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Show ae was found but And then improved the of the and of hundred general the Southern of stores, and indices of They don't want America. clement was would have city became that a that so small found him corrected, McAllister, General Manager. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, Temple St. So uth West 25; Independent, 3190. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, Salt in tion an anar- driven them not property themselves, live N. is have the home they the LAK to OUR surely the past been year. one well you of In the has who as in We patrons interested a the be of interest made by The the come good three believe that paper from we showing later must And company, months of are these the feel that our people readers within who beginning that is are a and he the is in reason February and a little in welcome there is no have defamation to big we the most every but make; to able January, for Republican be in foo J., the hot is as owning and worst for good assail name of they town in the lawless now as tell WILAT One know California tvrannical as a their believable for good own that to interest, choice affairs possibly the Southern destroy a for of better than know of There the is It going while, as of Salt the has of is earn- constantly the worst the in to capital. perhaps, is by no claims to which side that the published it and has of COULD the the - sell were fight found, one | But it is vole of is | papers be the permitted the people But was for those a big was located. the a continuance reasons state But of must It of be one Sacramento | now, may the better have | present | than the ness-went on who just that had as of without little a for of of at all in | as worth they | | | to ever actual the ! | lifting Manhat- real nation-the feeling the canyon market the inecldent stocks-more or something gZood business an of warring had |} | | busi- destruction of fortunes. Some of | logical And filetitious its removal the finding in simply sellers were so the | corporation, has been not pointed at all out that affect Indeed, It time want of the clean up the agitators to high will The And be people lamp peace is Goldfield by the some any Goldficld, will that some to and of swing in they | will | noisiest that all its lift manig interments, prosperity over effect | all the a | and timbers invitational unpleasant have camp, other ground forty getting in stringing posts-or above in of tyranny atmosphere after thing the the hoodlum enough clear. of the recent industry did BY good He not in panic other seriously = MAY four days, ensuing vain. to impatiently waited If ate, on returned He did he not and in Wall portions affect | feet there Nevada. on the rest | on the | West No of | business city | you more engineer's pay. Not collecting of estimate. special When assessments the sidewalk is finishe d, before. - AGNES the a week. and he more It the in had returned upon Captain and desper- of to not was waited Otis himself had the call evening once He during disgusted presented once but Henry Mr town, O'Donnell; for rather the rebuke did o'clock, declaims centre the men FLEMING its DO? Eastern capital the country. at CUBA the for values A WONDERFUL WOMAN an that here-for been location when to reasons the been and men --- = | of no will announce besmirch present means on desire hill are it The better paper the there world, to of some arrangement, defama- already That pinnacle sunset news is end. the everywhere people, home Tribune reached Tribune the the have the heralded state credit state and this going good the papers Lake the to of is down is Paterson task character office, that money decline slander zenith it of nation of are of island, Company the depressing tan any them. P< acific while not sup- have buyers And o1 by must the valuable less measure | the That gambling by | California making because cily a for rno. peo- urged as people basis the is and grove can before removal Sacramento seem must states the the the of not go to the that as March railroad's from hardly It assassins Tribune the the of worth But its in of that passed nihilists matter advance the know WAY. will would success, In It money worst stopped. has the They land. with Lake, rest the assurance Crbagesl tne ease COMING the in It 1907 Salt Lake telling cities, is upon does that railroad away street Here ing s-Dooly Block, 208 Mcpe Doo Bell, Exchange *'Phones: the That glad are Good! Malcolm porting propose claim Pacifie punishment a papers there people grown Paterson, the with of has city year, forees that place other a working pride Known of of charge, The have it fame any of lapse joined The the idea without have class. And the Paterson. They anarchist of They move simple anywhere, citizens. announce, in the sensation-monger after Now, chist that the and .of parks, pictures number the the APRIL 2, 1907. earnestly the fifth at close silver he Castleford. Scarswood seen his sister upon gray eight of the loudly summer evening was deepening into almost secured has twilight, as he walked up the avenue Republican year The against what it is pleased to term the "foul play over present of the The flutter of a white dress caught his To be exact, the number new subscribers. Cuba," and recites the fact that certain Americans are three thousand eye amid the dark green depths of is two thousand eight hundred ninety-one fern; a tall, slender shape, with bright seeking to make the American occupation of that island eee hair, was slowly pacing the terones a month new a permanent thing. "That is pretty nearly a thousand ace alone. It was Lady Cecil. A soft There were in January. three and thousand working for a If any Americans are the destruction were fia of rose-pink cashmere,silk and There nine were there down, Wrapped her She held a letand in February; planters business men, so ninety and of the credit of Cuban hundred eight ter in her hand which she read as she to prohundred ninety-cight in March. unable that the isiand would be left helpless and walked And even in that "dim re‘‘padding called be these ligious light" O'Donnell saw, or fanecan criticism then the of of the island, habit sort duce the usual merchandise By no jed, that the fair, pale face had the by ordered subscription, fide bona is a frowned upon, for such a campaign should be severely one IXvery grown paler and graver than ever he for fr paid and is addressed, the paper had seen it, in those five past days is by no means fair if it is simply an argument in But to whom person "Lady. -Cecil:'' lawful money of the realm faver of Americans of the island, we retaining control He lifted his hat and stood before detail, down to It is, if you want to figure right can see no objection to it. her. She had not heard him until first day for the aS spoke. A faint, tremulous flus about thirty-two new subscribers a Cuba can do nothing without American interyenose up over the sensitive face as she three months of nineteen hundred seven. tion. Left alone, the people of that island are helpless, turned and gave him her hand. the growth in which Captain O'Donnell! and just as we direction is another and they always have been. Maybe after half a century there And all began to give you up for lost. I even more has grown of training under an American protectorate they might may be calculated. The advertising am glad you have come-I have been impressively. be able to take care of themselves; might be capable of wishing for you EE ea Do you is Easter Sunday one year ago The Republican carried self-government. But for the present, and certainly for a know that Rose "Lanty said somethiag of it, but I four hundred and nineteen inches of local display adverare generation, they not going to be able to reach a thought-" "She is really ill-something has tising. On Easter Sunday of the present year this paper status of independence. They can not prevent the updon't know what, only carried ten hundred and fifty-seven inches of local dis- rising of discontented elements in either cities or the happened-I that Miss Herneastle is at the bottom play advertising. There was a gain of a hundred and fifty plantation provinees. They can not preserve order. They of that, too. Your sister has worked herself into a fever-she has neither per cent. can not stop the raids of the robbers who organize and eaten or slept, I believe, since you Go where you will, and a gain of a hundred and fifty ride the island ae. end to end with no better purpose went away. Something is preying on her mind-something which Miss per cent in a year will be recognized as a splendid ad- than the L. W. . felons of Goldfield have today. And in Herneastle alone knows. Oh, that the absence fe peace and tranquility the future of the | dreadful vance Miss Herneastle! Why did r which he ever enter is ouw Saptain to _note note that th Island is dark ptiaad O'Donnell, we 4 in trouble-terribl ‘The Republican wit out mentionEither Cuba will ‘have to be an American possession trouble-and she is the cause it all . ing the name, has made rather a poorer showing. The or the possession of some European power. There is no Do you know Het she is gone?" "Gone! Tribune, on Easter Sunday of last year carried twelve escape from that. This country has made no promise "Been dismissed-discharged-sent hundred and nineteen inches of local display advertis- to the people of Cuba which has not been kept to the away in disgrace. s the strangest ing. Easter Sunday of the present year the Tribune very spirit and letter of the pledge. There is a further thing-the most wickedly malicious, carried one thousand and seventy-five inches of the same. obligation due to the people of the island, to our own and whatever her object could have puzzles us all." That was a loss of a hundred and forty-four inches in citizens who live there, and to the whole nation as well, you puzzle me What enormity Herncastle has Miss the Tribune's local display advertisements in the year. which binds our nation to give good government to the oe been guilty And there was, besides, a very suspicious doubling of the Cubans. Make them a part of United States territory, "You do well to call it enormity Tribune's own department store advertisement. Of course She has parted Sir Peter Dangerfie Id if that is the shortest way to peace in Cuba, and security and his wife-for life, I greatly fear.' it costs the Tribune nothing to advertise its own store. for the republic of our mainland. But never leave the d been walking by her side- And whenever the paper wants to bolster its show of he stopped and looked at her now. He immense interests of that realm to the untender mercies had delayed too long-he had shown business, nothing is-easier than to pad its own adverof the night rider, the insurrecto and the rebel. her his ecards and let her win the tisement of its own store. It isn't exactly fair to the rest No unfairness is involved in that policy. Nothing but game He had thought to spare her, mischief was done and the of its advertisers, but it isn't the way of the Tribune to unfairness to all parties concerned would be realized in "Parted Sir Peter and his wife! Do be fair with any one-even when it gets money from abandoning the Cubans. I hear you aright, my dear Lady Ceell?" them. OO OOOO OF "It sounds incredible, does it not? However, no matter about the suspicious look of the WHAT THE SUNDAY SCHOOLS DID. Nevertheless, it is true. You remembig double ads in the Tribune. There is no question about ber the masquerade at Mrs. EverDown in South Carolina a college professor gave the leigh's last Thursday-that most misthe quantity and quality of advertising in The Repubfollowing exercise to fifty students before him in examerable masquerade? Ginevra would lican, and none of the growth of business in this paper. insist upon going with Major Frankination, and allowed them twenty minutes in which to A thousand new subscribers in a month, and an inland as the Page Kaled-he as the make answer: Knight Lara, Sir Peter hates Mrs. crease of a hundred and fifty per cent in the local disEverleigh-he abhors masquerades "Tell briefly the story of (a) Adam, Eve and the play advertising! That is what tells the story, And it is of (b) Noah, (c) Samson, Garden of Eden, (d) David and and male costumes for women course, he was right and Ginevra was Goliath, (e) Moses and Pharaoh a story of which we are very proud. wrong, but his very opposition made Proud of whom? her more resolute to e told her every He adds that student made an intelligent have recognized the if she went she should. never return, Proud of the good people who to his questions. answer In thirty cases the young men that she should not live under his roof have subscribed merits of a fair and fearless paper, and gave a concise mentioned, statement of each character and disgrace it. Ginevra defied him: us the honor to befor it, have read it, and have done but In her heart, she owns now, she with enough of comment to prove appreciation of the rewas afraid, and ready to draw back lieve it. lation of that character to the history of his period and But that fatal Miss Herneastle would Proud of every business man who has tried it and not Jet her She had suggested the of the world. And the minister adds: costumes, made Ginevra's, and used demonstrated that it certainly gets results-unterrified I hazard nothing in saying that the Bible is the only every persuasion to induce her to deby the attacks of the intolerant people who thought they monument of literature, anefent or modern, on which the fy Sir Peter-deceive him rather, and sume number of students would have exhibited so large go. could kill a free newspaper in Salt Lake by their wornGinevra yiel She wrote a fund of general knowledge note at the dictation of the governess, out threatenings. "My own observation leads me to the belief that the ne Major Frankland in London, tellProud of every man and woman In the cily who has current ignorance of e Bible among college students ing him of Sir Peter's opposition, asknot an ignorance of ‘supposedly familiar stories of ing him to corte secretly down, rehad the fairness to make trial of the new paper. Testament' or of the New Testament; nor fs i main at one of the inns, and go from Proud above all things of the excellent city and state an ignorance primarily of Bible doctrine or of Bible sancthence to the ball My poor cousin tions. It is an ignorance (1) of Bible history as a continuin which we have the honor of making a paper, and ofcan not even keep her own secrets, ous whole, (2) of Bible geography, (3) of the distinctive and she told me. I said everything I fering it to the best of citizens-without regard to politity of Bible literature, and (4) of the books of the Bible could think of to shake her resolucal or church affiliation. The Sunday school of the future will devote not tion, but in vain, Finally I told papa less attention to the former things, but more attention to in despair, and made him waylay the b The Republi has gained a hundred the latter things." train at the station. You remeimnber- and fifty per cent in local display advertising. he met you that same afternoon. He There is the value of studying the Bible. There is the talked to Major Frankland, and the Remember: the Tribune-even with all its padding- major finally agreed to give up the value of Sunday schools. There is the value of religious has lost more than a hundred inches in precisely the a Ginevra, of course, would not training. Men will not be worse for it, certainly. They same lapse of time. dream of going without him. But he inAnd remember, too, that The Republican has se- will be richer in their information, in their acquaintance sisted upon init | her, and telling her Unfortunately we with important personages in a history which affects the with his own lip cured almost a thousand new subscribers a month for were all at Siatasanwha at an archery life of the race. They will be broader and better men party, and when he reached Scarsthe first three months of the present year, wood he found only Miss Herneastle What is true of the young men of South Carolina is Glad to have you go with us for the rest of the way. He wrote a note explaining all; told true, we believe, of men everywhere. More of them have her to have his masquerade dress returned, and left her. That note Miss read the Bible and become informed as to Bible history GOOD MEN REFORMED PATERSON. Herneastle destroyed-she owns it; than any other work. They know more about it. They and, Captain O'Donnell-it seems alTwo years ago Paterson, N. J., was known all over have secured much of that information in the Sunday most incredible-she Ahir ae masthe country as the home and harbor of anarchists. If you Major Frankland schools. It is a hopefu! tendency of the age, and it is a querade instead of asked a man in the middle of the desert what he knew and jin his dress! ive major is short, blessed incident in the life of Salt Lake, that many men the governess it tall-she managed to about Paterson, he would tell you it was the starting make the Lara costume fit her. No and women of mature years are in Sunday school classes. point of every king killer in the anarchist cult. one ever heard of such a thing beThey get information which they need. They become fore. soy will scarcely be able to That was about all the people of the country knew tamiliar with one of the classics-the greatest that is believe of the place. So often it had been before the public as Ie te ‘believe a great deal of Miss embalmed in all literature. And those who hdve prepared Herncastle She is a wonderful womthe refuge of the disciples of force, the nihilists of the themselves for imparting instruction along these lines outlawed brood, that people generally never for a montent mA wonderful w onan indeed-it is are doing one of the most valuable services possible thought of it as a city of creditable homes, a town of to be hoped there f ew like her," among men. Lady Cecil reaonaed indignantly; good people, a place of varied industries, good schools- It is not needful that the result is an addition to "and vet, though something seemed ov anything else but just the home of anarchists to warn me against her-she had a church membership. It is important, however, that the sort of fascination for me from the About a year ago the better citizens of Paterson, first. Well, Captain O'Donnell, it hapmind be enriched with the treasures of the most wonderWN. J., got together and subscribed from their abundance' pened in this way: We returned from ful book in the world. ee archery fete; Ginevra pretended a fund sufficient to tell to the rest of the world some (ne che and retired to her room, All of the good things that could be said of Paterson, They the while Sir Peter was on the watch. MOVING CALIFORNIA'S CAPITAL. were not anarchists, nor anything like it. That was not M Herncastle dressed her-a _ flyAt the late session of the California legislature a law man from Castletord was in waiting, veally the distinetive type of Paterson citizen. And they and he took her to Mrs. Everleigh was enacted submitting to a vote of the people the quesmade public notice of the fact. Their willingness to corThe governess had managed to secret lion of removing the capital of that state from Sacrathe Lara dress in her room, and Rie rect the impression of the public made a good news story, moment Lady Dangerfield was gon and they got a great deal of advertising which cost them mento to Berkeley, near the eastern shore of San Fran- paper she rapidly dressed herself, and ake ed-actually walked from Searswood to Mrs Everleigh's house. Sir Peter, in spite of their precautions, had seen his wife depart, and follewed immediately At Mrs. Everleigh's he procured a black domino, and in that disguise, and maskec course, he watched the page. The knight arrived in due time-rather late, perhaps and neither Ginevra, dancing or talking to him, or Sir Peter w atching, _deemed {it was other than the major. "Well." O'Donnell said, curtly. "Supper came, and under 2 going for an ice, Count Lara disappeared Ginevra had to go down on the arm of another gentleman. At supper there was the usual universal unmasking, and the first face poor Ginevra saw was that of Sir Peter. Imagine her feelings! And the major nowhere to be seen. A moment after, Sir Peter disappeared, and my unfortunate cousin, half dead with fear, made her way from the supper room and the house, and reached home in the fly, the most pilable object you ever saw Her first question was for husband-her first impulse to , herself at his feet and implore his forgiveness. But he wee, not here -he has not bee n he re sine Not here since' "No, Captain O'Donnell. If he had come home and raged and stormed there wee have been some hope- now I here is none. He is in meetiatorl and his London _ solicitor is with him, stopping at the Scarswood Arms. He refuses to see his pi aa will never see her again, he long as he lives Papa has rae n a him-I have been aK him -al vain. He is harder than stone raat than iron She has made his life miserable long enough-that is his answer. If she were dying he would not see her now. He told her if she went to that woman's house- in male attire, to meet Jasper Frankland, she should never live beneath roof of his. oe she never will." ‘But it wa ot ajor Frankland. Yes -yes, he tnows" That: it makes no difference; nothing makes any difference. I believe he hates her and only wants a pretext for separation This horrible masquerade and more horrible governess have given him that. knows Jasper Frankland was In London, and that Miss Herncastle played the double part of Major and Lara on that fatal night. His answer is that that has nothing to do with it- his wife went in'the full belief that it was Frankland, in male attire, and to the house of a woman of doubtful character If there were grounds for divorcee, a divorce he would have; as there are not, he will still have a separation. Lady Dangerfield may remain here until the necessary documents are drawn up-then she leaves, and forever. She Is nearly insane, and no wonder; think of the exposure, the seandal, the disgrace. And to know- to know it Is all that wicked, revengeful woman's work He had never seen r so moved, so excited, so agitated in her life. Was this the cause of the change he saw in her altered face? "And how was it ali discovered? Did Miss Hernecastle confess at once?" "Miss Herneastle has not confessed at all In some way she reached Scarswood before Ginevra-she must have had a conveyance waiting, and was one of the first to receive her ordinary dress. The tumult poor Ginevra made aroused the house. In the cold gray of the morning we all- papa among the rest-gathered about her She told her story in an incoherent way. Papa listened in armazement. ‘Frankland,' he said rae land at the ball!-impossible! m self saw him depart for London 6 the Parliamentary train at 6:20 last evening. Frankland is in London.' He Was positive, Ginevra was positive The end of the matter was he telegraphed to Major Frankland in London-was he there or had he been at the ball! The answer came at once- he had not been at the ball, was then in London, and would run down at once. He did so, and then the murder was out. ‘Had she not got his note?' ‘What note?' ‘The explanatory note Miss ae ‘Certainly astle was summoned and eonteanted with the indignant maor i ew his note"' And Miss Herneastie looked him full in the face, and told him she had destroyed it." "Did she say why?" "She said (and you should have heard how coolly) that she thought it a pity Lady Dangerfield should be deprived of the ball, and of wearing the dress upon which set her heart, for a jealous whim of Sir and a prudish whim of the She destroyed the note, and allowed Lady Dangerfield to go and enjoy herself, Who, then, had personated the major-herself? But on this subject Miss Herncastle was mute -as obstinate as Sir Peter himself. The Lara dress was found packed in its box in the major's room, and the governess refused to confess or deny anything They might suspect what they chose - accuse her of anything they liked If they could not prove their charges they had better be silent-she would admit nothing. And she would not Ginevra flew into a terrible passion and ordered her out o fhe house, and she went-without a o rgacell drew a long breath. "By George!" he said, "here is a mare's nest "And hers has she gone, Lady Cecil? "To Lorna thvée days ago. Before she left, she had an interview with your sister, since when Rose has been unable to leave her room. And Ginevra a" in hysterics in hers. T nev- er n saw all pa as Nite Herncastle so line, and that all her mischief is not] | done yet mn I agree with his lordship. And her | champion-her admirer of others days -the chivalrous Cornishman-where is he, that he does not break a Jance in favor of this persecuted iady e soft summer dusk might have hidden from any other than the keen blue eyes of O'Donnell, the flush that rose up all over wady Cecil's falr Ce. "middlemen's's"" profits ES, = Dantree?" this fellow pose, about feet, seated herself at his She had her arms across his knee, her face lyvery laid his hand ing upon it He humbled head her bowed rently on Be "Speak Rose I am » learned to fear me you the other with ft forgive you to night, I ask If you and I may we trust? I promise to be whom may Is it about this fellow Danmere iful. "Tis hardly a fitting time or subject for Captain O'Donnell's sarcasm," she answered coldly, "Sir Arthur Tregenna is in Cornwalk He left very early on. the moras following the masquerade-be Tor the news had spread.' pardon. Lady Cecil-| tree? beg your believe me, I syr to pathize with you at "Tt Is' J tedmond, have I ought least. Will you Darin me again, if IT) told you t hat but I am other night, coward say I feel but very little for Lady| 4 coward- a weak, ° piuful Dangerfield. Her own disobedience | They say a guilty conscience mi rakes has wrought her ruin-she has no one ¢ y of , and mine isag uilty cowards years to blame but herself.' indeec For seven conscience, "That does not make it any easier | | have kept the secret I tell you toto bear But I know of oid how lit-| night Re dmond," a great gasp, "you tle sympathy you have tor was my Dantree if Gaston asked me error. She may have done wrong huve I should said yes. and she is. suffering and suffering than > was more goes far to atone my lover grown white again-her seemed to suite cate word like marble in the faint, dow im as farther crouched looking away misty light. She was though shrinking almost from a blow from him as pe spoke, a wistfulness,| She had expected a great start-an & passion in er brown eyes he coul amaze and horror- exe ba aahige of not unde ata hard to bear as a diOW either as dare say people who go through Dead silence fell. He Neither ca me. life as you have gone, neither loving sat pe her tly still-a dark statue in the nor hating very greatly, can a/ford to dark Whatever look his face wore, be cynical, and ,hard, and cold YoOu|she could not see. That pause lasted have never suffered yourself-nor err-| for perhaps ten seconds-ten hours it ed, I suppose- how are you to Uun-|ceemed to her. Then, "Your husband! derstand low or feel mortals I hope ter, (Be O'Donne derstand rouble. is not for who you from your enough to will your do? be word, all be for too over-even to fel-|} least descend! strength with your gentle the Don't weaker able tower of sympathize far sis-| That is years you wife?" a surprise have And been "Por seven long. Qh, brother, forgive this for seven scoundrel's ae me. I years ve done her, Captain] shamefully wrong-lI have Geeaie livar as you uNn-|jng jie-I have deceived the pianos she is in|grandfather-the dearest brother, but hard-your you may life}j¢ learn you knew That what choking I have in her voice suffered-" made her what it is to suffer, before you die!" suffering goes fur "And pause again. aton e She turned fron n him, and was gone/to in." He remembered willovcy figure, the}Tady Ceci I's soft, -the graceful, ro=sad words of he passion in flashing hazel eyes. proach, and again his careessing touch her voice-what did it mean or: had the bowed head, It fell upon watched her-an inexplicable look on been a blow to him, a blow to his leve his face-a hard sort of smile on. his and. both-were great, pride, and his but his voice and touch were far more ps. "ven you may learn what It is to tender than she had ever know them suffer before you die He repeated | for years. her words inwardly, "as he took his "T can believe it," he sald; "you way to his sister's room, "Ah, Lady| pave atoned for your folly inc leed. ecil, you taught me that lesson Dont' fear, Rose I can only regret thoroughly six years ago. I was a fool|that you did not tell me long ago. then-a will go foo] now-and I fear ihe folly | Tell me now at least-all.' with me to my gra A She told him-in broken sentences racic at his sister's door. Tt is I,|-_-with bowed head, while the car rkdeep am c Rose," his | tamiliar voice said. "May/ness of the August night I come in iin the little room, the old story of He heard a stifled cry from within}|ag girl's lo ve "marry ‘ing and folly-of -a cry of terror it sounded, and his in. haste and repenting at leisure.' heart Had smote it him. come and to Poor little this-had unfeeling with he Rose! ‘IT wasn't her, been|from and] shall still my eighteen, and just heme school when I met with all a. girl's fo olish beauty, and love, and roHe was. very handsome-I such a have never seen with the a ash, and sease, world Anc a a man of the of ugliness, very vulcan CHAPTER XXII. have won voice mi "Six Years Too Late." heart. sentimental girl's dreaming little Rose, indeed! Inthe 2 of conquest Rae about Poor The arom: came gliding forward, so dus she him-married ladies petted and spoil1 like spirit-so unlike herself-so his ladies raved of ed him-y oung wan, so wasted-that with a shocked voice, and and his Mario beaux yeux exclamation, he drew her to him, and}y;__y7 him x a reckfell in love with down into her worn face. 1 ooked sort ao wa as 1 ater she despe rate you were ill, Rose "They told me suppose poor Danae field It I had thought! aa in this very house. not like this was M. De known-" -if I had uanusae's reputed heiress then, and just She flung her arms round his neck, looking out the sort of prize he was ‘ and hid her face on his shoulder young, very silly, not badVery ont Redmond. Don't i yOking, an d the heiress of one or don't epee to me like that, I dollars-a even wor prize million deserve it-I don't deserve apy his stooping to win And-and f tedyou. have deor kindness from first think he mond, in th ese shamefully. You will you ceived even liked me a little y c lespise me-you will hate me when I father detested him-forbade l lave told you all" house-forbade me to see or spea "Will I? I am not sure Then began my w rong of that. ; | him. doing- When you have told me all, £ think lid see } it did speak to him -I be sorry to see those loved him-you wouldn't underst and hollow cheeks and sunken eyes, and} jf I told you dearly and- how e hands. V ona Shall I light the iamps, a Redmond-I consented to a private Rose, lose He was afraid to M. "No eet no lights; such a wretch De Lawes Lansac's helress, and [ was af raid as I am Fershould tell story in the to : lose him. He threatened to ELe, dark sit down in this chair, never return if 1 reNew Orleans and E Redmond, and let me take this stool} fused I iarried him and fora litat your feet. At your feet, my fitting | tle time was happy in a fool's paraplace.' for a very little wi rile dise. Only "My dear Rose, a most ominous be- | indeed. My grandfather, in the most ginning What must the story be like ; unexpected and sudden manner, us you when the preface is so terrible? Have know, got r narried. Gaston was f uriyou not grown nervous and hysteri-|ous-no need to tell you how he cal, and inclined to magnify mole-|ctormed and raved, or the names he , r > hills into mountains? Out with it, |eagljeda x e Lansac. I received my mise not to be too stern a first lesson in his real character then. Pp father confessor. It's ine story I sup(Continued Tomorrow Morning.) hard taught her to fear instead of love| him? With the remorseful thought] still in his mind, the door opened and she stood before him. pjm~first, dreams mance. z Sie convent of nes fh CUTLER BROS. CO 36 MAIN i NEW _- Lda pee tones iss pices ie "erlno- ‘Ly ne STREET ARRIVE. waXOs before. is Satan Hat with the famous A "mushroom" y roses as seen Dupay Amerit in This 116 So. ta at Ranks, York repretheir New firmfi, through much have these ‘goods yery nee facilities their through underprice 2d add having to without for buying es se ee Our tailoring department is now replete with the latest productions in Trousers and Suit Patterns. Blue Mixtures, Brown Stripes and Plaids. Staple Greys. Pants to order, $3.50 to $12.00. Suits $20.00 to 5.00. Se In of with are Ss RATES: Not =-ytt 7-3) ° Month:....--One Seice» tener es 2100 ...-- ici eele sive ees ‘Three Months Pe Se 4.00 ....-.---«- wal ees ° oe Months Agee «'< easyer cee eeu Use eeeos ons YOG@r @ 05s 0 bess once cele Sunday Only: Orne cveats care peewer uu and schools, of with the ple town, It nothing out. SUBSCRIPTION Advance. In SOUe py) | 38'200 Gi00: monuments-and good Paterson, statements of public of in to state- printing natur ally, people, mao Paid them; homes to Sacramento ss Department. of took SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, bay. opposed country and to Editorial the to addressed be of cisco ee rebe should subscription to to or Department, Circulation to carriers notice not give Do should items City. the number best helpful needed. over churches, ee ease Saltt Lake n ee ene eae eee in ir in Newspaper Daily relating All matters the to DIRE ported Office. een local the or solicitors. News Congress, of Act the the the the REPUBLICAN, of eg Republican at of of sort ee Only under Clty, Lake postoffice at - March 3, 187 March 5,.48705 0 7 1906,6, e 10, 10, Feb. matter second-class as Entered ID "Utah. ‘arty ip the Republican ‘Party of Organ ments the es Company _ Republican . Com - Mountain Inter eret eee Anas __ Oficial The Morning by they all precisely es eas Bvery which yers INTER-MOUNTAIN was eee Published statement which 3 THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN and oe ee ee ee ' THE feral ~ & 1- |