h Mi 1 J l H E r t t i Jii iv l 4 A J i ni i i i 7 11 VJ v t T M V A y tGGQQiQ 3Sj333SSi3 H6e Bondmaiii By HALL CAINE - CHAPTER VIL Continued What happened tnereafter he never rightly knew only that in a distem pered dream he was standing with oth ers outside the rails about Govern ment House while the snow began to fall through the darkness that he saw the dancers circling across the lighted windows and heard the music of the flutes and violins above the steady chime of the sea that he knew this merry making to be a festival of her marriage whom he loved with a love beyond that of his immortal soul that the shame of his condition pained him and the pain of it maddened him the madness of it swept away his con sciousness and that when he came to himself he had forced his way into the house thinking to meet his enemy face to face and was in a room alone with Greeba who was cowering before him with a white face of dismay Jason she was saying why are you herer Why are you here he asked Why have you followed me she cried Why have you followed him What have you come for Is this what you have come for Jason she cried again I wronged you that is true but you forgave me I asked you to choose for me and if you had said stay I should have stayed But you released me you Continued Story 4Kj33 know you did You gave me up to him and now he is my husband But this man is Michael Sunlocks7 said Jason Didnt you know that before said Greeba Ah then I know what you have come for You have recalled your forgiveness and have come to punish me for deserting you But spare me Oh spare me Not for my own sake but his for I am his wife now and he loves me very dearly No no not that but only spare me Ja son she cried arid crouched at his feet I would not harm a hair of your head Greeba he said Then what have you come for she said This man is a son of Stephen Or ry he said Then it is for him she cried and leaped to her fest Ah now I understand I have not forgotten the night in Does he know of that said Jason No Dees he know I am here No Does he know we have met No Let me see him But why she stammered Why see him It is I who have wronged you Thats why I want to see him said Jason She uttered a cry of terror and stag gered back There was an ominous si lence in which it passed through Greebes mind that all that was hap pening then had happened before She could hear Jasons labored breathing and the dull thud of the music through the walls Jason she cried What harm has he ever done you I alone am guilty before you If your vengeance must fall on anyone let it fall on me Where is he said Jason He is gone said Greeba Gone Yes to find my poor father The dear old man was wrecked in coming here and my husband sent men to find him but they blundered and came back empty handed and not a half an hour ago he went off himself Was he riding said Jason but without waiting for an answer he made towards the door Wait Where are you going cried Greeba Swift as lightning the thought had flashed through her mind What if he should follow him Now the dqor to the room was a heavy double hung door of antique build and at the next instant she had leaped to it and shot the heavy wooden barr that bolted it At that he laid one powerful hand on the bar itself and wrenched it out ward across the leverage of its iron loops and it cracked and broke and fell to the ground in splinters Then the strong excitement lent the brave girl strength and her fear for her husband gave her courage and crying Stop for heavens sake stop she put her back to the door tore up the sleeve of her dress and thrust her bare right arm through the loops where the bar had been Now she cried you must break my arm after it God forbid said Jason and he fell back for a moment at that sight But recovering himself he said Greeba I would not touch your beautiful arm to hurt it no not for all tne wealth of the world But I must go so let me pass Still her terror was centered on the thought of Jasons vengeance Jason she cried he is my hus band Only think my husband Let me pass said Jason Jason she cried again my hus band is everything to me and I am all in all to him Let me pass said Jason You intet d to follow him You are seeking him to kill him Let me pass Deny it Let me pass Never she cried Kill me if you will but until you have done so you shall not pass this door Kill me Not for my souls salvation said Jason Then give up your wicked purpose Give it up give it up Only when he shall have given up his life Then I warn you I will show you no pity for you have shown none to me At that she screamed for help and presently the faint music ceased and there was a noise of hurrying feet Jason stood a moment listening then he looked towards the window and saw that it was of one frame and had no sash that opened At the next in stant he had doubled his arms across his face and dasned through glass and Dars A minute afterwards the room was full of men and women and Jason was brought back into it pale sprinkled with snow and blood stained I charge that man whh threatening the life of my husband Greeba cried Then it seemed as if twenty strong hands laid hold of Jason at once But no force was needed for he stood quiet and silent and looked like a man who had walked in his sleep and been sud denly awakened by the sound of Gree bas voice One g ance he gave her of great suffering and proud defiance and then guarded on either hand passed out of the place like a captured lion CHAPTER IX THE PEACE OATH There was short shrift for Red Ja son He was tried by the court near est the spot and that was the criminal court over which the Bishop in his civil capacity presided with nine of his neighbors on the bench beside him From this court an appeal was pos sible to the Court of the Quarter and again from the Quaiter Court to th High Court of Akhng but appeal in this case there was none for there was no denfence And because Icelandic law did not allow of the imprisonment of a criminal unil after he had been sentenced an inquest was caned forth with lest Jason should escape or com pass the crime he had attempted So the Court of Inquiry sat the same night in the wooden shed that served both for Senate and House of Justice The snow was now falling heavily and the hour was late but the court house was thronged It was a little place a plain box bare featureless and chill with walls roof and seats of wood and floor of hard earth Four short benches were ra sed st p above step against the farth st side and on the highest of these the Bishop sat with three of his colleagues on each of the three rows beneath him The prisoner stocd on a broad stool to the right and the witnesses on a like stool to the left A wooden bar crossed the room about midway and in the open space between that and the door the spectators were crowded together The pace was lighted by candies and some were fixed to the wals others weie held by ushers on the end of long sticks and a few were hung to the roof rafters by hemp ropes tied about their middle The floor ran like a stream and the atmosphere was full of the vapor of the snow that was melting on the peoples clothes Noth ing could be ruder than the court house but the Court that sat there ob served a rule of procedure that was al most an idolatry of form The prisoner was called by the name of Jason son of Stephen Orry and having answered in a voice so hollow that it seemed to come out of the earth beneath him he rose to his place His attitude was dul and impassive and he seemed hardly to see the rest less crowd that murmured at sight of him His tall figure stooped there was a cloud on his strong brow and a slow fire in his bloodshot eyes and his red hair long as a womans hung in dis ordered masses down his worn cheeks to his shoulders The Bshop a vener able prelate of great age looked at him and thought That mans heart is dead within him The spokesman of the court was a middle aged man who was short had little piercing eyes a square brush of iron gray hair that stood erect across the top of his corded forehead and a crisp clear utterance like the crackle of a horses hoofs on the frost Jason was charged with an attempt to take the life of Michael Sunlocks first President of the second Republic tie did not plead and had no defence and the witnesses against him spoke only in answer to the leading ques tions of the judges The first of the Witnesses was Greeba herself and her evidence given in English was required to be inter preted All her brave strength was now gone She trembled visibly Her eyes were down her head was bent her face was half hidden by the hood of a cloak she wore and her tones were merely audible She had little to say The prisoner had forced his way into Government House and there to her own face had threatened to take the life of her husband In plain words he had done so and then made show of going in pursuit of her hus band that he might carry out his de sign Wait said the Bishop your hus band was not present No said Greeba There was therefore no direct lence None And the whole sum of the prison ers offense so far as you know of it lies in the use of the words that you have repeated Yes Then turning to the spokesman of the Court the old Bishop said There has been no overt act This is not an attempt but a threat to take life And this is not a crime by the law of this or any other Christian country Your pardon my lord said the little man in his crisp tones I will show that the prisoner is guilty of the essential part of murder itself Mur der my lord he added is not merely to compass the destruction of a life ii mens is uuiuiuiue uy i ture there is jus ifiable homicide and 1 there are the rights long recognized Dy Icelandic law of the avengers of blood Murder is to kill in secrecy and after long harbored malice and now my lord I shall show that the prisoner has lain in wait to slay the President of the Republic At that Greeba stood down and other witnesses followed her Nearly everyone had been summoned with whom Jason had exchanged words since he landed eight days before There was the lean student who had told him of the drill at the Latin school the little tailor who had ex plained the work at the jail the stut tering doorkeeper at the senate house and one of the masons at the fort Much was made of the fainting in the Cathedral yard on the Sunday morn ing and out of the deaf landlady the Cathedral caretaker some startling disclosures seemed to De drawn Still said the old Bishop I see no overt act Good gracious my lord said the little spokesman are we to wait un til the knife has been reddened God forbid said the old Bishop Then came two witnesses to prove motive The first of them was the tipsy comrade of former days who had drawn Jason into the drinking shop He could say of his own knowl edge that Jason was jealous of the new Governor The two were brothers in a sort of way So people said and so Jason had told him They had the same father but different mothers Ja sons mother had been the daughter of the old Governor who turned his back on her at her marr age At her death he relented and tried to find Jason but could not and then took up with Michael Sunoeks People said that was the beginning of the new Presi dents fortune At al eveats Jason thought he had baen supplanted was very wroth and swore he would be re vet ged The second cf the two witnesses pointed to a very diffe ent mot ve He was one of the thr e Danes who -had twice speken to Jason the ederly man with the meek and quiet manner Though himsef loyal to the Iclndic Republic he Ird ben much thrown among its enemies Jason was one of them he came hers as a spy direct from Copenh gen and his constant nssociatP3 were Thomsen an old white he ded man 1 ving in the High street and Polveen a yorng ad sal ow mm who keot one of the stores facing the sei Wi h these two Jason had been heard by hin to plan the assassination of the Prsd nt To be Continued STEEL WOOL IN ARTS Takes Place or Sandpaper in AU Cabinet IVorlr Although steel wool has only ben used as a substitute for sandpaper dur ing the last six years it is now very extensively used for polishing purpos es by metal workers carpenters cabi net makers house painters sign paint ers and grainers throughout the United States said a wholesale dealer in tne material to the writer recently Steel wool is an article of regular manufac ture and it is put up in one pound pack ages very much resembling rolls or cotton batting It is composed of sharp edged threads of steel which curl up like wool or the familiar wjod fiber known as excelsior but it is much finer in texture than the latter mate rial the finest quality being not much coarser than the coarsest of natural wools The superiority of steel wool over the ordinary sandpaper consists in its great pliability which enab es a worker to polish or smooth down ir regular parts of moldings or ornamen tal woodwork Such work can be done with steel wool far better and much more expeditiously than with sand paper The latter clogs in use but steel wool always retains a more pr- feet polishing edge or surface The wool is made in various degrees of coarseness the coarser grade being best adapted for taking off old paint or varnish and for smoothing and clean ing floors like those of bowling alleys The wool is generally used with gloves to keep the sharp ends from sticking into the workmans fingers Wash ington Star Industrial Development Brings Evils The annual day of humiliation and prayer was recently observed in Prus sia according tolong established cus tom and a great many of the Berlin newspapers took occasion to print ar ticles upon the recent deterioration in Dublic morality They asserted that the rapid industrial development of the country and its corresponding im provement in its financial condition had resulted in an alarming growth of social evils and abuses Blaklnff Bank Note Paper The paper upon which bank notes and bonds are printed is all made at Dalton Mass and its manufacture is one of the greatest secrets connected with the government system of money making Each sheet is as carefully watched from the time it first assumes shape until deposited in the vaults ol the treasury department at Washing ton as though it were gold Golden Hours Railroad to Tap Siberia German capitalists have planned the construction of a railroad through the Samoyede peninsula with the object of bringing the wheat of western Siberia quickly and economically into the world market The wheat wil be ship ped by the Ob and its navigable tribu taries to Obdorsk then by rail to the seacoast and thence by vessel to Lon don or other ports Bunkfoj Would Ee enlist Charles H Acord 41 years old and John J Lynch aged 45 have filed pa pers in Indianapolis for re enlistment in the regular army They enlisted to gether in 1882 were bunkies for 18 years shared the perils of 11 battles and engagements at home and abroad and now wish to re enter the service together Captain Edward C Raymond who had an extensive acquaintance in Grand Army circles expired suddenly of heart disease while reading a paper at Galesburg 111 During the civil war he was captain of Company A Twenty fourth niinois infantry The dispatch adds that acording to reliable information the Boer do not intond at presnt to take diplomatic steps but will continue 1n South Afri ca is strong enough o make the diplo matic stops successful Time is money with -the abscond ing bank official J HKXHKKH Commoner Comment Extracts From W J Bryans Paper H4MHWHIKJ Queen Victoria Englands queen has closed her long and eventful career and her death has brought sincere sorrow to her subjects Her administration was popular be cause her personal virtues were worthy of admiration and for the further rea son that she allowed her people those who have parliaments to have their cwn way in matters of legislation Her birth her education her environment and her own interests all led her to support the monarchical principle of government but measured by any title that can be applied to a throne her reign will compare favorably wih any previous reign in English history or with the reign of any contempor aneous sovereign Her influence tend I ed toward peace and there is every t reason to believe that war was always a source of real regret to her Her age her high character and her womanliness combined to make her name revered among her own people and respected abroad Lacking for the most part the qualities of head rul heart which make kings odious she has done much to lessen the oppo sition of arbitrary power which sixty years ago menaced European rulers Whether her successor will profit by her oxample or develop less popular traits remains to be seen If Edward VII proves that he has a just claim to the confidence bestowed upon her she as his mother as well as his prede cessor will derive credit from his good deeds if on the other hand he fails in the difficult task of filling her place satisfactorily her reign will grow the brighter by contrast rt is a high yet a deserved tribute to her to say that no one exercising roval prerogatives could have done better and that the world at large has cause ic mourn her demise Two Dozen Pockets The New York World is burdened with thfi oncG noDular notion that Am- i erican legislation should be framed to I mnmn Vl Q TI OBfoof ffinr OI LllO JI1U111UIC UiiV ivujw o greatest number and never to benefit the few at the expense of the manj Having analyzed Mr Hannas ship subsidy bill for the purpose of deter mining how many pockets are to be benefited by it the World is shocked by its discoveries and declares that the bare fact ought to make and sena tor even Mr Hanna blush to vote for it The World has discovered that Df the whole list of ships that are en titled to the highest subsidy rate fixed by the bill nine tenths are owned by just four companies to wit the In ternational Navigation company the New York and Cuba Mail company the Pacific Mail Steamship company and the American Mail Steamship company Nine tenths of the smaller subsidy rates that would be paid on foreign built steamers would also go to four concerns only and these four are really only two operating under different names namely the Standard r OiJ Trust and the Pennsylvania Rail road Under the clauses which pro vide bounties for ships now building for foriegn trade in American ship yards and half bounties for ships building abroad for American owners it appears further that less than a dozen ship owners and only four ship builders would be beneficiaries This then is what the ship subsidy bill would do summed in a sentence It would take from the pockets of 76000000 people 9000000 a year to put it into the pockets of less than two dozen private business concerns all told Trial by Jury Denied The president in his instructions to the Philippine commissioners is care ful to exclude trial by jury from the blessing conferred upon the nations oriental subjects The omission is the more noticeable because the sixth amendment to the constitution is quoted entire with the exception of the clause guaranteeing trial by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed which district shall have been previously ascertained by law One by one the safe guards of the constitution are being abandoned one by one the doctrines of imperialism are being adopted There is not a vital principle of government heretofore considered sacred which must not ultimately be abandoned if this nation continues to tax subjects without rep resentation and govern them without the consent of the governed Victorias long reign was marked by advancement in many direction4 but it closed while on of the most un just wars in history was being waged Victoria was opposed to it from the start and its awful horrors caused her great grief and possibly hastened her death Edward VII who declares that he reveres the memory of his mother and would carry out her wishes should use his endeavors to end that unjust war and do justice to a brave people whose only offense is cherishing a love for liberty In this way he could earn the gratitude of all people who believe in free govern ment It seems that some of the republi cans still shy at the gold standard when it comes around a corner sud denly Just now the proposition to re deem the silver dollars is making them nervous According to Duns report the busi ness failures for the week ending Jan uary 19 of this year amounted to 325 as against 242 for the corresponding week in 1900 and 249 for the same week in 1899 If wc had a democratic administration this increase in the failures would look bad but under a republican administration it Is regard ed as simply the weeding out of weak firms The transport California brought back from the Philippines seventy four mute protests against a war of con quest Lese Majeste In the early days of Rome there was a law specifying the crimes of Lese Majestc The punishment was death Augustus was the first to extend the list cf offenses that were and under his successors fur ther extensions were made If the relative of a subject was executed the subject must exhibit delight else he would be held accountable under this law One suspected of a sentiment not in harmony with the throne must be particular as to the expression of his eye even a sigh might be the undoing of a compassionate person Recently we have heard of Lese Majeste in the United States of Am erica Men who have dared criticise a republican administration have been subjected to suspicion under this Jaw Men who have protested against a policy of imperialism who have objected to a violation of the constitution who have insisted that the chief magistrate does not repre sent the legislative and the judicial as well as the executive branch of the government men who have refused to applaud every act of administration agents have been branded as traitors by the administration press and pointed out as disloyal by the admin istration orators Fortunately however the adminis tration press and the administration orators have not framed the law of treason in this republic The consti tution framed by the men who found ed the republic provides that treason shall consist only in levying war against the United States or in ad hering to their enemies giving them aid and comfort It m as much the duty of a good citi zen to protest when his country is about to engage upon a policy of wrong as it is for him to take up arms in de fending his country from an army of invasion Edmund Burke Pitt and other Eng lishmen of their time were regarded in the light of traitors by some and yet today no names occupy higher places in the worlds history than the names of those Englishmen who dared protest against wrong and speak in behalf of truth when the American colonists were struggling for the prin ciples of government by the consent of the governed No man protested more bitterly against the war with Mexico than Thomas Corwin and even Abraham Lincoln repeatedly added his protest against that war and yet the names of Corwin and Lincoln are among the il lustrious of Americas dead The difference between a monarchy and a republic is that in a monarchy the people must acquiese in the mon archs will but in a republic the pub lic officers are supposed to acquiese in the peoples will The Icing can do no wrong so long as he does exactly as he pleases The public officer in a republic can do no wrong so long as he adheres to the constitution and the law When he violates that con stitution and when trangresses that law he is in error and it is just as much the peoples duty to criticise him then as it is their duty to commend him when he sustains the constitution and upholds the law Men who insist that this nation in its dealings with its new dependencies shall be governed by the same prin ciples which the founders of this gov ernment claimed for themselves men who insist that the Declaration of In dependence was written for all time and provides a rule by which all men should be guided men who insist that the prohibitions in the constitution must prohibit that the limitations in the constitution must limit and that public officers and public bodies whose existence depends upon that consti tution cannot ignore it and assume au thority and power not given by it men who insist that this government is too great and too strong to enter upon an era of oppression to the weak and the helpless men who insist that honesty is the best policy for nations as well as individuals men who in sist that liberty was designed for the brown man as well as for the white man and the black man these men are not made of the stuff of which traitors are constructed No government has anything to fear from citizens who adhere to the prin ciples upon which the government was founded and through which it ha3 prospered No nation has anything to fear from citizens who insist that the nation must be true to its own tradi tions and faithful to its own profes sions No nation has anything to fear from citizens who are willing to go down to political defeat in defense of what they believe to be tne truth No nation has anything to fear from citi zens who can bring to the support of their cause the Declaration of Indepen dence the constitution of the United States and the declarations of every great American in every great politi cal party from the period of Washing ton to the present day It is a pleasant duty to correct a mis take made in the first number It was stated that The Commoner entered the field with an issue of thirty thousand After the plates were made the addi tional subscriptions and news stand orders were sufficient to justify an is sue of fifty thousand Since then twenty five thousand more have been printed making a total of seventy five thousand copies of number one vol ume one The parcels post has been Indefinite ly delayed Senator Platte is presi dent of an express company with this as a basis it is not difficult to reason from cause to effect If some genius will invent a green back with an interest coupon attached it is believed that Mr Secretary Gage will soon be able to look it in the face without growing faint When the gas was turned on the Delaware senatorial contest Mr Ad dicks was discovered near the foot lights TO PA OLDM BILLS House Fosses the Measure for Eeimburse ment of Southerners CLAIMS THAT AGGREGATE 344480 Most of Them for Stores and Supplies Taken by the Union Army Darlnif tbe Rebellion Opposition Overcome Other Washington Mutters WASHINGTON Feb 2The house today passed an omnibus bill carrying clianis for stores and supplies taken by tbe union army during the rebel lion Tho claims were passed on by the court of claims and aggregated 344480 Practically all tho benefic iaries reside in the south Considerate opposition to the bill was displayed in the day under the leadership of Mr Cannon the chairman of the ap propriation committee but it flattened out later and the bill finally was passed without division Mr Southard of Ohio chairman of the committee on coinage weights and measures asked unanimous consent to consider a bill to establish a national standardizing bureau which should have custody of the standards and furnish information to any education al institution firm corporation or individual in the United States After some discusion it was agreed that the bills should be made a con tinuing order after the disposal of the bill to promote the efficiency of the revenue cutter service The senate bill to appropriate 50000 for the pur chase or construction of a revenue cutter for Boton harbor was passed A bill to regulate the coming of Chinese persons into the country cre ated some discussion Mr Hitt chair man of the committee on foreign af fairs said the bill had been prepared by the attorney geneial to prevent the fraudulent entry of Chinese laborers by giving tho government as well as tbe Chinamen the rght to appeal from the decision of the United Spates commissioner Mr Hitt said that he himself did not believe the Chinese exclusion act was a just law because it was passen in violation of treates but the law was on the statute books and it was the duty of every citizen to uphold it The bill was passed This being private bill day Mr Ma hon of Pennsylvania chairman of the committee on war claims caled up the unfinished business which was a bill for the relief of St Johns lodge of Masons of Newbern N O The bill appropriates 6000 for the use of the Masonic lodge by union troops during the rebellion After some opposition it was passed The house then took up the omnibus bill for the payment of claims aggre gating 344400 certified to be due by the court of cluims under the provi sions of the Bowman act The caims wer for stores and supplies taken for the use of the federal army during the rebellion The beneficiaries wore all residents of the south After sev eral liours consumed by oppenents of the bill it was passed without divi sion Bills were passed to constitute a new division of the eastern district of Texas providing for alotments of lands in severalty to Indians of the La Pointe or Bad river reservation in Washington and to authorize the Mississippi Choctaw3 to bring suit in the cciirt of claims against the Choc taw naion to determine their rights under the treaty of 1830 KANSAS DHUGOIST REP0RWS PoMIcly Announce That He Will Destroy Bis Stock of IIqnors HIAWATHA Kan Feb 2 -E J Eicholtz a lecal druggist today made puMic his determination to destroy all the liquor in his store This aft ernoon he emptied a barrel of whisky into the sewer and announced that on Saturday he will publicly destroy the remainder of his supply or liquors including several barrels of wines and whisky The affair will be made one of re joicing the local ministers and the public having been invited to attend Tho druggist has concluded that to sell liquor for any purpose is wrong KILLS TITUS AMENDMENT Iowa S prcmn Court Affirms the Decision of the IiOiver Tribunal DCS MOINES la Feb 2 The su preme court announced this morning that the decision of the lower court in the Titus biennial election amend ment was affirmed This knocks out the amendment to the constitution and results in a state election being held this fall in Iowa Famed the Century 3Xark CLINTON la Feb 4 Martin Duffy of Wilton township is danger ously ill Mr Duffy is the second oldest persou in Clinton county hav ing pasred his one hundred year mark last NovenJ er He came to Clinton county in 1852 Snow All Over Kansas TOPEKA Kan Feb 2 Dispatches from all over Kansas indicate that tonights snow storm is general and heavy The value of the snow to tho wintr wheat crop is great and it prac tically assures a good orop Croker Pays Income Tax LONDON Feb 1 New York World Cablegram Richard Croker arrived at Wantage Wednesday and drove in a covered carriage to the Moat house Letcomb He returned to London yesterday He has paid his income tax assessment abandoning his appeal in the face of the inquis itorial character of the interrogatories addressed to him by the assessment committee false answers to which would render him liable to a heavy fine