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Show lilt EXAMINER Puklirtf Eva; luMirk by Tha Day in the Vaar Pueliahing C Subscription iates. Drllvtred by Carrier m Ogden Citjr, fcMMdlag Baaday More-la- i Axamiaar, pw Meath.. Tta 5 Single copses FtAKLIM ana INBLPENCENT. Tha DnahAir la a lUtfilT it gM ali aewiwaper. 0V, kiiil favorltos, baa laa aaB au aaaalaa ia gnuish. ii will lade-pratls- u mil rad. aaaiaarB aaB preoeatsd la tram luuiva bat iba trua bbsm aiuat ba yabaabaB ia lull. All totters aaB ladi-vldual- glumes, ar i.amniart aama, will ba UiNti la tba auM basket. ' Tba brave aiaa never bldca bahlnB aa aaauawB anaa. Don't nak the Ub lor ta ba nayoaaibla (ar wbat you ar aahaiaaB ef. Subacriban wU. oaatar a Javur Ibia tBaa of lailun ta receive Tba Kaaiouer balor Ualr breahtosL by lutorauay oa b Tha IfermiBg K""'1 (euad aa anla by tba iaBayaaBani Nawa Ca, Balt kaba City. Oa all ibrouBb traiiu leaving Ogdra oa Tb Southern Pacific Railway. Tba Ualoa raolfio Railway, and Tba Oreg-- Bbort Una Hallway. yntroaa will eo&lar a tavor ua tba Biaaagemat by to thla oiBca whenever tby (ail to dad tba pa para at tba Baatg-aataflorae. d eentl-ntenl- PISTOLS IN THE ARMY. A lumbar of effiocra la tha United Rtatoe cavalry service ara advocating Iba arming f mountad troope with pltol Instead of aabra and Captain Butler of tha am;, whan nuked la what tba UMupa warn moat deficient, aald: "1 ahould any without haaliation, the uae of tba plaiol mountad. I hope that In tha aaar future tha .(B caliber pistol will ta iaauad again. Aa tha moral affect It aaanw to me the man with tba plaiol la favored. Tha morn ooBaotaunnean that at a ear-talataga yon are at tha terrible disadvantage of not being able to atrike bark, to any nothing of a poaoible wound from a .45 calibre pintol, la of to tha taka out a man. heart enough In a melee It certainly la a oueetiou of your Ufa or tha other maa'a and under tha clrcumatanoea 1 ahould prefer to fare tha aaber ratlier than tha buaineea and of the ytatul. 1 think every one win agree that ahooting la by far tba moat Important part of the eoidier education. if more target practice la allowed with tha riffle and pfetol tba reaulia will ba moat ratifying to all conoeraed." a A AS SHOTS. policeman In Chicago met a thug and oummaadad him to halL The d tape rate character, believing that a Chicago policeman could not hit a barn at rifle practice, took .flight and escaped. xha officer fired several shots, killing one bystander and wounding sen; her. lbe Chicago policeman ia not aa ex- . ccptlon. The avenge city patrolman ha i little knowledge of the uae of a weapon and with one in his hand ia a .greater eeurce of danger to others In the nnge of hla gun than he la to (ha escaping criminal. This Is not the fault of the officer of the law. for good markmanahip ia not required of successful applicants for police ser vice. .But marksmanship should be made a qualification and It U a weak-Oti- s la any police force when the ir.no are untrained in the use' of firearms. How to fire with sccnracy does noi lead to an unnecessary display of weapons, but when a shot is necessary to bilug a thug to a halt, the man behind the gun should be certain that hla sun is nut so wide ot ' tne mark that innocent people will be killed or fnjnrrd. Our own police depuimieui should require rifle or pistol practice, aud i very man on the foro should be trained until skillful. This is nut ah together a proposed Innovation, for n number of eastern cities are now providing for pistol practice by their guardian! of the peace. good-feelin- BOOM. This boom in mining in Nevada has oe'ipsed al other booms and now It Is rf.inost impossible t cm mining is.i-;o look at u prospect beyond the of the Battleborn State. For a quarter of a century the Investor had u aeslre In visli a Nevada property and that aversion continued until Tun-ipathen Uoldht-Jd- , Bullfrog and Nan-- l auin became, each In turn, the sensation of the raining world. Tor a time It seemed ii. ihougb Goldfield bad failed to meet expectaslum p. Then tions and there was esme the fabulous discoveries on Jl haak and since then people hive t llietr head? figuring oiethe prof) they lulcht. have made bad they bought Mohawk when it was being hawked around fur ten cents a abate, aouie-- f i..K over ;i yrar ago. Nevada la having its day. but evet.-t- i i ly ('tali will receive the attention brnm-.lail- o-- 1: g uuaelf-lahnee- ut u d eii-ah.- -- That man ia one of my friends. remarked the novice in' public life, Which kind?" responded Senator SorKrpuhUrsn: People who give ; lie ghum. "Friends, you know, are divided Aioriiion church credit for the rhangi-o- Into twa great classes; those whom yuu need and those who need you." politics in Ltah forget thsi mhc Vaaiingon Star. iniiuenres sere al work in other sutr t IT IS TO SMILE. aud that precisely the same attalueil. whs To II c ton fast ia also to die loo if fast. in 18W a Democratic elected itut was States ihj Iniled Prospective heir are usually glad to In IbiKS a Kepubliran succeed'! V.m, wear dead mens shoes. The wor ker with the most sand usufifteen states reversing their tic'iu:i ally Is the Aral to raise the dust. of four years before. To Ins- one's head is often the imistic mediate In 1892 Illinois elected a to losing ones feel. IT some of your china ha been in r it governor. But four ei reversed '.hat iliTisi'in. mi, :u .in, the laiuiiy for rears, you probably wash your own dishes. sequent e;ecii"us has been k.mh,: an When she p.xir young man finds a ' hundred b m n average of over lich beiter half." he also is apt tn Republican majority m each I'.ceiiun. find better quarters. The song of the nightingales may he Tet there sere nu Mtuniou iisllut so mournful because morning after find their bill all over - morning they OTHER NEVADA'S 1 s F. POLICEMEN n poe-aeaa- nr" 1iyt,t - WEDNESDAY MORNING, MiYKMHKK 2S, uti mtne-a- l recug-Itlrlu- ! IbaaiiaMaitai vlu ba wceivu aa ail UTAH, 1 THE Author of Tha Circle, INFLUENCES. f Pn-si.it- n - i : I u bad Vennsvjvnr.i governor ten year- - ago. Inn fui H wmv Hind .in nearly a quarter n!' ,i niirio;: Moimou do ml cuiitiul P im-- y et i. i.- lie i H ..mu dew. They say a woman's i onlv natural, after should find lieraelf at when she ha thrown head- .- Succeaa aim Is poor. It ail. that ahe a mans feet herself at hi Magazine. Etc. a edge snd unfamiliar! ry. bred of much deurrlptiou on CkUcote'a part, he put his hand on the study door and, still exalted by the omen of hla Brat sue ceaa, turned the haudle. Inskle the room there was firelight aud lamplight aud a studious air of peace. The raalisaiiwi of this and n slow incredulity at (hik-ute- s voluntary renunciation were his first Impressions. Then his attention was needed for more immluant thing. As be entered the new secretary was volume to Its place on the returning book shelve. At sight of him be pushed it hastily into position and turned CHAPTER 1 Ia au impenetrable Loncum tog John Ckilcote. s promt-Ben- t and rapidly rising uiambar of tha uppoaltzw In parliament, unexpectedly encounters John Luder, a poor writer, who la hia exact double. At thu niouieut tha aggiesaion t( Russia iu Persia la tha all engrossing topic. CHAPTER II Russia la reported to be supporting the rebel In their tight ags.nat the authority of the shah a( Persia, thus distinctly menacing England's Influence in the east. CHAPTER 111 Chileute. who is a slave to morphia, hears of a novel In' which two men exchanged Identities. CHAPTERS IV and V Ckilcote visits Lndwr in the latter' humble quarters and proposes that Luder ahail Impersonate huu wkeu Chilcote la ever-romb.v the craving for morphia and wishes to get out of the world fur the time being. CHAPTER VI Luder accepts. CHAPTER VII Loiler is compelled to wear rings on one of his fingers In order t conceal a scar made In Italy by a pet dog belonging to nn Englishwoman wk.au he had met there and had become very friendly with. u,. ,h,. Cswvriaht, 1B0. hr Harpar b Bralhars SYNOPSifi. Eve saw sud of Wr t the There wa a UiuUu-ii- i quirk, "Are iue-- it your cigai'etimr' k.v ij doubt, ibr-- i a tir of skirls ened towurd a mu1I ib.- m,j l(. knock, aud the intruder v box made ot lizard akin. tered. . in aloud He she "Thank. luuk tlie h,. Far a cuuj le of huiIhL no her. and ua It oed fn :,i ,4m ls The doorway; theu as lzsier made effort to speak ahe moved iuto the oi ter be saw her giam-- ut hi r.ngT reThe glance was injiueuiary Her pL room. Rbe had apparently but Just turned from some eiiiertaiumeiit. lor. parted to expreo question , surpruJ loug then closed again without though she had drawn off her evenan More than any spukeu word the 10 stiil wearing waa ahe gloves, dent allowed him the gulf that w... ing cloak of lace aud fur. That ahe was Okilcote's wife Loder rated husband and wife. Well" be Mid again, whin instinctively realized the moment sbe entered the room. But a disconcerting Fraidef At hi ward all set otnighter confusion of Ideas was all that folq lowed the knowledge. He Blood by the looked at him mure directly, as if br. fit to ing beraeif to a task. daok, silent and awkward, trying "Mr. Fraide ia I as iuiereated bis expectations to bis knowledge. Then, farad by tbe hopelessness of tha ever iu you." ah began. "Or in your Izsler made the iDtcr. task, ba turned abruptly aud looked at ruptluu precisely a he felt chit her again. Rbe had takeu off her cloak and waa would have made It Then Instactiy wished tb word buck. standing by tbe fire. Tbe compulsion Eves warm skin colored more dm, of moving through life alone bad net second the Inscrutable ly. For ita oral upon her in certain self a certain confidence of pad derlylug expression that puaxlsd kin bowed In her eyes, then ohe yet bar figure a Loder then saw It, backgrounded by tbe dark books and back Into earner uf tha chair. "Why do you make such a point g gowned iu pale blue, had n suggestion of youthfulneas that seemed a contra- sneering at my friends?" ahe u 's f diction. The remembrance quietly. "I overlook It when you Bortous." R1m halted alightly oa tH epithets "cold aud "unsympaword. "But you ara not nervous t thetic came back to him with something like astonishment. He felt no night" lzider, to bis grant humiliauuu. ng uncertainty, nu dreed of discovery sad . humiliation in her presence aa he bad doned. Except fur an uccaaiuiial felt lu tlie uiuid's. yet there was some- burst on the part of Mrs. Kotuni, ku Inficharwoman, be bad mot merited a thing iu Iter face tfcat made him luek be man's dispicssure fur years. nitely more uncomfortable, could find ue inuae for. n friendlineee that studiously covered another feel(Continued Tomorrow.) ing, whether question, diairuet or LIBERALIZE dislike hr could net say. With a WILL EPISCOPAL CHURCH. strange Mnaattan f awkwardness he sorted CbUcete's letters, waiting tor her to apeak. Now York, Nov. 2?. Tha New York As If divining hla tkought sbe turn- Tribune today says Indication gr ed toward him. "I'm afraid I rather that the resign at ion of tha Her. Or IntnUsv aba said. ' If'you are bus- y- Algernon 8. Orapaey, of Rochester, hla conviction at heresy by Q III sense ef courtesy waa touched, clMlnatioal court, will net in motto lie bad begun life with a high opinion an effort within the Episcopal ehuns of woman, and tha words shook up an to broaden and liberalise its tensti echo at the old sentiment. Foster Peabody la quoted u George ho said "Dont think that," hastily. saying that while no steps had bam I was only looking through my letaken In that direction yet, a meetioi tter. Ton mustn't rata yourself below of men a more lilierE letters. He was conscious that his church faith wm likely, to discus the tone was hurried, that hla words were sentence pronounced on Dr. Crap; a little Jagged, but Eve did not appear and IU bearing on themselves and dw situation w(diln the church. to notice. Inlike Greening, she took general Y special Mr tktt tha new manner without surprise. Rbe in A Rochester, N. Rev. Algeria g. the a with talk tor six years. had known rhlicele It developed that if yesterday Crapsy "I dined with the Fntida tonight" tor three years service in the Epi she Mid. "Mr. Fralda sent you a mes- copal church, and after having built um-mal- By KATHERINE CECIL THURSTON. g BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. TKa rafii.na U a ky BBli uutatd of Ugfla gur year. .f&.uO Ai leeM auariaruL I advance.. Lu baa OGDEN, a MXp tba EXAMINER to allernaie with Uniu eealth warrai't. Tit. re regulsril) between the panics baa been no greater dividend payer than Park ivy' Ontario or Sfjer and meie was not for years a majority of over loi'ty tbouand f.r either. But King, or Eureka s BuLton Heck. Tcer-ii.' Ohio ia Republican by two hunnave beta no greater opportunity thousand. And there 1 no dred of than fortunes i"f f..r the making io:muu induauce there. prer anted iu the repeated ruatoisiva Indiana used to be Democratic more to activity of Bingham. Than is no half the lime. Bat Frank Hanly thau for field more promialng richer, in Ibt4 U by ninety "led cm1 vast today than in Itah's mluttral-boarihand (here are nu .Mormon in Inmountaui range,. Alter the eacitemeut to the nest of u. man. T!i fact is. the nation has turned there will coin a bourn ia I'tah. for this atate has wealfb untold yet to . to the Republican parly. 1'iah would ilevciopod, which can be mads to ve- ue toe krassuaiesi atate In the nation !f it piesanted a record dlffeieat than in vest ora. rb h the liist uow seen. It isn't a question of churches. It ON NATIONAL VIRTUES. Is a matter of individual human Judgiiaily I'nion: Secretory Boot baa ment. People have come to believe that the Country la better off under lately taken a long step toward the tabllahnaent of bis position as a mate- - lit publican than under Democratic man. We use tha word lu Ita wldeat mil. And they vole that way.. Yuu can't keep them from it. and boat aeuao, because for a long tlm tbaiw baa beep the fullest Nothing ia so useless aa to try. - And n i.hiug ao fatuous as U go lu the That the Beeretary of State every mental equipment and clurch for a reasun here when preevery reaourre of knowledge. for the cisely the same results are being dehigh wad responsible duties to which rived from admittedly other than be haa been called. We know him as church causes by every Northern state a niau of oxtraurdluarUy keen Interest, lu the L'ulou. a ntaa to be relied upon In every emerMan want but little here below-- -a gency calling fur penetrating and critfew paltry millions with all the glitical dlacenimeat. Such capacities sa those posseahed by Secretary Knot ate ter attached. indispensable to foreign policies of While doctors disagreed over an tba nation, bul They do not constitute the whole of statesmanship In the Omaha man's disease, he died, and thus sense In which that word will be ul- escaped a wprse fate. timately used. In the apeerh recently delivered by House veil baa returned from Panthe Becmarj of Star at Kansas City, ama. Now fur the big stick and Its Hu., he fully displayed (he mental neat victim -- a turkey. powers that have made hint rentai-t'ai'uao la now accused by chorus able, ami he also proved his poesessloii of the mural perceptions that are In- plrl, of improper conduct. The even separable from high sutesmaimblp. tenor uf hla way seems to be of late The occasion was a meet lug of the beset by numerous shocks and Jars. of the diplomatic representative! A Denver Judge says: Latin American Republics, and it is Religion is gratifying to find that these gentle- a cluak," and we have noticed that It a la au exceedingly popular one, as It men hastened o applaud tha generally covers all shortcoming. put furs aid on behalf of America. Forty-thre- e rail roads have been The iieart of Secretory Knotts speech was an repression of his con- charged by the luteretaie Commerce viction that commercial espanalnn CMiinilaslon of watering their stuck, from the lutnr national point of view which la a bad slate of affairs as the depended mure upon the cultivation of public furnishes the weter. national virtues then upon the signNow comes a retired general and ing of treaties, and that without such cultivation there ran be neither con- declares that San Juan hill was not cord nor progress. He went so far as captured by tba Rough Riders at to asy that nation lu their relation to whiiee head was the Praeident. It was one another ahould be guided by pre- taken at toe coat of American blood and which Is sufficient to satisfy most peocisely Hi use rules of elf respect that animate Individuals ple. whqhsve learned how to lubricate the LEONCAVALLO wheels of life by courteay aud Nation, he nays, are like Noted Composer Began Cartsr ns men: Pianist. NaMona have sou la and consciences Few of Leoncavallo's auditors who aa truly as tadlvldual cttiien. The watch Ms masterly handling of the life of the just and faithful and kindly orchestra from Ln Seals, the great man who a respected and beloved by house In Milan. Italy, are aware hla neighbors la the type of what ev- opera cf the fact that the noted composer ery rltlsea ahould wish his own coun- tegan hla career aa a professional In Ita to lie ail relaUona to other try countrla. Ta be narrow and hard, self pianist. His first appearance in rotirert was 1th and grasping; to he arrogant toin Egypt, where hia uncle. Loon-cward the weak and timid in maintain- made alio Hey, was director ot the press ing the right against the qtroug; to be a: the foreign office. Through the inunwilling to give kindly considera- fluence of his uncle he was permitted tion to the rights and Interests and to at the court of the Khedive, feelings of others, to be without sym- So piny masterly waa hla handling of tha pathy or helpfulneae tor the rest of pianoforte thut ha wan Immediately mankind all these thing make an Inprivate musician to MuhanJ dividual man despised and hated in appointed the brother of the Viceroy. llumdy, the ouumunlty. Holland's Influence Leoncav-a'lWe should taka the name pains to Through was uRclally pnmiUed an help our country avoid them that, wo a director of the Egyptian would take to avoid them ourselves. Military bands, at a libera salary. He went on to say that moat nf the At this time, howrerer. war between disputes between nations arise from England and Egypt was' declared, and of the Egyptians at the rooted belief that all the right' Is alter the defeat Leoncavallo realized necessarily upon one aide and all the that the promise would never be fultha and the that filled. To escape from the camp of other, wrong upon Introduction Into International matters the conquered, he disguised himself as an Arab, and after n baiardoiin of the Madly consideration that Is hour rile of twenty-fou- r ranched aa a matter of course by neighIsmlalla. Is bor to neighbor Without friends or money, he was rarely expected and still more rarely displayed from nation helpless. At tlii, point he was for--t tiiate in the Interest of to nation. Monsieur lleswrsry at Port Raid, who And then Secretary Rout turned to lepresented .11. Tie Lease pi' Interest the question of arbitration, and he In the Riipz canal. In (he French-r.ian'- a home Ijeunrsvallo was enabled again showed that hla ideas were from recital, and with the the heart aa well aa from the bead (j hire a phuu which amounted to nearly He commended every effort that Is proceedi. ;ou franca, the young pianist was Bow being made to show the fully and to get hark lu the country, where the wastefulness of war: harmony, rather than war. prevailed. But the true preventive of war Is PLEASANTRIES. the wllllngtieaa of the people of the world to be Just toward one another; Mrs. Rummer Dues your husliand the atroug desire of the people of the drink rKulr1y? earth to be kind toward one another: Mrs. Hogan No. mum; my wages the application of the same rules bv all Isn't steady. Judge. men to nil their collective treatment of other nations which good citizens Farmer Hey, you! There aint no apply to their Individual treatment of alKNitln' here! antifinal true The and other. each Boy trespasser, with a gun-T- her dote for war In the love of Justice and ain't. ain't they Ray, are you deaf? who make peace among the people, Judge. war or preserve peace. '.Virhle is fairly going craav over It la such thoughts as these that constitute statrumanahip the recogni- his new autuniublfe.'' Thai's strange. Every time I've tion riiHt the world motes forward seen him he haa been going crazy unw ewlll have Ideas whether moral upon der it." t'hlcago Tritium-- . it eo or not, the perception that there Du you konw. 1 can talk with a can lie no nalkusl nor individual life minute and tell Just person without them, and that eierytbiug what he twenty thinks of me." Is an to them Don't you often find it unplearant ?" contrary Milwaukee Sentinel. and a disease. Its give MORNING THE 4 a. u. Chil-cote- - round. I 'wm making few note on the political position of Khorskuo, be said, glancing with slight apprektnlvnaa at the otner face. He was n small, nby man, with few social attainment, e but au extraordinary amount of antithesis of tbe alert whom he had replaiwd. Luder bore his scrutiny without y flinching. ludeed. It struck him that there waa a fund of Interest. almost of excitement. In the encountering of each new pair of eyes. At the thought be moved forward ta the desk. CHAPTER VIII. Thank you. Greening. be said. A O all men route portentous movery useful bit of work." menta, difficult momenta, triThe secretory glanced up. slightly umphant moments. Imder bad had his example of all three, puaxled. Hi endurance bad been sebur no moment lu his career ever verely taxed In tbe fourteen days that hla new post. equaled In strangeness of seuaatlou ha had filled "Im glad yon think ao, air," be said. that lu which, dressed lu auolher mans clothes, h fitted the latchkey far the Ijesltatiugly. "Ton ratlier pooh pooh rd first time lute the dour of the ether tbe matter thin morning. If you remember." man's house. Loder waa taking off Ida coot, but The act was quietly doue. The key stopped In the operation. fitted the lock smoothly, and his finOh, did This moruIngT" ha raid. gers turned ft without hesitation, tb opThen struck IT IT Did by his heart, usually extremely though him he turnsteady, bast sharply for a second. The portunity the words gave You've ed toward the secretary. got ball loomed massive suit somber, desthe of electric lights. to get used to me, Greening," ha aald. pite modernity It waa darkly aud expensively dec- "You haven't qnlie grasped me yet-yon orated In black and brown: frlese ran are. Im a man of moods, seen know. lp to the present you're of wronght bronsc. representing pm-nlmy alack side, my Jarred aide, but I with outsprasd tails, ornamentI rare ta ed the walls; the banisters were of have quite another when show It. I'm a sort of Jekyll and Hyda heavy Ironwork, snd the somewhat he laughed, and Green formidable fireplace was of the same affair." Again echoed the sound diffidently. Chillag dark metal. cote bad evidently discouraged familLnder looked a bom him. then adiarity. vanced. hla heart agsiu (testing quickLoder eyed him with abrupt underly as hi baud touched the cold banlie recognised the lonaU-nes- s standing. ister snd ha begun his ascent of tha In the anxious, conciliatory manStair. Rut at each step his confi- ner. dence strengthened, bis feet became "You're tired, he said kiudly. "Go more firm until, at (tie head qf the to bed. I've got some thinking to do, (tain, a If to disprove hi smurance, Good night. He held out his hand. hla pulse played him false onro more, Greening took It. still half distrusttill time to a more serious tune, iroui ful of this fresh side to ao complex a the farther end of n well lighted cor- man. ridor n maid was coming straight In Tomor"Good night air." ha said. his direction. row, If yon aiprove, I shall go on with For one short second all things my notes. I hope yuu will have n seemed tn whiz about him: the cerrestful night." over lowered his tainty uf dete-tloFor a second Loder! eyebrows weul The Indisputable knowledge mind. Up, but he recovered himself Instantly be aald, "Ah, (banks. Greening, that he w lohn I Oder and no other, despite all snnor of effrontery and I think your hope will ba dress, so iloudusted him that sll other Thanks. comdilerstimis shrauk licfore It. It fulfilled. Ht watched the little secretary move wanted hut nue word, one simple word to the door, of denunciation, and the whole schema sofiliu sud apologetically to the-firthen walked he and, restwaa nhattered. the the of In disiipiy ou tbe mantelpiece, he elliows his ing moment he slrnoet wished that the In his bauds. word might lie spoken and the sus- took his face Fur a apace he stood absolutely ended. pense his bauds dropped to hla But the maid came on In ailem-e- , sud quiet then he turned slowly round. In and aides, so incredible was the silent1 that that short space he bad balanced IxMler moved onward too. Tie came snd found hla lies rings. The wtthlu n ynnl of her, end still she did things nervousness shown In bis light not Hk. Then, as he passed her. seuieuces aud overconfident brusque be drew hack respectfully agslusr miuncr faded out, and be faced facts tile whII. The strain, so astonishingly short steadily. Vltl tbe return of his calmness ba had hen Immense, tint with its slacktook a loug survay of tbe room. lUi exThe came a ening strong reqctlon. glance brightened appreciatively ns It pected humiliation eeethed suddenly traveled from the walls lined with well to a desire to dare fate. PausiLg bound books to the lamps modulated to be sud called the turned quickly, the projier light; from Die lamps to the hack. desk fitted with every requirement The spot where he had balled was Nothing was larking. All be had once vividly bright, the ceiling light being possessed, all be bad aime dreamed of. was here, lint on grantor scale. To enjoy the luxuries of life n man must go long without them. Issler had lived severely so severely that until three weeks ago he had believed himself exempt from the temptations of humanity. Thqn the voice of the world had apoken. and within him another voice had answered with a tons so clamorous and Insistent that it Lnd .outcried his surprised and Incredulous wonder at its existence and Its claims. the voice of suppressed That had ambition, and now as he stood In tbe new atmosphere a newer voice lifted Itself. The Joy of material thlnga rose suddenly, overbalancing the last rera-naof the philosophy he bad reared. He saw all things In a fresh light tbe soft carpet, the soft lights, the i numberless unnecessary pic mini, i things that color the passing land-- I ecupe and oil the wheels of life. This j waa power- - power made manifest The i choice binding of one's books, the ' quiet harmony of one's surroundings, tbe gratifying deference of ones thAse were the visible, tbe outward signs, tbe thing she had for-- 1 gotten. Crossing tbe room slowly, he lifted and looked at the different papers on Loder !"( hit SCTUWOV irdhouf IhHrhiHjJ. the detk. They had a aulwtantial feeldire.");.- 'tl.i.w his head, and as ahe ing. an Importance, an air of value. rank- - I'xiMrd him be raised his face They were like the solemn keys to aa waited. many vexed problems. Beside tbe paHiii'.ih at him without surprise pers were a heap of letters nestly art or ranged Slid as yet unopened. Tie turnYe, sir? she said. - i r mistress InY' he asked. He ed them over oue by one. They wera could of no other question, but it nil thick ii nd interesting to look at He srj HinI nn he recalled hia own erred purpose as a test of hi Toil t scanty ninU- - enrehqie long and bulky Rtlil (in utHnau vbuwpd ue urvicfe-Rbor uartrxc and thin, unwelcome manu:ui m. ir." ahe answered. Bul scripts or i cry welcome checks. Use-lushe's an boar." in sorted the letters, he hesitated. Tt bi lit.f nn bonr? AU right. That's was his life task to open them, but be nil wuiued." With n movement of bad never in his life opened an enveldevi- - t "i i.'ier walked back to the stair ope HdJressed to another man. bead, lie stood Uncertain, weighing them to tbe right and opened the doer if Chilcote' room. in his hand. Then all at once a look The ilu ir opened on short ide of attention aud surprise crossed hla t'i .iw aide stood the srnly. on fare, uid he raised IPs head. Roma the iii'ut 'be lied, lstli snd dre .ug one lisd iiTimisraksbly paused outside room. N lib a blind sense of kimwl tbe dcHr which Greening had left ajar. e Icarn-lug-tb- Bless-ingto- sud-doul- fli -- e actual who-desire- , up a church property valued a he withdraws from the print hood practically pennlleM and with nut even a home to go to. Hia l charities, added to what he has given into the church, have been many and large and hare depleted hi resources. down?" Dr. Oapsey. it ia stated, alii mw now. and They were near together devote himself to disseminating hi he mw her face more fully. Again ho views on the platform and through tin waa taken aback. Chilcote had spoken medium of the press and reviews. of her a successful and Intelligent, bat never ns bsantlfuL Tet her Imanty o rare aud uncommou fact Her o wm UNION PACIFIC REPORT. 0 hair wm black nut n glossy black, but o o the dusky black that Is softer than any O brown bar eyes wera Urge and of a O P'fi IncrasM in Grow Receipts 0 . 0 O- foe 1904. lieculiarly pure blue, and her eyelashes O were black,' beautifully curved and of O as0, New York, Nov. 27. The remarkable thick uetui. ' O nunl report of the Union Pi- - 0 Weut you alt down? ha Mid again, O clflc system for 1906 shove 0 cutting abort bis thoughts with soma O gross transportation receipt at 0 confusion. O $67,281,541, nn Increase over 0 "Thank you. Rite gravely accepted O 1905 of $7,956,591, and other 0 i be proffered clisir. But he mw that O Income of $10,829,815, nn Is- 0 without any oateutatimi she drew her O crease of $3,538,056, Tha me- 0 skirt azide aa she pawed him. Tb O plus for tha yrar; after p7-- 00 O ment of fixed charges, adlvlaction displeased him unaccountably. O (lends and appropriations (Or 0 bad what Well be Mid shortly, O betterment, additions and new 0 Fraide to say?" He walked to tha O equipment, wan $8,032,249, an 0 mantelpiece with hla cimtouary move- O Increase of $812,96$. The sum 0 ment and stood watching bar. Tbe O of $4,200,000 was devoted to 0 toward hiding his face bad left O betterments, additions and new 0 him. Her Instant and uninterested c O equipment, and 12,206,610 was 0 to operating expenses 0 ceplauce ef him almost nettled him. O charged Ilia own Iwlf contemptuous Impression O as a reserve fund for matnten- 00 etc. of anre O renewals, of Chilcote came to him unpleasantly 0 and with It tbe first desire to assert his O own individuality. Slung Iqr tbe conflicting emotions, he felt lu Cbllcotc's WANT ADS YIELD BIG REfiULU sage." Luder smiled. There was humor in the thought of a mesTa sage to him from tbe great hid hla amuaaiiMut he wheeled sue of the big lounge chair forward. "Indeed," he Mid. "Won't yon nit L'u consciously - fi-eld- ooooooooooooo ct oooooooooooooo v pockets -- Tieke. PURS FURS so-nia- u An Elegant Line of Each REESE HOWELL & SONS DRESS DRESS GOODS GOODS- 0 ut , YOU CAN GET Z. C. M. I. Home Made (Shoes - - '; i:iti-"..,- For men, boys, misMPi and children again in Ogden. They are the old reliables, every pair guaranteed, as well s the w I- 1 e g 1 Ladies Pillow Shoes THE SHOE FOR TENDER FEET, at he Fifth Ward Shoe Store 513X 2516 MADISON AVE. BELL PHONE Catalog and Samples. T. A. SHREEVE |