffer was the taller and heavier but then he was also the elder by twenty years and Hardings naturally lithe habit of body had known an English public school and university training The result of the conflict was still un certain when the professor suddenly loosed his hold and fell back leaving the prize of contention the camel al most in the others clutch Harding stooped to seize the creatures halter and rose again to find himserf covered by his antagonists revolver Now perhaps the man of science observed you will consent to hear reason No use my good friend as Hardings hand went briskly to his H r BIBIllilHl SHHHBHnHIHBwBK5ilHHiBiiiil3 col of HHBHHBHiaHiSIHBBMHnSMGssr nKSS BMBBiBBBPMlEA3l8HHBiBMBSwpSMl - SSH breat Keel pomte fessor BHIH9HBHHB9EK8Sa9MEiENwRHB9H9BB9QSKroi v HBBBHSBISBBi9K YTImmmmWMmymmm made both and began tc Harding remains breast pocket I drew the charge basis t w i - iESJI tmjzfg - distance he continued to ht volver raised and leveled slt wise on his animal to insure curate aim But after a mini camels broke into a long a trot in two minutes they were pursuit three and the professor eted his firearm and threw his across the saddle Your own fault remember was his final greeting be fore he disappeared over the top of the nearest sand duns When he had disappeared Harding looked about him reviewing the situa tion It was no cheering prospect that met his eye a dead waste of sandhills to north south east and west white hot In the glare of the tropical sun Two dark blots alone broke theNpaIe surface of the wilderness the stiffen ing bulk of the dead camel and the limp figure of the fever stricken camef driver Truly no pleasant place to dl in more especially if you happen to b young and strong and the death t which you stand condemned be deatk by hunger and thirst A few hour would exhaust the scanty remains ot food and water left in the skin and saddle bag lying hard by the deatf camel and then Harding shook off anticipations erf coming torture to take stock of hit wretched commissariat and rumraaff Ing in the bag found a priceless treas uie nothing less than an untouched bottle of quinine Wnv with this h might hope to revive the Khirgfcc whose case but for the supposed ex haustion of the expeditions medlclnf chest had never been a serious onat Escape was yet possible Escape Escape from a trackless wil derness in which they could only -wander aimlessly to and fro having no sin- gle instrument by which to determine their position or point the way Sav ing his assistants pack the professoi had carried off everything No not everything Even as thli thought sank like a stone Into Hard ings heart his eyes fell upon some- thing glittering at his foot With a shaking hand he grasped it lifted It and broke into a cry of mingled tri umph and thanksgiving which startled the Khirgiz from his lethargy Push ing back his long hair the man mads an effort to sit up The master Where Is the master he asked looking about him in sur prise Harding laughed grimly Heaven alone knows since he has left his compass here And heaven alone knows to this hour the course of the wretched Kirkhof fers wanderings When Harding and the Khirgiz guided by the instrument which he had dropped in his scuffla with the Englishman reached aftei manifold toils and sufferings the con fines of human habitation they could obtain no tidings of their vanished chief And although Harding insisted on organizing a new expedition tc search for him its labors were fruit less His fate remains as unknown to th world as the history of that ancient empire whose records lie buried with him in the sands of Central Asia- Chicago News A m Keen at Diagnosis Some doctors have a most extraor dinary gift of diagnosis remarked a clergyman of New Orleans apropos of nothing in particular A very start ling example of that sort of thing came under my observation a few years age and made an indelible impression o my mind A physician with whom I am on very friendly terms had dropped p at my study and I showed hira a letter I had just received from an ac quaintance hi Chicago touching upon a subject in which we were mutually interested After studying the hand writing closely for a few moments th doctor surprised me greatly by saying That man has locomotor ataxia I couldnt help but laugh Youre greatly mistaken I said hes in vigorous health quite a noted athlete and one of the brightest young business mei Chicago That may be he rep but he has locomotor ataxia all the same and I wouldnt give him over three or four years to live He explain ed in a general way that he based his opinion on certain peculiarities in the penmanship and an apparent difficulty in keeping the writing on the lines of the paper I took no stock in ths prediction and was greatly startled about nine months later to learn that my Chicago friend had suddenly bro ken down and he was regarded as t complete wreck He did have latent locomotor ataxia at the very moment of the conversation in my study and it subsequently developed in Its mosfc appalling form In a years time ht was reduced to a condition of almost complete idiocy and not longafterwar his unhappy life was abruptly termi nated by an accident The doctor sayi mow that there was a good deal ot guesswork about his long distance dt agnosis but I prefer to attribute it tc one of those singular intuitions tba generally have a profoundly scientist seaKSeMf tV1 jar v F JgJIUm