Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 46, Number 19, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 January 1904 — Page 3

Wccklu Courier.

?i hear i a shout and horses I H

. I)UK. I'abllaaer.

of ihe

bllDg ID

1 & INDIANA ' im' . 1 I

Of ." I

a

' y .

Kr?at w

;The Conquest:

of Kit Carew. j f I V ft WirMalci Mriii. . a oe "'

hituse'f ialff b wall . lag at Uft on the side .-.! but lt t aa i peering all over ths a the thick foliage

terribly , who wa t store

rnfr"4. Iba 1 (lodfiey mused than as - father, 'h iMOlglilad no m '.' r to t his hOf In peace

if

bear tn

It h

Ign my life you would rob me have no de.-ire at all to marry f all a maiJ I bav- n- r &et

, thou

f mint

H - 1 thy reUdlious toi Mia pert! To think that a s

gho .! 1 J- fy me thti3!" "Sir." pleaded the younu man hotly, '..! cannot think what it is you would hae me do. The king want eg to Igh1 tor him. and ou would tert BM i. i with a roundheads daughter and bide at homo by 1.-r aide! " Ay, I have it!" stormed the old cavalier bringing his fist down on the billing oak table with a force that act the heavy gtasM rincini;. 'Too yor.i! I to " di but too old to obey. Too young, tor.-ooth. to make such tt mat h a- -l,c.!iM secure to our father and yoorai f after me our lands and fort tuts, howsoever matters go with ki-' cr parliament, but old enough to fp !: i your sisie with dice and wine at the tarerai nf Oxford. I will have 0M Of it. boyi Thinke-st thou I will be (! Bad by nine 0"8 Ron? Promise me Ii-w to r.de with n?" tO-flMMTOW ana ask Ute cirl's land of her father or 111 lash every drop of Kspd out of vour lio.lv." 1 don't car-'" he cried, def.ant. his hands lin hed by his sides, "flog me all yo'i will, but I won t be beaten into marryini: a : rl I Know not even the. nam" of! This was too much for the fiery old cavalier's pa time). Spluttering forth Bill. :-i r. to Ahwdooa and other Scriptural tcMMOp, In seized his son by the collar.

var later Kit Carew found lumed Bp in an attic and seated on of an old ehe.-t of prodirious I, whkh contained some of the Plata and Jewels. It was here

that eld Sir Christopher stored his mo I rataehie possessions, and It Is qui' in Ke dag that he should choose this room a a prison for his son. who was to I made so valuable as the linl. v liich beaad him to what he feared would be the winning party. Ho hurled himself against the door once, twice, thrice. The third time the rusty old bolts, that were not half so strong as they looked. eave way. and Ma.'-! - r Kit fell sprawling into the wastage. Free! He tot up and walked down to his own n in win-re he chanped his rloth-v Mad, taking the few shillings he possessed. l-ft the house and set out on f KM for Oxford.

Ar self . th f ftp at f am : I

Two months later Kit Carew waa riding from London to Oxford. H1 had don fairly well for himself since his flicht from home. He had Qjaf itfliOal a mniission in a regiment of horse, and hal f(jught stoutly on several occasion-, and now had been chosen for the ta.sk of collecting contributions frmn the royalists ia Ixndon to aid the exhausted royal treasury in Oxford. . T' w was tremendously proud of beint: made king's messenger, and. unforrvr.at'dy. overwhelmed with the weiri of bis responsibility. He cartied 1,000 in cold. The r.iulit liefore he left Lonion he had lain n UM hear.-e-like four po. ter In the !avrn r ust chamber, with his

d about h

ii,.e

u.

an old miser. Tbe road between London and Ox

'. i 1 v.-u.-- : rr:arded by the forces of the

aarliazaeftt ilia' Carew meant to ride by way of Vodon, DottntBgtOfi I astle, and 'l: :! north to Oxford throuch a dbv; t held by the king

mc ie a long journey the first day by dusk was within a few miles

agility an ! cl im . 1 over the sill. loa i within and at that Infant vivid flash of li'htninr 11liiniini ' t I u'hriV roorr Tn Ihro Mat, K t had seen a small t-tiff. white hangings, a little white bed, with the curtains partly drawn, a young girl's face peering anxiously for'1.. What tl law was a young man kassilaa in the middle of thr room, a white, scared face, surrounded by Inn?, tangled, dark bair. Ki' bent down until the hand tha h'-id bit sword lasted on the floor. "For God's sake, betray me not:" he said in a whisper, shrill in its intense entreaty. Hide m-. Let me hide myselt here. am pursued by soldi t . 1 b- ar d:.--iit. h and money for the kinr. and 1 must not I dar not fail into the hands of those men: " Poor Kit s azonied appeal and his imploring a'titude would have touched a heart lets sympathetic than that of this p urttaa maldirtii 'S:av there awhile." she ordere!, and discreetly drew täe curtains. There was a short interval. Kit knelt motionless. li.tenins: to the tramping to and fro of tfcs soldiers in the garden, to nioemen'.s in the house downstairs, and to a rustling behind the curtains of the bed. Aft r a moment or two the maiden reappeared, partly dressed and covered in a Ion cray cloa".. She lighted! a cand'.e and drew the urtain.- over the window. "There is only or-- hiding place I an think of." she sa.d. softly ' this lOMt where my dresses hang. See. it runs queer! y back in that corner, sir. I trust they win not aanrca this room, but yon must be StiU, for I fear it is my brother's troop that is seeking you. 1 hear hi.j voice below stairs. Hoah!

Some (tie comes: She .-h i' the c;; !.. ard d'r upon

I do. When once tbia lad our forthar king or par-

bim and mo. d Kit had bare'.; tered cef-po.-s" were heard in tl; chamber dior. A man ' v frtirrins in t: Then the d.or well as Kit ' ool ttred. "What are you

on tiptoe, overed his scatwhen fOotstapa -a--e v th-

i t. as n en-

one,

whom by hi rotee Kr put down as an old n.an. Why are you clad thus, and why Is your cand'.e alight? Methinks darkness is best for the headaehe." "I could no? sle-p because of the storm, father." said the mrl. "I have only Just lighted th candle. I I 0PM about to read awhile to drown my fOoilsh fears." 'Daughter Charity." said the old Puritan, with awful severity, "we are searching for a malignant who hath concealed hlm-elf hereabouts. Hast thou seen or h"ard anything of this man?" ' I heard the soldiers in the garden, father." 'She must have been asleep, sir." sa'd a man's VOtCfc 'Unless the men mistook the room. But old Dun comb, who knowcth the house as well as you do, swear he saw the fellow climbing over the sill of my bsUY1 window." 'Ay. ay. he was a beautiful faced yOSlBg r. probate, and so my lady must ne-ile take romws: n on him. That is the story. I BM ) said the old man. and he gare a bitter chuckle that sent a shiver Of dlsgtUt thTQOgfc the listening Kit "But if h is Indien here we will soon have him out. Search the room. Godfrey !" "While you are w.i.-tinR your time he'e the man is eseapinc. brother!" cried the fcirl In despair. "Bid him go. father, and I will td! you all'" "Nay. he shall stay:" declared the old man. ".a., cirl: he is thy brother and hath a rieht to know of

II

an

of Basiagatoka Ti.e aagaal restot w-as hot and oppresaira, sheet Ughtalag played over the landscape, and the faraway rol of thunder was almost incessant. F r i f w oaaaata he forgot the traasore he carried, until turnins; the corn, r of the lane he came upon a swift moving troop. His h art leaped up to his throat. The oranse tawney carfs :;am d in the dusk parliament Mtdb A .vidden ranic took possession of P't Kit. Be answered the officer's cha nge hy a shot and, wheeling about, galloped blindly away. The roundheads nave chase, and their unim-d horses soon gained upon the n.ilmal that had done a day's journey already. A shot was fired. Kit's hor : f. u straggling, H" ' - himself free and dived into the pisa and bnxun woods that bi .. ! ,t;e side of th ro.c! M it was a Kr piece of cover, small, and In IttM )iaces open. Kit ran. stumbling la the dark, some distane thro iph the Wood und then ram" out into a nie.-, ' .w. j0 eouid r,Par his pursuers iboutlag and crashing through the wood behind him, but there "vas no lgn of them where he stood. Ahead he could Just descry s dark i f buildings, big ho'j.-.r snd a V! beyontl. H ran across the kMadow, the vivid lightning showlnn apU dark overbooted snd accoutered l . :..t Ue sickly Kreen of tns

win i low. ilence f

"Then it was 1 whom they saw en

tering at thf An awful

rible statement. "And whom did you go t i Jiieet madam?" thundere.1 forh the old man Th re vv as no reply.

"Let me cct away from here before

I do her an injury' WooM to 0d she had Barret bee.:: born:" Kit heard a

husky, unsteady voice exclaim, and footsteps moved towards the door. In that moment Kit realized that tberr are things more to be feared than tlea'h the life of one who has failed to act ; im a man. ene who has flinched ignobly at the moment Of trial. The touad of an opening door me father and son paus. Turning round. Ihey saw Ki' standing with his back to the cupboard door, bis face white as a sheet, snd bis eyes shining like two stars. He !Ng his sword from him. and Ii lay quivering st their feet Take ii!" he cried f.ercel. "1 yield.

Bfcl mill eame In st the window, it , was I they ssw. snd she said it to save

me. Charity uttered a cry of despair and leaned sobning asalns the window curtains. "So this is your lover, madam?" began the old Puritan. "Indeed. I am not"' protested Kit, his faea as scarlet as It had been white. "I never saw the girl I never was er much as in this country before. And I to most hesatUi beg her to foifci.e mel"

great sin in gfi yOOgg spark. Let

and tal e our pfiaOBOff b low." sj Km was atrehad off downstairs Into a grea' hall Bled with perl I a nasal soldi-rs. Here he was rtgOfOtsst? sfsreh I. But he had left the money snd dispatches In Mistress Charity's i;.!,anl so that they found nothing upon him but a few crowns and one letter v h.'h he had mi rl.M,.ed tn bis haste. Th. was of BO imiortanee to erh r i :u.- or un i t., but it was to- i.aau- :- hearer. It

proclaim' 1 the fast that Kit had been in the euimy's qiiart -rs rithoul s pass, and. therefore, might be proceeded rgtlfi as a spy. If he had not proved an able MBatagt r he was a faithful one. and his

captors, finding him stubborn, were j the less inclined to mercy. "A contumacious young malignant, i

if ever I saw one:-' said the old man. There is no doubt he is on some errand of mischief, a spy most like, and a clum -v one at that. I ll have him

hange !. Godfrey. Take him away, j men. Lock him up in the cells and set

a guard. I'll see hi in hanged st daylight." i I'pon this Kit was poshed away bytwo troopers and I ed up in a little damp cellar. Now his captors made a strange discovery'. In turning over Kit's letter aasj the parliament captain noticed some thing ritten on the leather limn z. "Christopher Carew." he read out. and showed it to his father. They looked at each other, and tuen bctli burst out la uidi tag "Your future son-in-law. sir, I believe?" said the yonttger man. Why. so it l ' Thi boy who wouldn't be beaten into marrying little Charity. What shall we do with him? We cannot hang him." The captain thought for a minute before answering "Do you dead re this marriage heartily, sir?"

"Ay. boy, Of roursi Charity Is wedded t tunes are sal . vvl.

Uaaaaat win the day if so bv that tba young raau beha e blaaSSif a dutiful son-in-law." "In that case it would be as well to give him some reason to '.hink kindly of us. We must not use force, sir." Then they brewed a plot that had Its efTe. t as follow: Kit had lain on the asM floor and rage-i his heart out for an hour or so for self-pity, and in misery at the Idea that these who had diopatl bOd !. m on this fatal journey. kaOWlag nothing of his fate, would perhaps give him credit lor having absconded with the money. Then he thought of the beautiful

Puritan cirl who had so bravely tried j to save him. and at list fell asleep to

awake presently and find Mistress Charity standin? by his side. "Awake, sir." she said, in a low voice, the sweetest he had ever heard. Kit thought. "I have come to set you free. See. here is the gold an I the letters When I heard they found nothine upon you I knew you must have left them in the caphoaid M father knov.eth naught of these But this is a letter from my father. He bade me tell you that he wishes you no harm. He would fain have entreated you more gently, hut he feared to be suspected by his men of betny inc the interests of the parliament." Kit's face. Indeed his winde oaring, plainly showed his admirati.r. and heartfelt gratitude Blushinc furiously he stammered forth his confuted

boyish thanks to the composed maiden. I who. one year his junior in year, waa j at least ten years his senior in every- I thing else "Come, sir." she said, smilinc a little. "I will shw yu the way out of that hmiu Otltv uo mi tat faLo nra fA !

arouse none of the soldiers " A few moments later Kit fOVBd himself outside In the gardes, kla tl ar.ks cut short by the barrirs r. the little door by which he hr.d Blade his xit. The thunder had passed away. It was dark and raininc hard K- -p d his way to the hich road and ihen set off as fast as his lags would carry him. bent on puttinc as much distance as was pos-ilde between himself and hia late captors before daylight. A few days later ; I S.r Ch: -'ophsf Carew was sittinc sadly over his wine. He had realised by thi time that the son he had alternately jie'te: ar.d bullied was all the world to him. "I was too hasty." thooght the roor old man "The boy has i xd (..-art. If only I could have had patieaei enough to rea- 'n writ Mn.' or perhaps I oiurht to have let hlrti the cirl before I onerrd h m to we.; l.er." These indulgent coci'at.ons were Inter rur ted by Kit himself, who. shamefaced and excited, ftimc kttWNlf down on his ; nees by his father's side and covered his hand with kisses. "Father, forcive m I hav seen Mi re- Charity Warren she :- more l'eaii'iful than than I car. anpfoaa. And she Is brave and Inf nitely kind. I will ri le w ith you ? Pa-.injsto:e tomorrow, or this minute, if lr pleases you. sir If I have vor.r pardog, I have

no other desire than to le her servant."

COAT AMD SKIkT YLhb. Mllitar Model la t'oIS larrrasla lu I-a tor aail I ull afjltla Are lu V . jr Ibj parate waist havicg fallen Somewhat into disfavor, it a a eoagfofl to barn that th epsratr coat is tiff much tne thin. Which is to say thai it is satii y admissibk to waaj a La.: or thrc. -quart r o:it a ..ark matt rial, with any sort cf a dress Shirt, says tat

k RECKLESS SKATER OM THIN ICE.

iur; cou. fat itu

-.!'.- IS. They havt a fit User., ar.d are atraight iront. extendlag about the waist i'iat braid of this kind, the braid

arou: .. ttu top of the cohar in row down the front ar.d arour.d Ail corners are squan- aud ti

wiUs hra:.: c.a

trim the houlucrs. Shcrt coats ara predicted bp the keenest obs rvirs of fashif :. There is nc doubt thst the general trend toward 1 Itylaaj would loeleally bring in thf short Kton with full eleetaj and loose back, but fashion is cot alwavs logical in its processes. ! -ar- a r rv den. cf the IV- r

I viva! bat it dfrs not reany mean much more than that shoulders are made tc i r. ;i and ?: at si.irts arr- full and fow- ; lait The fashior able figure rloet

t O' I . to t

fa.r bare: Spp- i

4 aSsSpSamÖaSaWaa -r - m

USHBaBS ;t3alaBw S rVnr3J

' -F-.-.-rt-c-e Pr

means conform to that ol

bf any

ft

ortraits of that period shows that f WSista were admired and quite s s:?e (;f hi;is was allowed. Skirtt l eery full and very short. r"ah:n2

to the ar-.l.lo. H

ferenc to fashion platee ar.d

do rot

toilette that the pcr.cral cTct of the skirl was Baring aad belb-Hke. At the pr ? nt. although full skirt pre in vogue, fashion demands that the

A FLIMSY PRETEXT. Th I'rmitleat'a Islhaalaa l'ollr Rahl la UM silh Hrpaallraa pil iatloa.

UNIVERSAL WAGE REDUCTION Ta Tn.ii Caailaar t I loarl.h. Bat W rkrr aaS f afrt la w.i Thrl.

fi-'t:re below th- waist he made as liea ter as possible. The natural sprirg of the body, to quote an authority, mast be aaneeaitd, or st least softened, as

mock as possible. To hrirtp about this happy result corsets have been built with long extensions reaching far down over the hips in long pi r.t? which are heM In place by strips of elastic Those that lac- down the front are favorites, they as ! ling the concer ling process in a Mb inner shcrt of mar . lot. Short skir's do belong to the isnn peri id, but they belong to mary eitbers t aide Every fo often women trb'l aitair.st the trained skirt, ard forarst lr.d .hange the short walking skirt pnmf? in. It always goes out. ar.d that wi-hfr. a short time, for fowir.g draperies are too graeeful. becoming and wornaady ever to b" wholly abandoned. The tnathinc sp-!l of enslb'.e skirts for street ar.d informal wear is In at Dfi ?- er.t and women are making the most of it.

STALL FOR LADY CONSTANCE. Trial Hnnehmaa Tln.tiuht he II a ajavawe and MOTS' Tblnss Kluhl f..r llrr.

The announcement that Laiy Coniane Mackenzie would arrive here on

a certa.n date lea to an amusing mis

take, says an Alice (Tex i report

leiegram inf rming K.J. Kleberg, of Santa trertrudas ran h. of Lady Constat, -e's propo.-ed arrival came from a north Texas ranchman, where ahe had L ta rtsttlaf Mr lUsaefg was absent, an 1 the boss of his ramh received ths telegram. The ranch boss is not up on titles cf

If the president is cot decidedly shaky in Justifying his Panama record to tba j conscience of hU people, then our r adtl g of this second message is hopelessly a:

faul'. sas the Springfield (Mass t Re- , publican. His radical shifting of ground and his promiscuous clutch at the remark of an anonymous Panama native repotted in the press, reveal a disturbed statt of m.r.c. 1-1 .or. or rri.-iL-I terpretatlon of facts is notable. His assertion that the orders to the naval officers, prior to the revolution, to prevent the lancing of Colombian troops "withj In 50 miles of Panama." were in line with the government's traditional policy Is , ridiculous He fails to show any precedents fcr the naval orders he gave prior to his own administration for , there are tone The orders e.f IPOS, which sre cited, are not parallel and. moreover, they were stror civ pro' erred , by the Colombian government-a fact that Is not mentioned The president I still ignores.. as If It were death Itself. i the tftaj point that he had to right, nni dr the treaty of 1846. to prevent Co'cm- ' bia from makine an effort to maintain ker sovereignty in her own territory:

and that bis action, taken as it wss before the local uprlsite. was an enontonsly destructive act ef wsr upon a sovereign and friendly nation Mr. Roosevelt builds up his case upon the unwarrantable assumption that there

Th ! was but one possible canal route, and

that route the Panama He even tells congress In so many words that there Is now "noalternative" to Panama which Is astonishing in view of the plain terms of the Spooner set and that "the or!y question" Involved In the present rats? treaty "is whether or not we shsll build sn Isthmian csnsl " If cnr.rreFs had

nobility, snd he thought that Lsdy kltherto taken the president's view tt

C:.sance must be a fine blood d mare that Mr K! bt rg was sending to the ranch. He telephoned to J. B. Kagland, the livery stable man at Alice, wbostWen.s to such business for the ranch, th it "Lady Maci.enzie" would arrive oa Friday Bight's train, and thf4 as she va a high-bred animal and very valuthis he w ould be expected to tak- special care of h r Ttil she could be forwarded to the ranch. Mr. Rpglar.d put a fine stall in ta best condition at the stable and notified Mr And- r.-on. the railroad agent, to have the ear switched at a certain place, as he w as anxious to get her out of the. ear as soon as possible after the arrival Of the train. Meant m? Frank Avers, of the Messer C Waiora hotel, received s te lepram saying that Lady Constance Mackenzie would arrive on that r.iphfp train ar.d

that she wat ted acc laajBOdatloeJ st the mtTl m hotel. A little before train time Mr. ! ,ft.M

Raclar.d and Mr Avers met at the station and both learned tba' they were there for the purporc of n. ire ar. xp cted arrival named Lady CoavatngeS Thre was no horse on the train, and Mr. Kaglar.d admitted that the rate boss mu-t have n.ad.- a n 1 ' ii

would never have legislated to thetff

that there was an alternative route. What we fee la an overriding of congress by the executive, who has recklessly tsken the bit Into his tee'h and proposes to drat the national leelsiatnre after him. Throughout all his messages, papers and diplomatic correspond' : the past year csn fee aaei the plain determina'i'T. to sie the Panama Is'r-

bia should not at once bend to onr will As the c?s!res 0f the Tnited States ts- ! creased. In the presid'nt's mind, the : rlchts of Co'ombis deeread. All attempt s at moral or le cal Justification of this episode sre Ineffectnsl. We I nd aajfl to Veep in mird theessenMsl

fscts to detect the fallacy and the humbug and the speiliation of the hour.

There are two reasons g;ven for the protective tariff by the repubiicaaa. oaa tha. it protects the enasafactsrers from foreign competition aad the other that it raises tke price for labor. As about aü the manufacturers have bees orgaLiid into trusts or combines and very industry has long if. -Lrcwn V. twaddling clothes and tone of tkeac cat any longer be csJled infant industries, ths first re-ast-a for s protective tanff fails to the grout d The rapid decrease ia wages now going on. the avsserosa strikes aad the continued high cost of living would seem to demolish The other reason But the protectionists are still sa ing iet well enough alone. although their voices are much !es strldeat than when Hanta isstaed ttstrwctiooa to "statd pat." There has been to low:Ice of the tariff tas. the Dingle htll to

still supposed to "sdequsteiy American laatavstrlnl prod acts the competition of fore ire istx the old machine shows signs and rasps and gmass when tl cogs teed oIMe Wher protectioi est there seems to he the most 1 as in the iron and essal it iaetil Tr e latest to show signs of dan tlon la the lumber aad logging t In which wages have declined i pr cent. A dispatch from Ost Mich . to the Boston Transcrtp

Tearlnr fha past few weeks rhre ras been s tab chance he the labor tflnatlon ia loggiag circles Is northern Michigan, the optica of the season men were so scarce that lussberfts concerns could only get s small aortloa eaf the help needed High wares wer no Ir.iucrn-'rT Now. however more men sre emptying for work than can be ecployed snd wages h a vy dropped from tW ar.fi S"" r- - "- 1 ' I?" and f?C gome employers are salft -, s BBjeagfag rreet hinds for as Tew as 1. T-r rr-- v " Th wood atd lweaber srhedcleof the TT!rrVy hill Is stfTl protecting tfae lam her trret? snd coarits. atd srowitar .VCTr ....... -v.. . .... e- ' It r - r- !a . v . w . . . . . . not partakltg of the prosperity. COMMENTS OF TH PRESS

i-tr

- sa

-

; .j . a

a

Louis Kepu -The voice ol

I Inn.-ry. MI'S Pech Is I have already natd "no " to you. Mr Vere I ion stem to be ab'e to make myself plain, although I have tried prcy Vere Ah you co-ildn't do that no matter how yo-i try. Miss Peehla. "Well -er--f anotps, I shall always be clad to have poo call upon me. Mr. Vara I'hr.adt;. 10 Prt

lM Mr I ln. k. rrnlr tjlr. Cut a tender, well-grown duck down the back, prick the desh all over and r ib th." fowl with a mixture ol Krem h mustard, lemon Juice, white pepper, salt, cayenne and a little powdered mace. Lay on a broiling iron over a clear fire for half an hour, bi' vvi'h mclte.l huver and t :rn -:a-t.l done on both sides. Take up on s h ated dish, pour orrr a cup of mushroom sauce and pari sh w:th want reM Serve with pepper mangoes Good Hotasakeapfag.

c;an

Holt nrulir. air ttrushes arc a s en eif ths

neat woman. Ilesldes the reguisr washing in an nion'.t or borax water, keep l.sir ettathei lean by 'ipieg oil the bristle each time the brushes are used, wi h tie - le pap:r I-ac ing that r. v,a;er is ten b.u Uranae Nil Ksru -r

ubliean abuse of Staor Gor!o him good. It is sn an-

nounecment t- democrats that repub-

; licans recognize his ability as s leader , snd mean to do what they ran to weaken his influence The democratic party j will not push him aside because of anything republicans say of him Savannah (Ga Newa

What are Porto Kleins' It hts fnaf been decided that they sre tot aliens, hut It is by no mar yet conceded that they sre American citirens At present, therefore, they ire neither fish, flesh nor good red herrinr. and they will doubtlesa feel relieved when the supreme court give them some political Status Indlanapo'ls Jonmal cRp l It looks as If the Rooseve t casapairn 'keine ; rs -tally cotdue u 3 N Y World It hsving Net decicjd hy therepublican administration that the "progress of civilization ss It is expounded In foreign commerce snd American investments in Santo Domingo" will not permit the continued activity of the revolutionary party In that country, we shall probably hear In a abcrt time that another expansion of the Americsn government ha taken place and that another independent people has been wiped off the nap na s aation ladtaxapoiis SeaUnei.

York, is still for Preidnt RoosestiL The senator' lang sower, however .i rather on the decliae. Ciacfnts' anoatrer. In the approaching straggle the Democratic party caaaot give better proof of its Ctaess to govern the conn try or offer surer hostage to pthUcopia ion and fortune, than by stertly d a inaung from its ccasaseravtioa the trivial aad meretricJona Loratsrilis Corsrisr Journal. The subpoena wrieri foamd Perry Hsth a: last, or ra:hr. Perry Heath found them And now the former first assistant postmaster genera: ate preset: conductor of the Hanns boom foe the presidential nomination will prompti start for the east to tell what ha know a of the alleged mach: cation of Machen Ithaca V M Observer Mr. Piatt says the sires -ed:"ihn retarn of the deaaocra-. ; ar-y ton sane and dancer on condition-" la other words, he sees trowhaaua umes aheisd fotf the g o p B.tghsactoc X Y Leader. We des t watt Sau Domingo. Our experience ia getting something like tiagaaojppf worth of trouble foe tM.OOOjaai when we acquired the Philippines should have taaght a lasting lesaoa. hart apparently it has nan. The only thing the country can do. seemingIt. Is to wonder where the aanenafJon

rm will break t sex:

complication It wtll

is -Ho as: on. (Teg i Pos.