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Show og oo MARCH 31, 1907. THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, v WhitMount miles apart. seventy-five ney isfecka foot two owen' morelevel, than while 14,Shei aborts or "the hurry, the young baronet was with the | designing Park party at Morcambe; they were|you what 6 Death valley, as above stated, Is feet. below. Before the Salton sink, also in southern California, was Nooded by the Colorado river it contained lowest level. point a of dry spot.287 ; land feet i in this below - BY : sea oui A> figures varying below sea level. from The 250 level California now aie in which and to 4500 feet | Jor Frankland, line of the officer ride off, points of dry gn and he saw that turned to moment. down low Cadets Are Busy from Six In the Morn | V0 gallant|} address| With his straw over his eyes, he a ae }Was "I a hench replace it exactly morning. ible as You word-ruin, I|beat quicker, un-|tilon his master suddenly going can't explain any further, poere all thib we or but not not one eagerness one sign pulse|ing of marred agita-|a the sternly cre seren-|we Ot foil back at in Sir |young O'Donnell six years going to bring Sir Arthur Arthur in the dock mad?]/at dinner. My and it|/that distressing lady was headache, * ae sittin Sikes night failin . wpe chair look before hint do on. ago, he was|hot to his bearis a |ings tonight." The archery party returned; |rated for a brief space, and met ae z his : ee under ees an britiant: Tea tonth h of mine tha cr > and. i sleep well on veiy? bri ae cent m sepa-|nights. It was past sleveutaanieao again | Went up to my ron I kn P w it.cs seized with | useless to | to bed; and disap- | down to write half a 50 ianreatt dozen lett I "tt you to know. Be|pered immediately after, Miss Hern-| Was half-past twelve when JI fuiste e keep sober, e stle er wake, 8 ele ° - ¢ me find you with Srnttee rellawed "eult, Mis O' Don. Sawn by ce opal a, clear and. ‘sat larches at half-j|nell, looking pale and fagged, made|Mmyself into sleepiness if I could. The keep early hours|her excuses and sought her room, |Stable clock struck one, still I felt no Will : be. still' By now that pons Lady Cecil insisted upon accompany-|inclination toward drowsiness. » While go, ~ mind, not a word of this|ing her. Squire Talbot cut short his|1I still sat there, to eed surprise, I saw, Lord |at that hour, a woman and man crossdeparted. moodily and visit ; a ~S Lan Lafferty went-his mouth|]Ruysland and Sir Arthur were left|ing the flelds and approaching Scars. ‘ 0 open, an a he forge a /nad al have If orgot to shut|/alone before it was quite half-past|}wood. ad ft fallen have. atic fu as doubt. "you. yond. to fae inclined seemed Fate lit, his eyes were like full moons, that|nine, "troth through; nearly every | ye his master passed In and ae of blank horror and. consternation. Open a grave in the dead of night to ing Till Ten at Night. in friendly convereé.with Lauty"tet® oats . ieee er e From H. Irving Hancock's "Our pane Mr : z was repeeting Lafferty " ye rat : ws . Military Academy undred-Year-Old = April St' Nicholas: a strode away at once through the town /js not necessary for and to his quarters in the Silver Rose.|on hand, as I said; The slouching, cockney-looking: indi-|no noise, and let id siop to whom oa ee oe Joggins under the ep on ae at the Silver one oc past eleven. They oo POINT ROUTINE. WEST contains, Work golly, 1 tonight. If he failed, the whole fu-|be cured." ture might be told in one brief, forcHe leaned Captain O*Donnell, and found to his|see what a coffin contained. Al the Surprise that Captain O'Donnell Was | ‘divilment" of the past paled into ingone. The chasseur, indeed, had-not | significance beside this crowning act. goes on re cord as the | lingered a extremes meet-the! hat pulled lowest XX. Night's FLEMING dinner, nat soqner. H play his last great stake Pe Lavoe reat "a my own eyes bad snap els to to met. ever I women : . erstand?" ity of his handsome pa 4 When my Lord Ruysland had finUnderstand. Mr. Lafferty was star- Re coolly, as aatiberately ue ts aid pall aa the ghost ished his little paternal lecture to Ma-/ing at his master with an expression|pronounced sentence of doom upon|oak, of which m geological survey is believed (o be the first accurate determination of eleva-| tions in that locality ever mad highest land. Dark. AGNES : CHAPTER ae revious estimates of the depth ¢ Death valley, based on - barometer readings, gave for the lowest point] ‘N MAY to return was going «x the country, i summon the fy, and give the pele very cleverest Th to Scarswood park ere Was nojyou need far only and California southern jn are walk Two} minutes aft-]¢astle with the peer.‘ 1 nearly every |ye may say it's dull wid sorra sowl|pblank expression of consternation still | sides re SE NDT ne ve possesses a very 7 stately we a er: Talbot's a case the boy who wishes to go to West/to spake to maybe from mornin' till |rjgid on his face I kne very commanding figure... he opened the s departure aera erates But thin, , on the other hand, | ae: or two; j her instantly-I also, after a intheak Afler|duel, and fired the first shot. Oh, wirra; Open aa grave! of | P'Sight. year Point must put in'a him Of man. the recognized two, from|or letter a about this is "What down look Lord The o'clock. there's th Haith o. arta and dhrinkin | twelve especially strenuous study% in order to goin' Ato aman ek tna 6 speak, it isth needless me this Arrah! To seetaken and your T departure In|Cornwall a what'sleatelrow. ajon coffin on late an' airly, and niver not|a aelileg ACBL Soiis| vitetomor-|however, heafi Arthur? Sir <is'-it- worst the is place West Point Weet. eine room Point Ena acegaze Baw around 4k lcoka,‘his Then L . Has Several |i tis se ' : ; ; e Ae ay a notice Lanty's com- him, | us tomorrow?' under the awful duty assigned the/ed _|but he would have obeyed. And he sy positively all ac era and bid | ful ‘The eed. yer honor, anxious she misthress was! | young the fer tell you me was 1e eyevening e 5 , a jdark. = ing ray gray deepened into Ten came-the stars were out, | ut there was no moon. Captain|]"so leave tomorrow. the folowing night. again Sir Arthur Tresaw I you, tell I as surely as genna, I watched and aroused, vere I wish week.' last gone Heanaes said iton moodily, drumming with|her steal softly before under midnight, my window,anda minutes not look-|f@Ww and the table, his from them warn to an' | sheets had |I of legion a shouldnow,risealthough in theirtheirwinding-| dread- | obey would this Misther Redmond, and I saw | Shosts above daughter, =" nses lord's the ee ucie [Not over an' above well" | sea she stood and watched him out of me wrote Pennwalder nagher! upon me sowl it bangs the| deferred. All this was nearly about two week ago urging me to return. There's sight. divil."" y, Mr. Laf-]a fever among my people, there have |in the morning, mind, when everyBut to rebel, to Page een mining accidents and much dis-|body supposed the governess to be in Had his master eel did not drean How she got in I It is greatly to my' discredit|bed and asleep. nformed him it was his painful duty | tre sacs know. ie She came down the next to some one, éand he (Lanty) a v o my y duty so do neglected have I that ) to !was murder ss the sacrifice, thaf]] corning, ° looking as self-possessed an and /faithful henchman might have groan"Humph! then you positively leave ene as. ever. My suspicions enils of they lately ; Rose my under directly almost in solutely long too parted |they I heard him promise not to | Window. abbe left to he appeared betray her. hisShepower. When usi- drift. your business-business "Yes, but dinner, at Dangerfield |did not quite catch ness, I suppose?" Bannagher! bang disi'nt this |ay be would it entirely Seeneae liss ane abate Moe | will no taking Se ladyship, her = vane i sta ff arts t nis ‘thatat.alects Santitent £ au TaielaceultAs ys a Several Theories as to-Derivation of Name-It sous at the academy eerap of -paner- that on‘the-fioor, or' any understand him unddinesa and 271 Park at| Jet a ‘ther . :; ;: : life Beliynaheggart ee |... ee arrah? | But Casstleford. instead _of By shure eee t have iverything masther himself, en ioe Re Lanty" hie westéc ree Tine aA y, with a nod, sponded, passing through He is-arousfor a lazy or stupid boy has ed -at.6- o'clock in' the-riorning, a stated number of minutes in which os ay ad Ata niet) & few ore minutes in which to ald his roommate = aha ae aon cic : to apartment litthe the setting in } . ea the boy. who wishes to go ‘to MI comfortable Lady ing Faith is! he intiraly aan his |ay cook, the an' barmaid it's little rhyme or raison there iver two as pu ney. pnl..as pleasant-spoken ICs @/was wid him or wan av his name, but kiss. ye'd wish to eae Ban- with what is before him in case he the academy, in entering succeeds possible time, yer half do the ov spake to to turn han's exam - compared nothing is That ination entrance the pass to able be ‘ at his companion 7 So do I," " Lord f Ruysland King's oak i horse could take her post under the ' S The gallop of Sir Peter's spoke} gravely, and with unwonted energy; |be distinctly heard on the road. She do I with all my soul. For the| Were a long dark mantle, and as he Variations--The First.in., England "Was. Possibly atea Nor- |séncoimasters at wests Point,a who are| cc's 8 sister adé beeree "over anda | smoked. ona Toamet himAt tusthis openlast window and | last week rou." Scarswacd has Been 10 eae an ar t off eee but act over sis Tee | Oe' AWIABEE Asin aa : ' fi whilte-her hair fowing her even lord!" act of simple duty to save his |" "My plainly@ |jan and he could sec than lahove well," as*-/enough are looked upon oMeers, Wielded |l,az™y New World Settlers-Have manc Knight-Early ‘ , . eae ren s it was more a mind frjend-the one last proof needed i a ed. What follow ' »f o Large ! Influence as . Writers, Statesmen, my Patriots-One ; the Latin word pyrum, | deed, the granted 1 to to th the! ene ‘ wa as eran at-z oat-armor and French form of the Rane | peace, Steet who Peery or trace Peary, ae Waate cee sections of about Peer paer was name Danish Peerks teenth are German names of Pierie was century of Wareham The six-| DAL provided ace for " the after Mass..]an which hour - and . ae i ene Panga: to men © given with ; 4|)/eyvennee.to away.y. run twenty 7 sree oe S- ‘ MAS Soe a It is high time for me to speak-|©Cat followed you ‘know. . Gh strange discovery he had made. |a false delicacy has restrained me too| Picked up her cloak and made her , be dor a h I tell knows. Heaven back-how, prove unworthy | ¥4y indeed I would coffin]long. done-the be should harm t |shou o ear a us of drill o'clock at hard . allow- from' West to - laee Sun 0 Don eee away stay can who L morning, | st ride lad so tight- across the night ee I will meet speak, sa brid be the conse-|@nd daughter's health a has its | -whatever which theory a} tainly does for name ancient 23, July perriere.| was stones, impressed not is perriere word x: é Spr frunttery," and he received 10 John," of ‘4$0| of] another. of 10 and 20 ten, old pounds one Nor-| Manche, La from came Conqueror's| the William of Many Iaights days study, in is a andfamous therePiron, mindy;called there some place, this from were men of the chateau they kept aS) been atthorities of hey best ‘blood He (The pioneers or first to always|every devote their| There the saying inn [room downLanty ihe the door pe yard and disap-|the winter. I merely mention aie noiselessly ene a roUe | eeeeyes Oe did un-|his had this tion-in h of ym of -eerys ne had have since Viiginia, iy Ol) beginning' the. | quently county: Let in estates pioneers Western ee of ; the f Robert § Peery, S a I a a as home 4 in He made Margaret.W. Janes and mimber hee his twelv ae k the was ‘ eee SOE |prise,'"' his lordship as a at his post-upright arte mL eae then to, aetonce ivray, jp eee pee. was Lanty sur- by "I on, oe "ae or, oe stems five (1). roval they . =a think sometimes must rules eat, duty, by and obey an. officer whether million- a se- indeed is waitin' I tle maids water that it \avebis that a place as English ha in mo I'd ied ud to look only nig thought sich jer, came Uletee make at. whitk As to alle It's oat ! ones Puritanical. ae thim the Geography: Soporitic Best rapidly that they were in ore wae / Castleford y, there "atte light. es ua Methen G 7 g di pieim‘ pay, Sree venturess." That mei teatrier stones eibaaine é g cit One ' ane corne: John What college the nae ie been : Jong sn; may have at fund upon left a ; hea ae bent... and leaves or, a pnird, gules, Hon ea re: head touched and One asleep, Second, | 4% rake two two, Fourth,| gules. lay and had but he pillow the for thus was he was he several wide} hours. Lanty, ‘A can it? yer a light faint the I| the of of need no his acting. bit- many perhaps better be os a Sir °A ‘ienesi hand, looked t‘im full and ne now, 1¢ ne AU will, you if lord - then my snamatit "One Whether it is. {manhood more than I. Still too late to repair my great fault What I have must rest wilh you. ®eturned to England for-what I came must surely for-you to Searswood It was I shame to speak it. Know. Lady Cecil Clive, to see and know aries ed S1L1sSs no last] him emblem. who has a is only lion, performed eranted|to some ser-| Do change asa the friend of your trend mine of thoughts. |-did I drew He last! At the In late it's Faith now? a gv iow EMAL. ly te, 1 Survey Geological le7s. Depth rds iS "°*\ wh another on enribers the New fornia. : York is the of Determining Death Valley Death Sun: point lowest the make cee valley, in the CaltUnit- it is a good short, the narcotic." The Age study of geography "Nothing rectionist {8 to anything it Is eat one er who drink. opens A to them sells and bodies dead steals dissection." for students medic al ie Renner of VPishes, and Science in April Nature From ed States, but to the surprise of everypee list of names of sub: length of The normal Nicholas: the|St. with the region no-one gave, either In yeh itejone acquainted ‘The "And ait) ghastly object \ brightly up They resur- graves, | had \ is a profession- | |ing to all the evening minnows small common our of life has as-| is|U nited States geological survey He The chasseur's gers av- | |al sack'-em-up." five or four exceeds rarely the use of a line of spirit | probably by certained ye a look} Lanty's at way gave nearly but|ity shorter; be much may is| years, and area that of depth the that levels Sete mind, my good fel- | "Never horror. of observa-| satisfactory few are supposed.|there been had as great so not et ‘dine ee subscriptions dissection; | for you sell won't he rule|low, general No point this on tions yet} nol have nae ompR final The ng build towards Medfield be must you before, I said as age|and, the regarding down laid be figures|can made, but the preliminary ~ wi as| been at Cambridge. college age |civil to him despite his profession, for before what a Phe them, GvernGgkeat i ; Length " of lit and empty ay eer Pays eee eee Popa ane nOnbES of sense high RDe an OF "My coffin! | ¥OUr ee An eee yee e a Tether. can be my eyes Therehaveig wife-wheth- the England I leave settled-if is business Cc Yornish the Bat at oa ae a rl' - He was ‘saved! ‘ But his immovable face ening' as immovable as' ever and Arthur "You are but ismortal, SHAE attrwatise & Gerncantia atieé this also." ra a "Lincoln | there | Wood; time Inn, Lord:-In_ demand oot en ae a I I trust; and yet 1 hope, night eft Oe him speak-left ee ae alone then turned before the compliance oe Wilton given. had No ever or ‘never: his fate at onee. Somehear breast his in a stone Hke lay soft the face, beguiling dark, Herncastle..was Helen of onion him thing -the Nita' eyes, ‘his on women his in she earth Of ears. the was o ae for tas have chosen he would woman that written had. Destiny and wife, he must never look on her face again. of the drawthe length passing In to go had he door, to the ing-reom a tiny boudoir, where, on the evenP he had followed ing rae the theatricals, Lady partly neni ot dra folded , only were curtains The her within, seated and Listlessly in her lap, her yes fixed on the dim starlight, he saw oncee more, as onAs on t hat thatevening ing, the earl's daughter. evenhe swept back the curtain, and inI ated. Her dark, tall and half-uttered she Before away. word he was ae by her side. died ce viata ete one speak could what. he had come reac: ) +, say-hurrle baronet the July 29th. | face all set and stern, en I called at brightly followed and room the earl ‘from thethe inane wan Now |let could Artie in the drawing-room empty lit co | irresolute, The ear! pushed number the there, lived Cie eek rhuat all power whose in not. toonlate - oi sate be ley : mah ear ay at cent Lawton XNXI His it O'Donnell Redmond to see-an co vee cf CHAPTER to Lord betune us and harm!" this fellow you have been talk- saw expected moisStalea blind-I was I If she can foryou met. her | Cecil is very prroud. accept y you, I can, with all my accept and pointedly, " al- | ive and then, I shall not say good-bye, and | heart. ms teeta Vv that/as way and found of imagining sheep |of them counting and "Sorra hear. lines longer than ten minTo)]or dhrink?" asleep. sound he is along these utes before who then Circe, ean ys or Vi ce » as oe eee lik Sees e Rees hard. long, one from that well-it -uppese noopened danger-lately my guilt. my to. one ae upon one was;day. He did, me only .I that too time a For or no I have wronged her too greatIf decide. may you her, ask to y S moment repeat- | ™Y > eee ede Cr a eae oa CE coffin the saw been were | but so, ¥ he a with} ike Mrs. lived |c¢lasped other. Cres- | She as lover drew well can a little away tightened hands She sat perfectly next called at St. John's | ¢;ed-a sort had|of scorn for Jonas Woodwidge Mr. looking be from as his un- concetved. over still him, her one and an list- of scorn for him-a sort herself-an utter weart- feelings only the of everything, but|noess ago, year a about there to|resided destined night, listened Sho of. conscious was she family whole his with emigrated calendars | has the in en to the patience steady with is all the informaThis Red- | to Australia. Captain and of her-infiniteunworthy was "He to obtain. able been I have |tion likewise fated was O'Donnell, mond admirand esteemed he ly unworthy; etc lord," "I am, my with a red cross in that to be marked been had it heart; his all with her Tetter.}ed the down laid Arthur Sir Tregenna Arthur Sir of be of July fateful That forever marked Dangertield Lady "Sir Arthur Tregenna has run the/The flush had faded from his face, | his dying father's wish-he had her ~ |give for the lowest point a depth of|of fishes or the relation between ne times, n colonial Cecil Lady Would consent. father's pale. at him Ruysland | le ae Lord of his tether,' purpose} length on down him brought have sal-|I the that known is It size Bennett's|and level sea below feet iv|276 Peas of - indifferently spelled his Clive do him the honor to become one! by any be seen is plain to "It Ww hile pacand | had calmly said to himself night, very this a grave which enter l to open is 266]mons of the Pacific coast, point, this is near which eS ron (Welle Pearys and Peerys the and the references | wife?" that blind wilfully is high | not a station; the Castleford ng help." and along to come are shoals, live | you |the rivers in such immense Thess figures may sea level. a ifeet below to an wae words, - the possibly trace back at up nay looked She of Herncastle, Miss by forged, are shor up him pull to Oh, king o' glory' | time a grave! "Open then be four or five years old, and lbe altered by two or three feet on the|to "s ht wh darkn the father in A at father. flushing Lady piwzrim If ends. own her we course, to] was ces to Ruysland Lord For Lanty-no square, the on all "T's their laying once after die |invariably are probably but they thought 1A | final computing who sen a repeathad wn Prery, consent," father's "My to trouble the taken had Dangerfield Arthur} Sir night very This bodies, no selling to doc- | act when|stealing dead died fish Japanese Our |egge The three feet in error, than "ralad | not more ris the me tell distinction Arthur, more "‘Sir added slowly. for her-j|ed this out find and them seek up." pull his "short receive should vet.| to that got quite haven't of|tors-I coast west the On old year elevation|one has now eves geological re ae hat he or talking ‘e's,"" been two has than father My truth. govclever very her doubt no was;|self, he where placidly walted He very a to believe reason I have Europe there occursa small fish w hich | But lowest) and highest the on how marks ie has-oh! He his brother, ae tonight?. with you perchance have been prepared with|to erness would still) return, Frankland Major saw and|he perpetrated, been has fraud great the| all fs, plant-that annual an jis like United the in land of dry ,{/points coe oo in the ed a little change This has frequently bappene t one | States It is a strange coincidence, says the changed surname trace oe ‘ pean pu It must be neither trivial cause. the} survey report, that these two extremes that right here, however, individuals |eggs-i. "duce the die each year, and the seed-remain ¢, next season's crop. only to the |that very great mischief may come of gloomy and In the sulks, saw him de-|some To prevent that mischief I open| part an hour later by the Parllamen-|This pro-|it. this grave, open the coffin, see what it|tary train, and not until then did he | Miss ‘ "no oneone cancan : fee 1 deserved-no |Said‘ I have how I have fallen from honor and. .-. Inet cane are Seas '¥ working upon that poor little supertae Ng ..& 5 nee aa oun stitious fool, Sir Peter, and his fears, to a woman beauty, she -|claim to . his "hos ay i face the perfect fascinate men ie nn ee a and a She is a goddess. might fall. oe But let that ead t has also true. in|°U° below far stars, revealed Jay son.| last, at con-|watching-and me question father's was them-there with secret' Upon same's from expect a keep is that thin hour,}|didn't to be up at a certain you ‘saycret waken,|science to hard e than more or merchandiee; the to Appended equivalent. "This is @ true thge following: the df of avee the new tn thebye er ly ‘3 looked | the her Bue I that aD eae ar oe = ac . - : ips eens a eae Hee cna SE BOULe deep, mischievof Herncastle here, ts} ous, latent object in coming ae O ees of reluctant the inn) the in fellow that of quaintance his condemn I not do "T curtly, saia he grave," the is "This face, adventuress!" "De signing I'll keep watch.' to work. "Come in, Lanty, and shut the door|"Go The resurrectionist opened his bag, better turn the| had you -perhaps gave one inte his shovels, the ac-| produced I see you have made key. set and of Lanty, hands &. PTAs . elec ne ee . . earecDron fisee torteaux of ane eT one at yealan: no in - "It shall a as you he paused, not,' strong words, use "You ed slowly. "a? ae my . lord. He 5 folded his arms, Of course, you do not | Say, Lord Ruysland. very stern, and awaited such a statement as that upon| Very white, make swer. a a iHet Eacared cid dems h Pt ae suspicion." mere a paused -he its. solitary' tree der = ¢ saused s lips| His Dangerfield's Katherine or good were s set, his eyes stern-for > ai soon truth the jl] he would know Read seoscription of bear to will It rest. escape. ad-| burned wred<etih: angry baronet's ul n= ‘until the At the table upon fixed : , saa suddenly he however, ones still ey Sane lonely»spaths, : thes on Sse ‘ : eoe: Fee eae | erect made-a Dan pouty SNe a a designing with love in fall -|and mat fdnight to work with professional rapidity and | yard already." coda 7 a sa aloe yer| dexterity. The two men worked with "Jist passin' the time o' day, According:to: a-Drug Clerk, ; é ae Ne Sg ; : stood in thim)a will until the perspiratton O'Donnell civil erathurs They're ‘haggard-|honor. A Philadelphia Reeord; drops on their faces. English chaps mostly, an' shure I'm| great looking man strolled into a downtown] gave and flask, a brandy brought had | proud." not asked] and day other the store drug. even until libations, coptous just|}them is it and it, "I'm glad to hear the druggist for help. He said he had the same troubled sig-| Its heraldic the crowd for doing, | vice 80 ig|the old folks' pian "It courage, is deathless cast ok Zs x nificance barrier a passing who soldier, good of.a image lively . Florence, contribution, Herneastlo perfection whom you know nothing-except that seemed to seize know in station-de-|™ment, inferior is youreich |she of youmadness sort acLINeEnice i eh tea be abate the 7; etn As ‘ STeadan tolled ont, re- fe enterec man his when sat aci cas hs SLEEP. il LLELP A MAN piegrgee so before. Si Ml ps ore! A the ree tcapien philoso- | ghostly : | and: boots the selzed panty walked panorehs sai} life," wee ae = ay Saito "eee yer! It's lit-1 Siro. Zhat "Blessed times upon my s his listener, smoking sponded t a Ts "ally physi-|" his time same the at must punctual) shown, study of course but walk, He be teters she Bnd) Roeee ae monisie -o% "Open so it Is, to ax me sich a question | tense breath-his eyes gleamed, eee eae Paes eae ee of sort composed a in said, he it.' that." in mista akes, no make they UAT as vets comcn oat cn Loon an his produced Joggins Mr. and voice, indignant-/ be don't Lanty, Well, thes was This thay oe SORDE the silent, dead sull oance|, work to set and T | scre w-driver, Then can you know [T course, married who Peery, Jain argue. ne be Sees tookethext ishman were one, by one screws, The evening, | more this quiet to keep you | want trying began he So of date. out strong of| Was of courage: valiant be a. | must and Archie Dr. of daaghter ‘rerers pee the worded, ee aa of palm in the lay last to re- | removed-the remember, sober, perfectly to} to hame all the states in the union. He|and a foe and in council, polite body. an atl of oe These are Peery beth ese 4 pal bb ano a Derr < * a but remained nothing hand to|Joggins' not but early, room your to elassify|tire could he se them got soon fear." "| to Ol or trace back family, giria one yore ae Y Bens the either see and lid the lift eleven,|to half-past About bed to they|go when Then alphabetically. in}them used doubtless are pears The es good pretty a ancestry, minion . read Seto aaa et BA per et Katherine of remains mouldering Is quiet and every soul) the town when started| he him interested longer no name of the origin to the we| ference family . tan-head. compressed a aaa ani a 7 "We or- Dangerfield, your) take to, sleep, Ss gone inn the jin on the counties of this state know eas Se tes Te oo ic it, raised Joggins a sign, made He as ' out ci steal aye no © hand, your in shoes | tonguce's his at them tics; o m : has now "He family| and wait all three bent forward to look. here to procure aesire who Those that tant, up to the fourth letter ithough you were a mouse, classified pedigrees|end, information, another letter across to him. "I wrote from exclamation a simultaneous alogical should correspond was larches| of clump the under me capitals|for state on is starting he Now arte ke 1. rab assisachu- | BER? with| recoro M edne lineages, or Peer) Pe hn Jcohn , could, ; i ; he W hat the Genealogical Socicty of Utah,| and their locations: then he will take | beyond the inn. You'll find your Lonall as they. bent again to reassure or setts. did his share, "ask hdl Bee tae pe Tee a eee moon, rising late The you-I | themselves. there before acquaintance A moment's glance at|don seats. county His-|up president Lund, H, Anthon eld a Bare founding towards a ; Hie eae N ah oe a through struggling had _ been which you) want I and down, him him|brought shows day the during atlas an City. Lake Salt office, Alver-but | corian's . a silver gave Some ] ue 7% x aohvartl eee orate shone morning, coming of mists Lanty, did you ever hear|the of | both tonight. beauty the and he is wrong, when i paury's t ag gold of beshels-noet of wheat and corn, and Jo a an the LOWEST LAND IN COUNTIRY. the plan is that he rarely has to think | of a resurrectionist-a sack-'em-up?"|suddenly for a moment full upon the F tl a ird y . a : ss a hgethtens ito Peerys*- marry than better ae a actu broke-grew learned good-bye, Kepharts,) Beals, Willards, ah cae zs cee IB seRenee sUMAtOD wiped lay on their spades, ‘The men Redmond,! Misther Arrah, sayeret! of his peculiar af-|A in consequence fram-|4nd will you mirrors argent, three square lor, you. _, Afterward facts before Thompsons. and Keath Canes long a drew and faces, their since| did iver ye turn a bad there sleep than|is more losing was he fliction , lea wa family Virginia the one of \nother . A E you please.' do-as Lanty and resurrectionist. the |Then Know? I don't that breeched ye were he could stand, motto] and crest of absence The married who Peery F. Willlam wa pocket-book a his from took He them-the]), between coffin the raised wor} iver ye divilment av bit a there quiz-|1Is him regarded clerk drug The for this coatantiquity ea | Pi ‘ints to great of John daughter Margaret, eae DEDSrS. | ANG PES packet pute it making it, to elinging clay past|damp was divilment yer faith (an' re-|in then and moments few a zically 4 armor marries he death, her rt / soa, tabl the upon them out two of Redmond at. it placed betther | weighty--and know. I didn't that countin') want} don't you man, dear "My to] plied: matter small it is no too, Then. all told,} ten, had He Morroe Suman OV SE glance £o Kind: enough Be feet tell ;O' Donnell's TI iver did and prayers, me is something|than you want What medicine. The "quarterings." show to able _,|be : ye in his flock. Peerys do the man's n , phar ree -o S are oe you ed had. seaeves ea son-of-I in youfather's | pointed your his anshoulders gins, with a dasack over k, si hisaan ue may ru-|from sodgerin' | contal all day whin it now on the eve of narion ‘Sai the Siri eaponts say Tor ASpening ‘Amer taymnelnviltty ever-of the plans I had formed-of ear. os he are me- went e will be over, a an' iky and Samiti in fact do everything | mouth regulation, favoritism MAPS - Peerys| 00 with Oorns, no Ar- things opeiniGaenes added aneleee to disappointment keen Paes rhbie his|the in were coldly went aoe Petals oye a aerehee No ow from the moment 2 spirits arose, in| Lanty's butdrooping not stood has pride sociability your he re-|as well when to sleep getting how in matter trouble illustrated| coat-of-arms Peery a! age The was noise the the)sound on your of way he might|the sleepy No tire d. Gen-| ‘Armorial Rietstap's in riven it of the}. first-for her you have oad subdued ‘ ; h-sle > haw the di "ine ; : and|!s s!ven in shoveling would have as you whether present hisoccasion, sleep| much how moment workedor most rudely, I had said, during be Perri or O'Donnellliving Peery quarterly:|he seen. Counts the to be clay-nothing Mis- | aril or no.to| |dead acquaintance his} make have daylost,or the might the blazoned Js aly.for and lot patriarchal | Virginia ‘he connections marriage annals. in found' stern: , | i sotri is no arc|Mental Fielding-CapTrusten..and' oe zobert-Peery of Virginia, is the first| 7) Ti, te o ' a laine. His wife) | of whom we have records. o Peery was a patroit Fielding ain oly ‘Far sri ; Stella Rosella, the true-blue stamp. and thelr Margaret McFarlane, wa fre.| more av ohella. are. names. Peerys| oy hoye was in Tazewell county, past| the of als he inflexible minute in every him given order The vere; names ‘family' favorite Among val Bee - men. eee voice have I ne t ee table. the leave ee not contrition -ahawis, Guilt seen be to was creature a Not AMI hour! blissed - Oh, or bad. 1 Beare Iver see the «The soft | Between} ch forthis master's room... king | words, they have possessed that rare/cal well-being Fiveis guarded : ‘ s aration' <i} 1s mare ast igs | ra "| symnasium . ss gray‘ of a the 8 summer. evening ciiwery i hes and} we rk, drills, Piaen pit ne eR Bicat eK Sple nie | 8! ‘talline by this time, 2 and with his| | |. was ‘gleep,,U1e of hours, regular, " |absdlutely. 4 Ey oh ‘Lie eat Heritage: t's dan ; TOR i " ofr ip fami family the aero xf7 ms but healthy}, ck to the faint Nght, the chasseur| kt tee arted,' ,, | cade e is a hard-worked ot kesi pilgrim fathers set. ‘ me i it has been aif and New toJerscy, and going Virgiina out, inbranched ver that there "was no bend in |) the Westin. his em states, where they have wie laed his. square -chin;,.no--quarter writers) rapier-steel eyes." lage influence as statesmen, professional Ce 6 arl's the per- deep a Cornishman, the of |face the of out way SS uoe enon xe ee = Norman the tla tien anl week, to every young men be the son of laborer or of aa day . day le other in time right the at of knack a and thing right say may lineage race, the their lives to their coun-|thke fortunes and elo-|aire with d gifted been Many q have try.) to Piron. | quence. back Peery trace this an one "Sill among have they patriots, Ardent and) land was giv-| their family name, when Some) in Devon and Somerset. emthem the recite, and according observe Characteristics of the Peery family] chateau) of W ill-| are a love of justice, merey and truth.|to the th» name you, me, honor far so could she if and bed he askOn his death his | will speak. of "spite in feeling less-a|comfortable sorra. rooms Sixty-three a 1 Brees ae ruse eins gave EE ae ra a ibe ae rn ee I ght nigh the On wife. my her | make -ayq ace > : : ; See f : 11 1 b full af cattle-the <table cf] breach a of guilty founc been old|has pounds "ifteen tener, old ys, . ci toward his , place in to sté ind me |ed of duty, that this night's in| consciousness blood best the uf cattle fu itis ble to spend discipline he is likely to have for "half a Stk was the price aj\tener meaning > CO ry, a pack of ho ds . as ¢ ay < aatar r ave strive first met," he aused, and spoke th "Miss effo e of coer a with name ear Bg ihe iden A pare ie Peer ee ea Fae Noreen Serene me aes Seer og ie jor the] across. walking afternoon rsithis mes Boa it man this Lady the followed I had Hernecastle, changed. is too that son-all own anutors Rees belted One giant, Trish the McCaul, Fin as high inside of "barracks" in full quadrangle to a Peery not refer my place to boudoir the into be-|Cecil to chosen deliberately have You tates and? the snare mat ae are thay gaWhiskey him. av Dur-|j¢ jyer ye heerd bayonet. rifle and with waSs|uniferm Pe ary Samuel 1746, the spell that Of hands. in her fate of| woman a with infatuated come. They thas erin avert ‘iat Seana an' axin', the for champagne jo,e, ing twenty-four hoursa day, for seven} "westward the to go to ee 7 ae Names ‘se plerre, word cae ti Thi . TrFench the stons, is another An supporters. with made road, the from Peery mpossible 1 warn he saw Lanty|to the Countess of Strathearn's for | ally husky in the intensity of his emo= and -Bodlly. won are wanted: dutymental did his "June 1 Herecord: bid tigs the there" a. eeman on ae Mee re would | |the hopes I had CE eranea ar are, noble captain-up "Here Ww pas Saturday comes around the | cel¢ pack in O'Donnell Castle on the the (epee nen bump June day, one: Fo are san my Mee ern De Hopes and about! to Prene: and not a minute to be lost. |be idle to speak tonight. Talk more? once sed weet ¥ cary for his cadet has his afternoon and evening to}ouldoan Beets ie' clans oF magit "Servis Srunnaelt ™ both went to the devote to his own pleasure, uilless he | grandeur-about yer Windsor Castles, | Lead the way, and we follers and gets plans are all at an end-your father's | we s and ion : ee and' ike roa Side dying wish binds me no longer since | is backward in his studies or has brok-|4n' yer SU James palace-be me word|to business at once.' rontters ashia all fe the shade of the |you have been the first to disregard | Keeping couldn't} thim.to thegither av In the|the regulations. of the some case "Ebenezer oe a _sune errs Se cuore eine ee Pint But still for your father's sake I Castle O'Donnell.| hedges and wayside trees, with an un-|it. houldtwo a candle his afternoon he spends airs former was enoughpeary'')en letter one capital ewe eee ea Piet Be sane Tonight sl- that we did' not, mset tomorsawe sar tight-shure it's a wakeness all his}-the whole town seemed to be still|countenance, and guilt held him what |me say it now -soqd ih, and mo. say Let Lord Ruysland He seated himself on a/lent. dark. wudjand Its meself counthrymen have. then|he might, he could not say one word | Heaven bless you, Arthu drew on his boots, and ‘iJon like* 4 afreddhrop , av motheen eS this min-|bench an gras ant "t 7 and He rose : iy nae oh inpoumtaaie"te trom, re ie saa is dorived; per forever. oe Scotlan ake 5 her oe to Bontland vai i wilt spir | seiritect yUNe2 eleven, nnal ures: clever, his made hand, was}|bolted. he but him fear divil pear thew Oe eae qute, | cregiy | Seon 2 ‘ that parts, an' me gettin' have in these " vais sorr th it, i f hard endure the to the} ee alf-past caer Halt waite. er neti his thin, Oh, would comfort in A Uae Trish im- one aounde indolent &Soldiers3 See loikes he study. recitation, drill, the time , Pegg > < a sight) and. meals, . a e D better Point. ae daea Ee confess An Irish lad so tight, all- | pear in the shadow of the larches.|that you may make your farewells to And still Sir Arthur sat like a ‘stone. It hasbeen # bitter blow-to-aiee. He had remoy-|her final when you part tomorrow." Bad seran to ye fur tops, shure the |The time had come. A flush rose up over the blonde|® blow more bitter than I can sayy {art 0° man wouldn't git ye the color|/@4 his own boots, and with them in their is time the aor caer fas should , wt i do my duty, however distasteful that | While it is yet time-give up this mis; or he would. Long before your re-|erable designing woman, and forever. half-past ten the inn was al-|duty may be. Do not bring disgrace on your dead if you are mad up for the|turn to this house, closed and dark there were but few guests, and|enough to do, I and Cecil will have|father-on your honored name-and few kept primitive hours. At]gone, and it is neither my wish nor | }ifelong misery on yourself. Go to not a light was to be seen. Still] my intention that we three shall ever | Cornwall-go abroad-do an ything- . paaeke? F s 2 o'clock g At minutes spend ease and and|/do Peary,| Peary. Samuel Sa * ) ee i substitutes, buy study, > eee Gone eee Sea | the | No » hte ia ‘followed ‘by |. it Was on a windy night, about two jtual to the moment, in cadet barracks eln te iei OOK PAV ae ee author-| - have a aN cases, in Men a "d."") with » ceca soae in ) so walking : walking; dn ginning noget. eal ity Pe. mie ene ee 9 es §, j e jnanner Seay cd ae oy eee easy oes aePs ae mit ) oe Aba See - this Gaston had who 2 cause, ; a neal During his lights out and seal igen an orchard of this sort, would be, say| having misused the ilps. not the exact word,|the twenty-four hours he has eight Henry or Henri de la Pirie; or atle| -badly-that's our si , slee the} but it looks s better than the P other,er, be-]| be- hours s of sleep, through of hours sixteen with z The ; transition Pyrie. - ‘ and that scoundrel tee oe comes dress parade. Soon at 6:30, the| is finished, From march to supper. they 10 "im-|rooms ; eed Ae Tay | far ihe ide. or to 7 iniaccuuneits of "impresses," : you . buck to Sanineltuntll « o'elocie™ laws early and| or in, lived who One orchard, the a eight d studies forand "recreation." by}lowed after followed Peervs. is always ae Any the exe to prebody diseased, e- | Dantree - the epared | wearin be of about cient young men: band, had ‘never for an. hnstant o¢-/ mam she had made Tove her the whole | quences what they méy-tonight Twi |«hu, my Iaa_-my son, almort Pause ty section into many centuries ago | will have no trouble at all in estab- after which this The old Anglo-Saxon werd for pear, | lishing eligibility to membership with|after men young pern:| the Society of Colonial Wa was the Latin, from derived the to make been tle must ea seniike iimteneia - "this County! Peery or Beech to give the|, Italiap ule A en eeania ovcupa- truth, mainte pamreces hour to an hour and a half each. BeAt lin: 5 air tween 8 a. m. and 1 p. m. the time] 4 tion of ct brushing a pair of his inaster's|ready She pe TREE nS raritavion ane| tops, and his conversation with the | night; At 1 o'clock the battalion of cadets stranger from London, inter eet |e se AiG etS| work and social converse with a lit-| eleven ail t iy ancien ‘ fe LEXINGTON ELEANOR BY ; hae See ed The Petry coat-of-arms seems to{ Peerys nor the Pearys are quarrel Quite aha a boay Serae foll point to the theory that the name tis} seme from He in | would be opened, and replaced pre-|the dying trust of my dearest, my|¥oU the simple truth - tomorrow I nee fath- Sal e| Shall tell it to all tile house-tomor = C dead YO ° my9 best friend, » your Bie it, ' the grave|truest, escape he " knew o f him. . 1uire! | some . BYie to divided h hope To-|T0W Miss Herncastle quits Scarswood ean NorPAs can that |reclosed.as heAndhad thenfoundMiss' Herncastle|er, if I held my peace longer. But now,!/cisely anes wayto: Miss Herncastle. eean he he Class NTICAH Nor ne was or had Dern Rose' s actual hus- vane ld hear all-st ld 5 df er , thd s allowed has not thats cil thes | derived is he lesson. his yare <lra Charges ; 4 Descendants-Heraldic ns | for Nila| f | W als; Society x - Denote Deathless Courage, ; No cadet cuse that ae Wikies ' FH ehOWSID CONEPe . a Harvard Found Helped plausible story to account for it.|shall IT say it he has ordered you much I must certainly say for|follow me here and say this?" (Continued Tomorrow Morning.) Herncastle-she is one of the to ais "eed |