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Show 5 VE YES. ,. out Rio Grande Westcn.' ll : J' Railway. "- "lr ai : vVu.- S :. STAXMMD GAUGE. k L N UL?e1 J-- - .. il'i.i.ta tiuvii yvrf As ia.J i itu3 La.. l-- j l iMItNlJ Arri.e limn 1 . n') a. :4S V W:i p. p. . I ia Ttet Niaur pi yi Vb tutivisa. i: is (La Baxitlef . tae. tJ oi tj tie c anT;i-- ii t..::a U tu-.- - r it - . . ! - a. a i6 p n il :y p. t' i:H a. t u. U i- As' N.ttr' j:un fc; !- e - . ja i: a v. HeLt-s- S Blid fcla holiOr ;. 1 1 111 . ft-l- t v-i'- oJ-prin- i.-- lit-u- Utah Central Railway r j iti j .Denver, Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, ijincoln, St. Joseph, Omaha. Our Famous Dining Cars Mm G-.,- STANDARD GUAGE GEORGE W. JONES, 1 TICKET BROKER Sib I'w'uty .: I f tie f:i.ri ti.it to LA l sf tzr teart fr.ia 1 V ,1.1 'I : i, - us Ail t.uf LvcJ i- i a tar-.- - 1 Li Bias, rc li! iL; fci.rw tT is u s le tlat I Ltiig LL8 JV1 jL.i tLa ct til it t! : i Ijji-- i t--y my cp-L-- ul kijjt J- vf teCwo.-:k- fc-- UGGISTS. L:.-"- f d you t-- b:t re tak- 1 5 r 'l ti.-c- ia c..a tut W. ileXUTT - L & CO, DivUGGTHTS -- - ciici- IHI'ESTlSdI.ltniEllim l,-- . ye.-irx- o, despite this codicil, I went down into the valley ia which Gideon Lee's homestead Stood before 1 had breU itX home a day. It was sunset whea I reached it, but the light did not as uf yore gild the paues of the upper wi.i dows to sheet of buinishfd gol L Every shutter was closed and the house to frown njnin me. The garden had r:m wild; the fields lay desolate; the broken branches of the orchard trets told of boyish depredation. Strange cattle grazed in the meadow and Hover's kennel was empty. The sight brought tears to my eyes. I went up the old porch and found there, wet with rain ana tangled in the relics of lat year's vine, a scarlet ribbon, one Madge must Lave worn. I put it in my bosom and cwme away. No one could tell me anything of Gideon Lee's children, except what the empty house had told me that they were gone. I had lost them; and wliat did I care that all the country place besides welcomed me home? Gideon's smile would have been more to me than all their greetings, and Madge would have given me a kiss that had trne love in it. I was not happy; I could not be gay. I could not care for anything very much. I lived a quiet life for two long years, and, let those call me cold and proud w ho would, I was not cold, but those w ho courted me were Gideon Lee's enemies, and had persecuted pretty Madge since her very birth, and had done their innocent father to death, and I hated them for it, though I said nothing. But at list, OHe bright morning, walking np the road to look at the desolate dwelling "vhere I had learned to love Gideon Lee's children, 1 saw a change in it The windows were open; a man was at work in the garden. Three figures in traveling costume had just entered the porch and a carriage stood ut the gate. I knew Gideon's tall figure at a glance, but who was this superb, glowing, beautiful, with a look of triumph on her face who came toward me? And who was that old man with the strange, sarcastic smile, that I fancied I had seen before? As 1 advanced I knew that it was Madge who ran to meet me Madge, grown to be a magnificent waman Madge, who kissed me as of yore, but more gladly, and who left me in a moment alone with Gideon and drew the stranger away with her. And Gideon held my hand, and I could only say,"It has been very long, Gideon," and try and hide my tears. "It has been long for me, Agnes!" he said. And then there was a pause. He broke it by kneeling down beside me, with my hands in his as I set on the low step of the porch. "You are Miss Agnes Grey," he said, "and the world honors you. I am the Even son of the man who was hanged. now, loving you as 1 do as I have all this weary while that stands between ns, a barrier you could not cross. Is it not so? Were 1 all else, and so worthy of you, I should still be Gideon Lee, and an outcast, branded with Cain's brand npon the forehead, and you could neither love nor wed met" Could I say "I love you?" It was not in maidenhood to do that It was imI trembled; 1 faltered; I only possible. said these words: "It is an unjust brand unjust and crueL My eyes never see it, Gideon Leel" He showered fond kisses on my hands, but he spoke again. "Do you dare to do it, Agnes to love an outcast man; to bring upon yourself contempt and hate; to relinquish wealth for the humble life of a simple farmer? Is your love strong enough for this? Will you never repent?" "Never," I said. "When your gold is gone, your land another's, your friends turned to enemies and your name, yonr very name, Agnes that of the man who was hang"Think! can yon ed?" he asked slowly. bear that ignominy? I know how ter rible it is." And I took my hands from his and laid them on his broad shoulders and said but no matter what I siiid. 1 have forgotten the words that told him that I loved him too well to donbt my courage to bear anything for his dear set-in- d sake. CIG'ARS. ii.ii-i-j.- to my tiii.ve Lm i a rich womaa ari u: own mistress, thi Waa tc! oai Cll to the Will iLxt Iclt me all: "L Hctxy Grt-r- , LaviLg eaass to that my belovel grandcliilj i eu.ly niis'el by artiil persons, and is CM ffOiWful taoagb. to cudcrstsLi iLc:i guile, do, for her own welfare, aJl That, should sh tver give l-- i Land in aiamage to the son of uiar derer of my son, Matthew Givy, nil claim upon the moneysand estates abo.e tqueathd her shall be forfeited, and said property go, without reserve, to tLe Lkfpital of St-- Marthit, to Lo used by the trustees of said institution as they ace tew ct" lands dwelt in tl.e Cir--'i..-u Arat'i teut c;-.- .. tie desert and n-dele- wr.h Liiu oVt.r the burniiig sauas. loving the l.le too Well to 1 ave it, SI d " teVer LeuTli.g of Gli.!i OLJ t coidt-iij.ua- ! ion, or of Li terrible fate. Lis Son ft-,- . Liia and bad baa, if otie dr. p tf Christian pity lingered iu hi soul f...r the man ou whom he had brought this awful dootn, to return aiJ prove by Lis living presence the fart if his innocence and of his unjust death. t children They t;ra of Gideon now as of those of a martyr; and the ban is lifted from the name that 1 have taken for uiy own. Baffala News, L-e- -- c-i- .l iB DoMET10 IlarOATEQ i -- e il e i u-- rt. , Lc-- r ; LlI tri i?-- tLe oct ia Urr.-c- a Ca- - f CVL,:::-.a- , - . Biij-'t- : ssJIi rrv,?.t LiLa'..rc lvel tir'j tu ?t I ! Ui9 j. ii Wi a (. ri-- in ecrt-- to Vj tHs 1 r i.-- he I O.iewa. s: t fr ti Ua:trrti. as' - rJr j tL-i- eriJ r UraLi-iiitLr- pkrty Lri L'-- "Your nncle Ma'.htw f cvetoe, btit u il Lwve r.'i' H is the truth was a will, Ui fellow bi?tiyc4 iuB tb tui'i-i.rit u. BJ . . I 'o Am n S He oi hi .! j quarreled with tay father, not f tli-i lit. iii La sie .o i. w la' tli p. Hi Arme irUi i i iiiC :(... .!.! Ure4 iLe OiUit tlicl to witn him, and the debt Wi-- i i:L M tht-- r JuuMi4tt... p. au !u li a. is Lae tjraici ilif giScN aj rt saw it Cli,ue, and beard bio lfjst that . I a. w if.. .1 -7 imtr tri An' raoie i i.i.a' Ii.ri '!rh tlia cip'&iB.aud .. a. l Arrive the money should tike Liin beyond th d j u lu artu l: p. bi i4 J a. ib Vwtma Arrive Puerto m a. u. r ttitt liie no) reah of irksome laws tul chatt-eriur.. i .'it ii a crest j.i Ar. Lulu. N p. vcrs M'tu trai:iliiT p ni 1:1' I It Arm lazier tongues And for the Moody handkerSLou'.m' la t!i i&l rvUem'liaa of a lio.y chief he Lad cut tn hand, and nnb- - ioud , 1 Sx So. 1. trotti' L;riU: mixa. vest washed and anJ tiei it tip afresh i i it, I on I An' tha riJe pola of CroMail EllrM mother's very sight that day. Don't dar-t- o at lo a. duubt it; don't be so crui-- as to doubt Aa'oaly Ct to buliif Is tuy Luutio ta; pl-a. Bi . p. IB IjCAJI I V BrJI, II ?A p 17. l'l li V m Leave 1.4 friiiirs it, Agues Grey." p. B Wen McliDdr. try ilelinJjr, CUbA my heart i ............ 1 :Vi p. in ii Lea e P Then the brought me the picture that i h juUiuiiiju, a. ui i1 P m Leave liiu!l ... ...... a Bl 11 It a. n Leave It iu..d !.ri'a.. Wtu McliBily, tnl' ma Vf.r iltllLnjj, uiy they kept as a sacred relic, and verses ' a 4 Arr-vp. in liraiid June'lou wr.ttt-love let4 VI a. ,1 by his band and p. IQ Leave (irand J uttcUoii a. Bi 5 p. IB ters yellow with age, and as 1 locked at AmTrwi Kli Tr m! Bl f:l'. p. a. ter lxTim-ithe face so swtt, so good, so like that UNDER A CLOUD. ! .'.! p. m 12:11 a. to Arr:v lru 3.11 p. Ui U:tl a. in of the Gideon Lee 1 knew I t tur? lsave PriTu m a. I 4: nil rt!t L.k Arrive p. that those who Mood before me, thoug'i 4 IS m p. ni. ! I I a. LaavvSjih Laihtf. I am Agues Grt y; or at IS . "i that wa they were the children of the man who m Am g of a iy tainu when cue Lright summer Jay, was hung, were not the UJikL. fUXISA. the tVy aa blue as though there never murderer. And afterward Gideon also OGUtH 1ND 4LT LIES. could be another cloud in it, 1 cauie home spoke. a. tn., LaT (V 1mm., .4Sp. bu Ktrturiiiu arrive Uara lu u6 p. m., JW p. across the fields from Nellie UobartA "It is hard to bear," he said; "hard to m. IJj a, si. wedding. Very 6weet the looked in her know that we must bear it all our lives; IN'OBllf. fond the gentle- but if bridal dress, and see the truth if only, LaT SU Lake, h a. tu., relnroing. arrira man to whom thevery bad given ber hand withoutyou only Salt Laka S iai p. m. will understand that proof, you seemed to be of her. The church was we know no murder was ABKUC1H roll, HolO.PfElNOVILLI, THISTLE. ever done by A. decked with Mowers, and not one of onr dear father's hand MASTI AND . Ut. who have we, arriT m J8 wished the who OfrfBn those there but tat LaT returuiu, p. pretty his pictured face npon the wall, the letOnlfin 6J tn. young creature well; and as she stepiied ters written to our mother, the words iTc. doim'.e. J. H. BESNETT. . Pbm. Airt out from the shadow of the painted onr mother wrote (ja, UaiiKr, us to read windows into the clear, golden, out of them often when begging was she dead, and door light I thought of the old rhyme his knees doubt man never the who on Happy is the bride in the condemned cell, calling on God to Whom the sun khinea on. And thought that she looked like one of witness his last words, had sworn to the 9 wrt Line to Park City. those fair saints the old musters were so wife who would have loved him even fond of painting, blue eyed and blond. had he in some hasty moment dealt a LINE OF TUE WEST. and with mouths like those of smiling fatal blow, that he knew nothing of THE Mathew Grey's death and even doubted babies. I tnought of something else, also, as I that he was dead at all if you can believe On and after Ortohor M, 190, paaaeog-eand with ns and not with those who were suppose every girl who had been to that frc iclit train will run aJ follow : have a PASSSNOla TB4INS. wedding did, could one but know the bis murderers, l, at least, snail truth. 1 wondered whether it would lighter heart." !)KXIa.m Lk taieflnt 4 ill p. m And 1 put my hand into his, and gave LmaT Park City ever be my turn to stand where Nellie Arrive at Park City H:.)am the other to Madge, and said honestly, 4 Ju p. m stood that day, and what manner of man Arrire at Salt Lake " my bridegroom would bo; for I had never "I do believe as yori do, and I alwavs vrkiobt TtAira. will." 7KWa. id LeaTS Halt Lake yet seen any one I could fancy giving a. Lmt Park City 4i) And so I we away; but I took their myself to, almost body and soul, as a 12 :W p. Arrive at Park City 3 M p. rrira at Salt Lake wile must. 1 was making a picture of faces with me, their pleasant ways, their Twelve suburban traina dnily totwntml him for myself, like a goose, when my voices. As for Gideon's face, it haunted LiakeCity aud Mill Crnk and Sugar Housn. Allrmoiile Riut to Park City will dud it to foot caught in the grass, where some me. There was about him a charm that Ui.iir itittiriwt to take thi linn. no one else ever bad. They were all JthOna and l)iit: Corner 8th South and boys had tied it, and down I fell, twist so quaint, all charming in their way, but ankle and m au ireet, bait Lake City. ing my hurting my head, he most of all. T. J. Miuktntosh, 6. F. and P. A. that for awhile 1 knew nothing. A pretty scandal there was through At last I felt some one lift me oS the the town when I began to go down to to see and that opeued my eyes ground, it was a great, swarthy, black eyed girl the . farmhouse to see my friends. 1 of seventeen or so a girl with a careless knew it, and fought it bravely. "Gideon Lee never killed any one, 1 look about her dress which was not ladylike. Hit she had the voice and manner vowed aloud to those who chided me, of a lady, and she asked me very kindly "I will not ban his children for the fault if I were much hurt; and, seeing that 1 of others." But there in the town were those who was, picked me up in her strong arms and carried me through a garden gate had been at the trial, and eleven of the and into a little parlor, where she laid jurymen and witnesses; and nnder a SOLID VESTIBULE TRA.INS me on a sofa and bathed my head with stone in the graveyard were the tones rose water and told me tokee up my that had been sworn to as Uncle courage, for "Gideon has gone for a doc- Mathew's, and in a bleak, lonely spot near the prison the coffin of the man who tor." That name told me where I was. 1 was hung; and how dared 1, a baby alwas nnder a roof that I had never most at the time, to judge for myself. I knew they were right enough, but 1 thought would shelter me, no matter what would come to pass. I would have never faltered. I was as sure as Madge . . risen and gone away if 1 could have was that her father never killed Uncle stirred from the odd old sofa. For this Mathew. was Gideon Lee's old homestead, and They would not come to my home. here dwelt the children of the man who, Indeed, grandfather would have had the sixteen years before, had been hung for door closed in their faces, but nothing the murder of my Oncle Mathew. could keep me from them. And it was I was bnt a baby when it all happened, dangerous work for me, too, as I began FREE HEGLINING CHAIR CARS but I could remember how the whole to know before long, to sit so much by ON ALL TRAINS; Gideon Lee's side, to hear his dear voice village was astir in search of the missing man, and how a body was found at eo often, to feel my heart thrilling with last in the heart of Alcott's woods, and a loving pity for him for which I had no ATTACHED TO ALIi THROUGH TBAIHI, how the facts that there had been a words. He was my wounded and desquarrel between Gideon Lee and Uncle pised knight, this dear Gideon Lee, befor farther lntormatloa oonoermng thii Mathew, and that Gideon Lee owed the fore I had known him three months, and ane. umi'T to nv Ticket Agent, or audresi latter money, and how they were last I would have given my life for him. K. E. WALKER, Gen. AKt., Salt Lake City seen together quarreling ,in Gideon's But he said no words of love to me nor J garden, where a bloody handkerchief, to him. Just friends we were, and nothwas found soon after, ing more, outwardly. That was enough L. il I marked "M. Lill and brought Gideon to the gallows. for the towu enough for grandfather. Perhaps hearing the story afterward I was called unnatural. I found my from my grandfather made me fancy 1 dearest friends grown cold. Even the remembered it, but at all events the clergyman asked me if "it would not PIKE'S PEAK ROUTE! name I had learned to hate was that of harm me t8 hold companionship with Gideon Lee. And now it was the child such people." born on the day of her mother's death And I said: "They are the best people the very day on which the father met I have ever known. And even had their his awful fate who lifted me from the father done the deed for which he died, BETWEEN PUEBLO DENVER, CCLOEAOO SPRINGS ground, dusky Madge Lee, who had they would be no worse for it As it is never found a playmate nor a friend in he was murdered, and you are all cruel AND the town because of the ban upon her to these poor children of his cruel and COASl ncnuv pacifu; citv, altlake father's name, and Gideon, the son, wiio unchristian." andaUnirtli- - vixuuf wait iKiiatn. had been old enough to understand it So he left me angrily, and so many a VIA .. all at the time, who came in with old friend left me, and all my comfort was , wEADVILLR. ASPTH aulGLEN ill WOOD SPRIXOL Dr. Humphries soon after. to sit between Madge and Gideon in the H I'JrPMEN'T SCENERY They were not poor people. The house quiet evenings and talk to them. Unaurpasaed Uneqai lied. was a substantial one, and there were In the summer time we used to light more books and pictures and tokens of no candles, and the moonlight fell Throutrh Pullman Sleier and Pa!lmB Tourist cars rxitweeu Denver aid San Francisco, refinement within than country homes through the ivy leaves upon us, and the generally buat of. But even the farm old dog lay at our feet and put his curly Through the heart of the lio;ky Mountains tlie most comfortable, the infest, and the hands spoke contemptuously of the "sou head upou Madge's lap. We would toil grandest of all trans continental rou'e. stories of fairies and goblins or sing roFor rates, descriptive pamphlets, etc., call on of the man who was hung," and the servoi address J. D. KEWWORTHT, geuen 1 ai?ont, ants who were hired by Madge Lee mantic songs written before any of ns Banta Fe Route, Salt Lake City, Now and then Gideon were not natives of the placa were bora. H. COLLBRAN, leneral manager, Ciloradr Bprings, Colo. And here was 1, Mathew Grey's own would steal his arm about my waist or CHAS. S. LEE, general passenger agenl, niece, lying under the roof, and likely to hold my hand awhile, and wrong though Denver, Oolo, be there for some time, tor the doctor any one might have thought there was no more harm in it than though we had forbade my removal. "1 must go home I must go away been children. Jnst6o we were sitting one evening, from this house!" said, angrily ami Member of the American Ticket Broker when grandfather walked into onr midst feverishly. Association. And Madge Lee looking down on me and clutched me fiercely by the arm. as an Indian princess might, with fctr No need to repeat the words he uttered. Railroad and Steamship dark eyes aglow, said, in a bitter voice The insults stung me as sharply as they "Never fear. Miss Urey, we'll not mur could Gideon Lee's children. But he d?r you!" and somehow abashed me forbade me ever to upeak to them again and frxik me home with him. haughty as I was. The last glimpse I caught of the brothGrandpa wa-- s away from home, or I ;!iitik even the risk of tny life would no er and sister showed them to be standhave kept him from talcing me home ing hand in hand, their fingers clutched I ami tight, their teeth set, their faces white grew ill and delirious, and Madgi Railroad Tick". 'Vbt ovi t, p, Lee nursed with wrath nnder the moonlight. mo us a sister might. ai: It Lb TICJ.E7 8 hnnore i. to nil point. ANTKKI) wits my lust glimpse for m;iny was kinder th:in a brother 'i'lcou Ti "''b lfplioue. u-.- f the diy k'r-- si. it was si. i . i.--j n.:- -i djvrn ti.ere" (ai.i her trown feud tow&ri the tuwi.? "ciil ua the children ct m u,arJrrer. We 1 are the children of a mamr mw fievrr taw my father, but we b;'.h know rememtiiat he u icautt-i-And G : bers bis kindness. Lis tcidcr-- . his gru- - wuzaftn; iiL vr i.r Sc.t.-i- s j.- - f ! t- f- iil., U Lt--u gru-irM- Iht iiiw..3 e& ti.n l.if. v nta dcr it the m i j aBidc u .railia. -. Ui a I li. t".- I''- 1U .f i.Xirea m ' a at -d tt aa it.l TLo-- t Un Arrive i all ! tiwe t ix r L . - '. fc ?....'.:. wu we'lecx'h u fis Lat 1 Ltever Leri cf Liia fria tlii 1 1 ,k SUl Lr'.L-LtiJ ia Le CvcJ bor cv'ul ' t g.rs aj i Tie i: ! tywo kaowj the ft ry "llw tLiii I tvrr iLiik jji f dird. rviiitu.bcr or i tue, t.t tLir Us L.xs t.ll ti.rEi jrc'ji juj yitlLiig ij Lis liriilrr tirw t mizf uj. kt-i.It-1it.- - lilies, Le Ll he left, years. i Atl the answered, Urey, At the enl ct tiiat tiue tuygmsl-- doz. t- -f U f jrc tlie Lot and tru-li fctk U i 'f tn.',y Ix ia fauier dic-i- an 1 I, Lis be:r-srcturue!; ct Lit tarly ail far fioiu tit -- -- Ti I : tic f r -- t . ir:! At jw-- ti r Li? pmmrssr-i- . wr.tvn, to ity u.r Ijv.Lg tLfta. T Il li VTtet &St i..ar laet'cr os llje af-rU!.4 !,.. 'i a..- jl .. J y uJ" tue "Vte," W"ii i --. LUt a .' R.: I " Si A- - J- -' fre:u 3 Art- iTfhr-- r tl ..- CTERENT TIME TACLE t fro. It U.'r aii' i UT "Ma i br. J rr &a. betvr;glt tf-- En?; Ll-.-- -- il a.. Va as.. e;j ..I f: v-- to 2 4 Vf5 S . r-v- Orden bj Mail Proe.ptijr Attended to' Fifth St, Near Young, OQDEIf e rater for t. aaa Cei (armeialaae, r .e. o aecara ia - fl UaTlTlTE..! Kt; Ljf-e'- mam of I.murium. State Consul Manatt, at Athens, in a recent report on Greek mining and metallurgy, enters into the hisWHY IS THE tory of the subject in an interesting manner. IV. The mines of Laarium, now worked for rine, and iron, are, he says, the CENfPERMrai iVl BEST SHOE IN TH UnU FOR THE UOHHf very mines from which Themi.-tolr--s iii a with ao or wax irt a,i drew the silver supply to fit out his fleet toithurt the feel: in,. of Om. fin .Mir ii... tkori uf Ihit make brmut and beat bsick the Persian invader at and easy. aul trt mrt . tnulr titan ci ny ytu-- m.ln wM-- urrr. It equal handSaJaiiiis A4.0U u $.nl. li C), and so to lay the .'vo-l 1U lland-arthe flneit ralf Crmlar d, foundations of the Athenian hegemony. Cfl ev,-PJm onVrrj Mr Yii; eiual rrt licit hl.h cunt More than this, it is thought probable ..hrtl .hoe $vn tutu ki. 00 HaBd-oewWelt fhoe, fine calf. Th Iil.U. comfortable and (!ura,li.. ? that the Phoenicians delved here before tiiKie . at thi price ; aaint itrade a cua-t- the Greeks came, as they are known to a nia'le ui cot!iit from C2 0 iO I'oliee 9hert Kallmad Mfa have done in the Hand of Thasos. aud ri arrl.mall neartlicni; umulb liiaiae hravy thrre tulel,dueealf, At any rate, Thoricus was a free city will wear a ear. One before Theseus welded the Attic bor- CO on Hup pair no heller ahoe ever off erert at ralfione Otfca tuia trial mill convince Uloao price; hf want a u. oughs into a single commonwealth (that f..r comfort and aervice. is to say, before the name of Athens ap- SO iareBad Pi. 110 YVorkinirman'a abnea liO anil Uuralile. Thuae ve Kiven them a nn.iig trial will wear no other make. peared in history) and its importance Bud 11. 7. atbuol tb.iea are fOVC' must have been due to the mines; so that worn by the bnvaevervwhere: thevarll "yj tlieTr merits, n the luereanltiK aiileaahow. the mining industry at Lanrium may un d I etrl j ae Kl.OO shoe, best IVo Ooliicola. veryutvllnh:euualFreliL-possibly boast an origin as remote a aCll4 imm ai.ui io iiiHjn.U auiK-'2. .Ml. J llll and IT ahn fi.r thirty centuries back, while it is again M I.atliea' Ibeesare the be4l flue boutiola. St vllj.li and durable. in full blast today. auilon.-iS- ee that V. L. Uo'uiilaa' name and bottom of eai'h ttioe. In walkiug through the French com- price are stampedw.on the u ooLol-v- a, tirxxktun, Mass. pany's great mine at Camaresa, in the sold by heart of the Laurium region, one tra- W. H. WRIGHT 4. SONS CO.1 verses here a gallery in active exploitaNo. 2H7 Zii Washington Ave., Ogden. tion for line ami lead and hard by another worked out by the old Greeks two or three thousand years ago. These ancient works are among the most interesting monuments of Hellenic civiliza- YOUNG MENVOLD Ancient Miue TU Ci-ite- d L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE k-a- ji-- 1m- -i -- rr-.- wi.-e- ii w r C. vt-- w offr-va- a h.-- v"i l exteu-t.fiie- vt-r- --- llaurl-aewe- a OR tion. T e the Reign of Loula XIV. The etiquette which prevailed at Versailles was of the most minutely elaborate character, and governed every movement of the king and those about him from the very moment he opened his august eyes until he closed them in sleep. He was the center of the whole; it was a drama, daily repeated the same characters, the same scenes, the same details-oppres- sive in its sameness, fatigning in its constant pressure. I have neither the space nor the inclination to dwell on all the extraordinary ceremonial of the state dinner; the twenty or thirty grandees fluttering around the king's plates and glasses; the sacramental utterances of the occasion; the gaudy procession of the retinue; the arrival of la nef that is, the center piece of plate which contained, between scented cushions, the king's napkins, and Pessai des plats the tasting of each dish by the gentlemen servants and officers of the table before the king partook of it. The same custom was observed with the beverages. It. took four persons to serve the king with a glass of wine and water. Well might Frederick the Great, on hearing an account of all this tyranny of etiquette, exclaim, that if he were king of France his first edict would be to appoint another king to hold court in his place, All the Year Round. Cost of Booming: in Georgia, I heard an amusing conversation between two property holders. One was speaking of improved values of property around Augusta, when he said: "A real estate holder in Augusta is afraid to try to boom his property for fear of having his tax assessment increased. Ii a man goes out on the street and makes the innocent remark that he wouldn't take $25,000 for certain property, up goes the assessment to $25,000, even though he couldn't get $20,000 for it." The other speaker said: "One day 1 had some friends at my house to dine. During the dinner I was asked what my place was worth, and we were all feeling good, and I wanted the value of the place to sound well, so I gave some extravagant figure which I could never have got for it One of my guests happened to be a tax assessor, and, would you believe it, my assessment was increased according to my rosy hued state- ment" TOILS OF ante-tradin- The Tonic Kirect of l!athlnK. The tonic effect of bathing is caused by the contraction of the surface blood vessels, which drives tlie blood back to the larger blood vessels and the heart. These react and send the blood rushing back to the skin, causing the glow which follows the bath, or ought to ful low it, the free respiration and the vig But suddenly, as he knelt there looking up into my eyes, I saw a look in his face that I could not understand a look that made me cry out and begin to tremble; and I saw others draw near: orons feeling of the muscular system and 1 saw Madge clasp her brother's The bath should always be followed by hand, and the old man held out both of friction with the hand, a brush or a towel. his to me. The freqii"iicy with which it should be "We have been parted five years," said "In that time 1 have been taken depends entirely on circumstatice,-I- t Gideon. should be often enough to keep tin searching for something that I believed must be hidden in the wide world. I pores open and ths s!;i'i cleiti. for does of the breath;::;'. ;;:i have found it." if it is clogg d the lilies mast do .:m "Gideon, tell me," I cried. work and they will beowrburdeiieil. A: "Could any earthly thing but one embolden me to speak as I have spoken to a rule the move rapidly a hath is ta'.i. its c.i vts I Seriid your" said Gideon. "Do you think that the better v.U 1 would ever have offered rioalt'i. anv wotim .l HElt SERPIITS Of MSUSI, so allowing bow ccMniiiy JSHAKEOFFTHE HORRID SNAKC3 laev ffivanpla darair and link latoia Mrly V- A naataaaaaua.iaartaukLris OUR NEW BOCK grava. vermis r limited th phUosephr f o- - DlieM Affliction! of tb of Mm, ud how by HOME THtAI WtN I, Bothodi xclMiTolT omr ud a Orr&Bf t ova, tho won! rmmem at toPt or FkUiBff MftBttoe4. Do ui Mflroi Qral Weavkno- of Bodv i4 MtB, Effect! of Errors I'., nn fhranlUB OrfftBt mr Skuiii. Btantod Taped. Bnffiti H Of OEOANB PARTS of BOUT ni ado pUia to kll inUrtiUd. Mm itMifv fmim Stow. TemioriPO nd Pvroina Conatrlca. TnufMto wriwthrTB. For Book,foll-plni'oti- rJ pnfi, ,4rfii. tRIEMEDICALCO.BUFFALO.N.Ya. GEO. A. LOWE. -- DEALER IN icultural Wagons, Ilpllfe Buggies, Road Carts, Buckboards1. Turbine Wheels, Engines Saw Mills. Wagon Material, Heavy Hardware, Iron and Steel. Baker Barbed Wire, Black- smith Tools, Etc. OGDEN UTAH. CALIFORNIA Cream Prunes -- The moral seems to be either that a man had better talk "poor," or else that the assessors should take something more substantial as their basis of assessment than a man's after dinner or taJk. Augusta (Ua.) Chronicle. THE , d In a II 1KI thraiitlvM, Tby naka arel eBoru ia rrt vo 0 Etiqi'-tt- MEN OKLY- OF- A very pleasant Laxntive, made from of Fresh Prunes combined with a few harmless vegetable ingredients of and highly medicinal qualities, put up in the foim of the juice well-know- n CREAM DI40PS, Making a very valuable preparation FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN, Assimilating the food and Regulating the Stomach and Bowels. IT PROMOTES DIGESTION, RB6T. IT IS A WONDERFUL CHEERFULNESS-AN- REMEDY For Constipation, Socr Stomach, Convulsions, Loss of Sleep, Worms, Feverishness, etc. PRICE 25 CENTS. For Sole by all Druggists. BRIGGS MEDICINE CO., E.ir FrcTicirco, Cii!l.for?.ia. |