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Show n rnu MOUSING EXAMINER OGIJLN, UTAH, MONDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1903. or oxidised ores. They are curving, irregular, and often, lenticular, but It may happen that below a ahuot which has coins to an end another shoot may be found occupying a slightly different relative position, or even overlapping the fiiwt. Similarly, the main quarts masses as a whole eaa he expected to shew little regularity in depth; they may increase In size, or diminish, and even disappear at least temporarily. of sulphide the day when the gale raged most fiercely the Prinzesa litie made ouly On GALE BESET, OVERDUE knot, wlieivx tor usual run 127 GOLD FIELD DISTRICT la about 3 Ml kuuu. On the following day ouly 197 kuois were taade. 141 ths next day, and not uniil af er leaving Halifax ai nuon Satuniay waa anything like the vessel's m-on-t ma!e. CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS NEVERTHELESS. bei-So severely had tin- shaken up that about thirty of thru left tfie ship when she reached Halifax, thus being enabled to reach home mure quickly than by coming to New York by aew. but by that time most of lat Several Passengers on The North German Lloyd Liner Badly Hurt When Tremendous Seas Swept Away the Forward phy-elaia- thsm-st-Dt- bulkier of this city, bad hi right thumb Bo severely cpraiued that he was able to live it only yesterday fur tiie tret Ume In a week. Oilier of the 124 first cabin passengers who panned through the ordeal of the storms were the Right Rev. John H. Delaney, recently elevated to the Bishopric of Manchester, N. M.: 1roi-esaAngela del Nero, a well koowa sculptor; the Rev. C. A. Jessup, of Montauk, 1. I., Mrs. Charles S. Jee, wife of tl general passenger agent of the Lehigh Valley Kai.ruad; the Haron-ea- o Meyer de Sibauenvre, wife uf a empta.a uf the Papal Guard; the Rev. lonia M. Miller, minister provincial of the Pranciaeea order in America; Mbs Pyle, a daughter of Howard Pyle, a well known illustrator; Miss Edith Wools), daughter of former President Waobey. of Yale, and Dr. A. H. Sehin.ler, professor ef the theory and practice of modlclne iu the Homoeopathic Mrdical Co luge, uf Clevsland. BRAYED STORM FROM THE DW'K. Compared wttk tiie terror InspireJ In the heart of the steerage paste tigers those In the firat cabin bravely withstood the strum of the storm. Bernal of the mere Mout hearted uf the men. end even a few of the women. insisted ua remaining on deck, except, through the very height of the gale, and described the arena aa of extreme beauty, though terrifying. Though again and again if seemed to the pa.ngers that the ship must be engulfed, the gale blew from an almost cloudless sky. frum which the uioun shone down br.illantly. Even the officers admitted yevlenlay, when there was no longer need to the pamengern, that fur two days the sit nation was critical. When the veiililatom were broken off by the wee and washed away water by the tun poured through the holes left in the forward deck, and awept in a eolld body towarj where the steerage pass-ugcwere huddled. U did not lake long lo done the Inlcta for these river, but day after day, as the ship became more and nuvra overdue, no safe course wae left open to Captain Daunritiauu except lo make for Halifax. 1 think I might have reached New York with what ma waa loft," ,e said yesterday, "but 1 did mg. dare take the risk. It waa only about two huudred miles out of our course to make Halifax, and tinder the rfti'umvtaucaa that waa the only win course lo purue." ur I ra ment Expert underaigneil, first itbln passengera on tie- - Prlmce Irene, oa her tenipcsiuuu voyage from Genoa to New York, desire to express to Capiaia Dauurmann. Lis officers and cn-w- , our apirmciation and admiral ion of ths masterly manner iu which the ship waa handled under the most trying and difficult circumstances." the resolution reads, "and to tliauk the officer, the chief steward and ids staff for the ourtroua treatment and cnnsMerttloa to all during the entire extende-- , TRANSFER CONTEST OX GROUND UF JURISDICTION. Francisco. Jan. Bun 1. Edna Wal- lace Hopper, thmitgli bey atlt.rneva has taken the first step towards having the cun if -- I over I he will of the late Alexander Du'ismuir transfoned from British Columbia reurla to the aiiierlor wuit of this state. The contestants court will apiicar befme the auta-eio- r and move that ilia decree of May I. 19W. admitting lha will of the late n r Alexander 1 to probate on let-te- Him-mui- of adniliii-iratio- of Janies n Duns-mu- ir lie declared void on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to grant that decree. e. CHIEF JUSTICE MASON DIED ed OF PNEUMONIA. Brookline, Mass.. Jan. 2. Chief Justice Albert Mason, of the Mahsai-bu-set- t superior court, died this morning at hln residence here of pneumonia aged 63 years. WIIEKK INSANITY EXISTED. It la said insanity is to lie the defense in the Trial of Mrs. Chadwick. There is no doubt Insanity existed, but it was in the minds of the flnancicie the who woman money on the securities" she offered. Salt lake Tgle-gntloaned Washington, Jan. 2.The new camp of Goldfields' iu Nevada, which wae first known as Grandpa district, gives promise of becoming a very important mining center. This district, which was located late In the spring of 1903, lies about 23 2 milti auuth of Tonopah. Mr. J. E. Rpurr of flie United States Geological Survey visited it for the Mrnnd time la November, 1904. and waa interested to not the way tn which it has developed wtnie Ida first viMit, which waa made soon after the discovery of gold in the diatrict. A little work was tb$n ia progress on what is now known aa Columbia Mountain but up to that time no good strikes liad hewn made. In January and February. 1904, however, rich ore waa Ktnifk in certain spot a south uf Columbia Mountain. The town uf Goldfields lias sprung up nlnce then and a number of smaller adjacent tamps have beu established, o that the district has now an approximate population of 6400. It is estimated that up to the present time about two million dollar worth of ore has been shipped from the district. Most of these shipments have been made in the last live months. On hla la-visit Mr. gpuir took notes over an extended area and made interesting additions to hie knowledge of the geology uf the district. Since laat year the area of known or bodies has spread ao far beyond Columbia Mountain that values are now found over a district about 6 miles square. Hie chief mines at tne present time are the Jumbo, Hie Combination, the January, and the Florence, all grouped together about a mile south of the southeast end of Columbia Mountain. About 5 miles southeast of Columbia Mountain i the Diamondflelda group, which includes the Vernal, the Quarta-Hand the Black Butte; from which 'shipments have also been made. Other ore deposits have been ilevel-opin various parts of the field. The rocks in that part of the field visited by Mr. Spurr on his last trip (the region of Columbia Mountain, Diamondflelda, and the Jumbo group u mines) 'were found to be almost entirely volcanic;' consisting of rhyolite. rhyolite tuffs. andesites, and banalta. all probably of Tertiary age. The urea occur In both rhyolites and andesite. No definite veins or systems were observed. The outcrops of the quarts bodies are irregular, atrag- RiiiiK. branching, and apt to disappear suddenly. They, are sometimes nearly cliular or crescentic, unit frequently are 'roughly lenticular and Intermittent. Owing to ilia slJielflcatlon of the i , ; i I Remarkable Take Flight Through Air and Escapes With Broksn Limb. H. R. Carieoe volcanic rock In which it occur, the quarts iuelf to gray and Jaapenr.toIt is thq probable that this allicifination work of hot springs and that those horizonirregular reefs represent the tal section of column of rocks ( versed by rising columns of hot water. Had the rocks been strongly fractured w should have had veins like those of the early andesite at Tonopah, but the lack of such a fracture system at Goldand fields resulted la this curious rather unusual type of deposit, it follows! list the quarto reefs will probably extend deeper vertically than horisoa tally, and so hava roughly the nature of columns or pipes. The greater part of theae Jaspery quarts reefs contains no gold. Within some of them prospectors have, bow ever, discovered Irregular portioas that carried gold In paying quantities. It seems probable that these ehoota are the real ore deposits, and that the mass of the reefs constitutes merely a siliceous jacket or casing such aa to known to surround ore bodies la some other parts of the world. The pay ahooto would seem to represent the main channels of hut water airculatten, while the siliceous casings are the result of the water soaking through ths adjacent rock. The ores are often of very high grade. A aa extreme example may tons be noted a shipment of 14 from the Sandstorm, which yielded 945,783 net when worked la a stamp mill, while the tailings still eontalnad about 1,000 to the ton. From the lease on the Jumbo 600,-0wss taken out In five months from a space that measnred 100 feet and 200 fast vertically on ths shoot. The whole production of the camp has come from ores that range In value from 9200 to 9309 a ton. The values an all in gold, as silver to practically absent. An exception to this rule to found in the ore of the Combination from one to mine, which contain three ounces of silver to the ton. Most of the ore extracted has been oxidised ore. As ths water level at Goldfields to unusually high few this desert country, it to plain that this oxidised ore is only a temporary supthe ply. la the Combination and Florence however, sulphide ores of very high grads have been found below the oxidised sone. The indications art not unfavorable to the continuance of high grade or at least good grade ores down to coneiderscie depths. There la. however, aa has been demonstrated by exploitation no continuous regularity to the ore shoots, whether tn 1-- the voyage.' CLIFF Locality Written by a Govern- s. ae "We OVER A Graphic Description of The Great Mining those aboard had no arcuctiun-s- d to tli storms that they were able to celelmte Christina:, about regard to what miglit have happi-ueto During the at i In Halifax dectree were oral iona for n Ctr.-tm- a bought and many nmmentoa fir their fellow passenger. Nur wc.e the children in thAHtecrageiurgoiten. Under the lead of Miss Isabel GllWwpi and Miss Union Steel, candy bags and trinksta were distributed i the poorer youngsters on Christina-- morning after the cabin passenger tisd stripped their tree iu the dining saloon . . Led by the Dr. Jesqup. the Chri-tmwwvlw weie more in the nature of a tliaatozirin. At the Captain's diuner ou Sunday night a resolution waa adopt ii and signed by all of the pamengi-- r expressing their appreciation of the manner in which hs had handled hi (easel. d Out of Coal York. Jan. 2. After the mot tempestuous toy age ahe bait aver encountered, battling with storm which exceed d la severity aByihing her mp tain baa mat in the quarter of a centhe tury be baa been Muling the eeas. Piinzeas Irene, of the North IVenus a IJoyd line, five day overdue, reached her pier la Hoboken yeeterdai . Only by their thankful net m Cai-tat- n Gerhard t Danaeuaun au.l the other officers of the vessel for linng-lr- them safely through the dangers which liem them waa tue gratitude of l he passengers exceeded for having at last reached their home port. So great had been the ship's dlittraaa that h had la put into Halifax last Friday trith what to aa ocean liner aaa li! tie more than a buuket of coal. From the muuient of leaving Genoa, m December I, until the vetarl reached Halifax the voyage vu a routinuuu aeveiity. When in mid ocean, a week ago Sunday, the gale agairnt whitfTihe Friazam Irene wee tattling developed Into a cyclone which swept all of lu-- r forward ventllaton and wrought a I maid araoiig the alee rage passenger from which they had not entirely recovered eves when they were landed yeetarday. NEARLY KILLED STEERAGE PASSES' U EKB. The following day another gale of almost equal strength waa encountered. but the moat aerkiua damage wa daae by the great wave which wi. even over the bridge. One of the heavy abeet Iron ventilator, broken off even with the deck, craehed down a torrid or ef the lower deck and narrowly escaped killing a steerage pneeeager. Several peraons were badly injured aa ft waa, and all were ae terror mrickr n ee that Dr. Frimarchi, the Italian in charge of the etnerage pause ruahed to the bridge. where Captain Dannemaun waa on guard, and beg-p- d him to atop the ship. In the critical condition of affaire there waa no time to argue such a point ai thin, and the physician got a short answer, while the vowel continued to light alowly through the eaee at the late of only six knot aa hour, whea the etonn waa at Ha height Of the first cabin panaaiigera several were injured more or lam eerioualy. Charlee A. Bailey waa hurled against a staunch Ion and hi hand waa au badly cut that several aillrha had to be taken In It. W. K. Fertlg, a well kaowa PLUNGE buie Was Almost Ventilators IN NEVADA ' ' 1-- 3 00 hori-soiital- ly While enwhich proprecipitous Utah and Nineteenth streets Herman R. Carl-eo- n of 2148 Nineteenth street last yesterday afternoon lost hto footing and fell down the rocky heights fully a hundred feet. No one witnessed the mans tall, and whea ho Anally ended his flight at tbs baas of the cliff he lay fur a time half stunaed and helpBaa Francisco, Jan. 2. gaged in repairing a fence tects his home from the cliffs at the Junction of less. As hto FOUND NO WORK AT MINES Sent by an 'Employment Agency to Tonopah Return to Los Angeles Men Half Starved. Los Angelas, Jan. 2. Half starved and half froera, and to Bad advertised waa the exgood Jobs but myths, perience of the workmen whs vent from Lua Angelea to Tonopah a few weelu ago. Soma of them came back today and carried their troubles tome Two workmen, one of whom police. ia J. Eng land t, claim to be among the victims and stated their case to the City Prosecutor. They said that they ware engaged through a Southern California employment agency to work on a contract for Cnerer and Co. Whea they gut there it was found that asms mistake had been made. - ae Bnerer and Co., needed no men. Thebe forty workers, some uf them Mexicans and some whits, were thrown npon their own resource X, which wars practically nil. England! said they almost starred to death and almost froze. They oould gut a work and were desperate. Finally they scattered, and moat of them managed to work their way out. Ia the chrcametaaoez ths City Prose-cuto- r could not draw up a complaint, hut asked the employment agent for Crowiv an explanation. Manager Beamed to be sincerely regretful that a mistake had been made and thought hto company was not to blame He expreseed a wish to do everything la bis.Powrf to help the workmen. Crow-lsaid that ths company had sent a special agent with the gang of men to strength gradually returned Carlson made a careful examination of hie anatomy and was agreeably surprised to find that only hto left leg seemed to have sustained any serious injury. He attempted to rise, but the Injured member restrained hie vfloru and he sank back to await aid. Aa duak approached Cartoon Jster-mine- d to drag himeelf in the direction of the nearest car line, end succeeded Tonnpali. in continuing his painful Journey fur several hundred yards. His predicament waa discovered by a pawing teamster, who aent in a call fur ha ambulance of ths Central Emergency Hospital. Cartoon waa attended by Dr. Glover, and a severe compound free turn of the lower part of the left leg sa discovered, Banker Hadley, Aged M, ia United te COLUMBIAN REVOLUTION Mrs, Morgan, Ten Years Youngeft UNSUCCESSFUL. Uplands. Panama, Jan. 1. Advices from ColBan Bernardino; Jan. 2, Washingombia that the prjected revolution, has bean unsuccessful and that General ton Hadley, .89 year old, president of Kales and Gonzales Valencia, who the first National Bank of Whittier, ware at the bead of Ihe movement and and j Mrs.- Rebecca Morgan. 79; year others have been imprisoned. General old. were married thin morning at the Uribe, Lucas and Cabellero have been hums of the bride at Uplands, the ceremony being performed by the pasappointed ministers to Brazil, Argentor of the Friends' church. In which tina and Venezuela, respectively. Mrs. Morgan has been n pranlznt worker for many years After the ecref INTENSE COLD PRK- to VA1LB IN KLBaiA. mony they returned to Whittier . A reside. . Hadley ia extremely wealthy and la St. Petersburg, Jan. 1. Intense cold known la banking . circled to prevailing throughout Russia At well Moscow it to uo severe that all the throughout California. Ho has the die Unction of having organised the flnt school! have been closed. bank in Lawrence, , many years ago, and for two decades was president "Are you on good terms with all your of that institution. guests?" asked the new arrival at the Though advanced la yearn, Hadley ia vinter resort. active, having lately been remarkably the "Very good terms," chuckle,! lnatrnmental in closing several dsala 910 hotel. "About landlord of the per Involving nearly a quarter of a million Chicago News. day. dollars. The romance with hto wife,- - dates Sunday starts the New Year. Bee back thirty years though they had lha! you make a new start; hut you only within the laat two years known better make the stait today sl you will of each other's presence indlouihwa California. be pure. Tooele Transcript. ( e- WEDTN WINTER OF LIFE ...at A A New Years Story of Love and Marriage and Money o !$ ft An Annual OpyrtdM, Reckoning Mi, by Qtarira If. Hast "Youre a great man o bus! nee, a grand man o buxines. Youve done much fur thle tank already, and I'll not deny it. But the beet thing you've done tar It by long odd was worrying your old. Incompetent father Into hla grave.' I can imagine Robert's amassment and righteous indignation. He never Battled places la the was able to believe that any person was Men dan The 1st ef Jaenary, however, le a date that can be depended upoif in bis metier. I aaa a conservative by the decree of baturei I hava a fondneea for eld customs and Sbaerenncee. Per Instance 1 make gnod resolutions on New Year's day, and one of them always relates to lr Robert Denning. 1 resolve to get Iho better of him and to niaka on end Of iho violent nod bitter controversy hetweea vs. I win explain aa briefly as possible my grievance against Blr Robert. f laid in full the story weald be long end mould involve many wrongs which 1 shall net mention here I wlU try lo make the whole matter comprehensible by relating only the pitiful romance in Which Star Robert and Sylvia Mayne and Arthur Tyrrell were the principal barietera. Tills takes me bark te the ln,e when Blr Robert waa living In the bivn of Barlock, near Birmingham, England, before he came to Amei Ira. 1 Bare never been In England arid have Pot bad an accurate description of Bar-toc- k, but 1 know what happened there. It was in the highest degree iinportart N By Howard Fieldintf the flrst day of evrry year I quarrel with Kir Robert Denning. Tbla to inevitable; It has become a habit. I quarrel with that man n ether days alee, but they bnqe no Though he loved money. Robert waa no miser. He lived Iu flue style and would pay the price of anything that be desired, lie bought shrewdly, but never gtudgingly, and he knew how to make a pound worth two by having It ready at a moment's notice. A prompt loan to a man of exulted station )taved the way to knighthood, and the tanker became Blr Robert when he was about thirty years old. Moreover, lie managed the affair between himself and hla patron In accordance with the soundest business principles, so that the loan was paid upon Blr Robert's hooks In unimpeachable form, though it cost the debtor nothing. In Fir Robert's house there dwelt somewhat lean than a doxen poor relations, They were a part of the young man'e inheritance from hi fuihrr. the only portion which decreased as the result of improved management Ail the men aiming them eventually went in work and found another abode. The old maid and widows remained, and one young girl, named Hylvia Mayne, who was very distantly related to the Dennings. Ills reputation for probity and precision sas unexcelled. His word was as good ss his bond; a valid claim against him wxs equivalent to cash. In his own house his opinions of right and wrong look precedence of the Holy ttcriplurex. for, while there are in th- - Bible instances of the forgiving of debt, it was the uniatrdonablr sin with me. la Sir Hubert. Robert Denning Inherited from Me In Karlock there lived an engaging lather the remnant of a considerable you- g man named Arthur Tyrrell. Ho tortune. Including a controlling interest was a great student in a cheerful, to a bank. The bank was In a bad way fashion, end his cnii vernation and threatened te involve the wluolo "A MAN JS HKTTEK DEAD THAN wa, .iilnrned with bright blossoms gathin disaster, but Robert put its ered from among Ihe wild weeds which DANKRIJT." te right within one year after h the world culls knowledge. He extracttook charge of It. for he was a much in accusing him of wrong. II is ed ruse fiont philosophy arid human bitter business man than his father had rvciiiiide was In his own eves the fun- iiU 'ce from He was a cultl-v- a' history. been. The two had differed radically damental certainty which must be obil iinisi 'l.iii who loved melody. He eon questions of business policy, and vious to all men. It could not be ques- had written u novel as whimsical as were the at time tioned of the they estranged except from dishonest motives life. otoer Dennings death. or mere rplie, as In the present in" vrri'll hmi :i email properly, and Itiif One of Roberts Hi at administrative stance. vsieiue artistic occupations yielded him Sets was to dtmand ths resignation of Robert w'tuld never tugue wiih-- dis- so'i.e income, yet he wax always In 10 bank's cs shier, who was old and honest matt imr deign to defend iiim.Hf mry troubl- -. iiis name would imswhat feeble apd would have withfrom the dr mulhe. and of lie turning up on a hit of iper, drawn voluntarily xrcjt thst he had a course it wss beneath his dignity to a I he would Im asked lo pay money wish to teil a few i'm-Il- i more and quarrel with a dlscUsrsrd employ. wiicit he did rot have. tound out forty years or service. e, Therefore in tiie chaigc that lie had A note of Tyrrell's went lo protest si there was in matter of a pen-to- u killed hla father he replied with a cold tl.e bank one day, and, though he made which he had been d to expect, etatement of s general truth, ax was fi iiiuminl good al a great sacrifice, lie hut did not get. tn, (he day when he his ruxLom In such a r"ii'd not his credit with was Anally compelled to yield his place "A man is belter dead lli.m hack-eupr- .Kc Rolen, wherefore ail tv hum he owed 8 a more Le rvirahir niu saici he Mild turned his back npon l"S.s'i to said to press him trust ipiiiiercifiilly. Retort by way of farewell; the old vashiei. Ill XI' W lo i- s l M'.'ivr who name waa serviceable for illustration when Blr Robert addressed . the old maids and widows and Sylvia Mayne upon the proper conduct of life, Sylvia waa then eighteen, and site knew no more about money matters than the bush men know about the geometry of X dimensions. Hhe knew Tyrrell, however, and thought him the most agreeable man in Barlock. Her ideala of personal beauty were thoroughly satisfied by Tyrrell's bright blue eyes and yellow hair, by his grace and manliness and courtly bearing. It was a great surprise to her to learn that he wa not a good nuin. Her notions of evil were based chiefly upon the dishonesty of two servants In the house who bad stolen silverware aud bad been aent to prison uiul upon her observation of cer-liii- n shifty eyed tricksters who kept little Stores in Rarlock. Certainly Mr. Tyrrell whs not like these. Sylvia's moral training hud savored or purl tan lain, and she had been taught that evil ia attractive and good repellent. ller own experience had not seemed to Justify this doctrine until the case of Arthur Tyrrell offered proof conclusive that the gloomier view of the world waa the true one. Khe confessed to herself that ahe would never have known that Mr. Tyrrell waa a w hi ted sepulcher or a red apple offered 'by the old serpent that tempted Eve. Hhe had entertained some foolish dreams about him, and ahe reproached id . - hap-haSi- rd re-to- te Riih-sr- u pe-e- tc '-s Be-ede- tw - l Tyrrell really eras. It le always easy to accuse an amiable person of weakness and to carry, conviction to the mind of a girl who has been taught (and verily believes) that all the vlr-tuare hard as iron. Presently the old maids and widows discovered that they could curry favor with Blr Robert by praising him to Sylvia aa a man of strong character, a great and growing power for righteousness in the midst of a weak and sinful world. He would coma to high station. Tbe king would honor him and give him charge of great affairs. About this time there was s fever In Barlock and its vicinity for Investment in a certain gigantic enterprise. Persons of distinction visited Blr Robert in the Interests of this project, and they used Ms tank in various ways that were profitable to the institution. Personally Blr Robert made a email Investment. and upon learning of thle all Barlock stood ready to risk IU savings. Depositors began to withdraw their money from tbe tank in order to invest It, and this waa undesirable from the tanker's point of view. Bo he stood up boldly among his fellow clti-seand said that ths great enterprise waa speculative and that he could not advise any One to put a penny Into it unless he was perfectly willing to lose. Moreover, he called attention to the fact that investors, in addition to the usual risk of loss, ran also the chance of being aaseeaed upon their shares in case of failure. This utterance checked the run on the tank and was repeated by Barlock people, and especially by Blr Robert, after tbe great venture began to sink toward ruin. Among those involved in the disaster wa Tyrrell, but he hid not Invested very heavily. He would have escaped utter wreck except for the assessments which Blr Robert tad mentioned, and be wae among the first to counsel re; Distance of payment upon the ground that the whole transaction waa fraudulent. At tbla point Blr Robert'a rectitude stood forth sublime. The enterprise could not be fraudulent, because he himself had lent it a measure of sanction. It was speculative, because he himself had said so. The victim should pay their assessments, because he had warned them of the possibility and because be paid hla. "It Is a matter of honorable business obligation." aail be. "A man must pay his debts., .Blr Robert paid .the trifling sums demanded of him, and he did so with a loud noise. Tyrrell protested and tried to draw the othera ufter him, but they feared Blr Robert. Tyrrell could not fight alone nor join in time with the dissatisfied in other cities. The ftps liot of It waa that he went bankrupt. Blr' Robert loat 400, which he could well ee DIS- GRACE. fr herself them, for she lo-- . ed honor' and honesty mid especially the moral strength which la superior to .ill temp-Uliii- n. It waa her doubt of Tyrrell strength away from him. Fir Hubert was keen to see this, mid uu doubt he was sincerely alml Hut Svlvi.v should have begun to ' (' out v hai ror' wof mau Mia fellow r shh'li probably turned her etx-ug- Tyrrell left Darloek in disgrace and went to London, where, to hla own great surprise, he throve. About two years later he returned to bis native town to pay the last of his debts there. He came hearing honors which he had won In the larger world and with a heart full of the hope of high achievement. ltut the hope died in an Instant, and the laurels already won turned to dry leaves upon his brow, for the first news he heard in Barlock was that Bylvia'a hand wa pledged to Sir Robert. The wedding occurred within a flew day, and Tyrrell carried a broken heart In his breast when he went tack to London, and worthless for money making; naff he had never kept this anxiety secret from her. Hto sole ambition for hto eon was that he should follow In hto father's footatepa and win the respect 1 banka Sir Robert declaimed business principles over the childs cradle and undoubtedly drove hto wife Into apart es- - of insanity by unceasing reiteration of. hla low alms and sordid plans . for their child. determination that the boy should never give n comprehending ear to hto father's Instruction 'was undoubtedly the leading tpotlve for Bylviaa conduce. It i true also that she tad learned to understand . the fraud that had been practiced upon htr In regard to Arthur Tyrrell, aa th following passers in the letter proves: deed would not have forged , "You of Arthur Tyrrellk property end offered it te me for sale, but you did not ecru pie to forge, a character for him and paaa it upon me tor genuine. Yon ruined him through a partnership with swindlers, and every - act of your throughout tpat time was shaped upon the basest and moat sordid self InterHer '' est" ns afford. TYRRELL LEFT BARLOCK IN Five years later, aa the result of steadily increasing and irreconcilable differences, Sylvia left her husband home, never to return. She fled lo secret, for. thus only could she take tar eon with her. The letter which she wrote to Sir Robert has com Into my hands, and It is one of my most treasured possessions. Therein eh states with precision the reasons lot .her not. DECLAIMED BUSINESS PRINCIPLES OVER THE CRADLE. reasons which she tad stated, lea calmly, perhapa, to hla face long before. "You are a dishonest man." she wrote. "You do not pay your debts Out of ten thousand kinds of obligations Justly due you pay bat one kind. You pay in money, and upon every other reckoning you are bankrupt. "I waa dependent upon you when t waa a child. Your father took me into hla house. If I was not there by right I should not have been there at alL I waa not old enough to decide. He was the judge. .When you came into your Inheritance you found me under your roof. You should have sent me away or hav- - done your duty by me. There waa no middle course. "Your duty waa to Leach me honor and honesty. You taught me dishonor and fraud. You should have shown Christ's world to me. where love slid kindness and sympathy are current coin. You showed me only the temple of the money changer before the Master drove them out. and you taurht me by set and word that this waa the true holy of holies where all good men wor- shiped." Bhe then lays tare the sordid life eta led with him. For all the outpouring of her mind and heart he paid her only In dross. AJI hto thoughts were of money , all hie moral Judgments were rendered In. terms f money. He could talk of nothing else, think of nothing else and hope lor nothing higher. When their son waa born Blr Robert was reli-v- M of n terrible mental strain. He bad teared the child might be a girl Probably this reference te Tyrrell led Blr Robert to believe that (Sylvia tad fled to him. Tyrrell woe supposed to be in America and Sir Robert croeaeA the ocean, vowing vengeance. Tyrrell-whwoe really in England, heard ol these occurrence and promptly follow ed Blr Robert, but neither of them ever saw Bylvla again, or ever saw Eng land, for Blr Robert became involved In business enterprises In the new world and grew much richer herq while Tyrrell died soon after reaching these shores. As for Bylvla she lived a quiet I'fe and earned her own bread and her son's. Tbe boy had childhood full at love, a youth made beautiful by increasing helpfulness to her nnd a manhood rich In honor. He was net In the least like hla father: but, ala for the sad miracle of the pertinacity of sin, hie eon waa unplrsxantix. reminiscent of Sir Robert, the tanker of Barlock. with whom I quarrel once a year, ae 1 said In the beginning. Why do I quarrel with 'a man whs died so long before I wae born? Hie he was-mrascal I 'None of his actual wealth to me, but perhaps I owe f.j money to him. just the same. I hs" been In the banking business now tor twenty-fiv- e years, and It seems to suit me. I understand credits. I Judge men by their capacity to pay whet they owe on the day wh-- n it ie due, though I can't help knowing that some of them are a long way behind with their more important obligation. In order lo get the better of wretched old Sir Robert who dwells within me. 1 make It a practice on the flnt day if the year to forgive the debt owed re me by n delightfully irresponsible nch. sw of mine, and It Is the more fun i e cause he always thinks I'm not going t do It He accumulates indebted:- ;x during the year and cornea to me a great distress at the end of it Ties rises up old Blr Robert to Jell me tta. thle youth can't be honest or he W"i.'d par his debts, and I hare to call up"i the gentle spirit of Bylvla Mayne to ret me right Tbe boy Is. honest enouglq but be doesn't understand moneys that's all. Perhaps rv spoiled him by lending him so much. In that case owe him reparation. I must make the young rascal a suffMent annual allowance and thus pay fay debt M him- ie-cau- se y great-grandfath- er |