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Show 3.00). 6.00 with _ en ser tne unday egetonly,tha Stag 2 5 Subscribers notice to saeeee as "Siretlation delivery of paper. aes Bf add eteas nie an aciclote a er yei == will1 pleas one the 1-90/is boo Please give oe Neve sen the with red-light, exception are perfect. not yel epee view e points progress at always tury The nas the} to as!bated aivorial franete only, Independent 237 Enstern Offices Baul ‘fio, Dontnte Waldorf ee Chicago Office, 311 Boyce Building; J. Sees sole re presentative east/ They are| j ; think But been. been And may he here there} there Man rising for going DECEMBER It is very ndmission 13, to clear that by the that Herald's is not a forty of the and mitted to strong and do.' done low way prices. masters of wealth hae and of The milllons|to the seat the help pat houses. Ant | been the get their They are $ so a strip It of the of the the 4 goods robbed houses repro- prices, more.| profit, people of s Synopsis the people of the} of} which business In the will one stand LETTERS the Nothing on MAY BE the make of the the mail-order forgotten number of has views made the TO SANTA the L Ino ce 1¢ i] é Huguenot de Bezers chires at CLAUS. permission gool to women try and to the furnish the of | this prese nt | It aid to is one the the eee Pavannes ee i a conveyed in not blessed who things the fi way. faction, ot | a nbEd assassin hating of the him-as Duke of the Gulse who are working for the nation, and} We know all about Santa Claus. And THE SAN PEDRO RAILROAD." for Utah; There you are. Notice to all the|tion when people that the personal, private andj vote and and who meet every ques-| we are none the better for the know-} it comes up, and cast their|ledge. It is probably the only piece their influence in favor of|cf information obtainable which does corporate that interests millionaire and last are and of to all be the the Montana considered time by first| the Her- the claim the general They seems most helpful to} not any fac-| cause. do not make mcr2 "belong" to one better capable These and stronger and for the affairs of life littic children who have writ- ald, when they conflict with the in-|tion. So far as material for factional| ten ietters to Santa Claus, who have teresis of the people of Salt Lake. , quarrels in the Republican party is|dropped them in mall boxes with the That is pretty clear. It should be concerned, they certainly are not to| confident belief that the genial spirit understood by all the people of Utah. | be considered, To. that extent, andj|of Christmas, when ‘good will to These people are just now engaged|with that view, they certainly are|man" fills all the air, will convey in an effort to get fair rates from the} "negligible quantities." them, are happier than their elders. railroad I The papers But there is another and a larger} Maybe they don't know as much. But can do much for the cause of justice} and a truer view of the case. As men,/the old men and old women would they are not negligible,| give a good deal to get back that Inand right and commercial progress In as senators, Utah by placing the facts before the | and they have not been neglected./nocence and trust. ie because Senator not is It W. it property "ithe Is the of property the|about Santa them-the want all learned have who who and Claus, the! to given be letters women women their| good presi-| good from and senate, the of | dent people the Let senators} Utah the that have received recognition from fellow senators, and from the of| A. Clark." the note will You is against} Herald the But people. them, are they sorry They will fill the orders of the They/did. who pay in their money for subscrip- | President of the United States. They will keep alive that children, It is under no sort of obliga-|have been given most important com-| tlons. in | innocent fiction as long us they can. Mr. Smoot tion to the advertisers-the merchants | mittee appointments. faney in a whose business is hampered and made} particular has been sent to Europe on | |They will maintain or dificult by the ruinous freight rates|one of the largest commissions that| world of fact. And to the best of their ‘peace on spread It is not their| could engage the attention of govern-|ability they will charged by rallroads. They are honored, and theyjearth." They will stimulate the spirit It igs|ment. advocate in any sort of sense, given/|of helpfulness, of loving remembrance, and trusted, "the property of Senater W. A. Clark." |are recognized; |of innocent imagination. It will not help them in their demand | power. kindly have And the women who facthe In everything excepting It for fairness and justice and equity. It will|tional quarrels within the party, the| asked for the privilege of answering will not even state their case. not present their arguments before|senators of the people, lest the interests of its|and beyond are|plied by Mr. A. Clark W, owner, "Senator? 5 thereby damaged. Undoubtedly the truth properly set}ONE Utah EVIL RESTS the without} wholly are the characterization Blythe. ON ANOTHER. letters of some back get will | GLAD TEACHERS. FOR HAND the has knowledge larger the ap-|delights taken away from them. St pa Very shortly there will be a convenOf course the sending of money to before the people will be to the dam-| age of the "Senator," if he in his road| mail-order houses in Chicago or else- tion ef school teachers in Salt Lake, But]anq about a thousand of them don't to|where is a great injury to Utah. rates unfair has been charging Undoubted-|that harmful evil rests on the greater|}tnow where they are going to sleep And he has. Utah men. ly the truth would be of help to the|evil of excessive and unjust freight| as these are, in the main, women, the people if published. But the Herald|rates. Begin with the beginning.| problem becomes a public one. is "the property Clark," and the of Senator people of W. Utah expect no service, no just treatment] from the Herald. The may pay their money jt {s the annual session of the state A.|Take away the cause, and the smaller| need effects it must that rest upon Salt Lake stands people of Utah|manding position. to the Herald.| work of man have in a topple. | teachers' most com-|the association. betterment Nature and the|there is any conspired to make| schools, there pf It is held the schools. value or is interest for If Interest in in this con- But it will not Hft a hand to help|this the imperial city of the Inter-| vention. The papers and discussions, them In the biggest fight for the plain-| mountain country. With the passing|the mingling and comparing notes, all of every year these valleys will take| have a helpful effect on the teachers. by man. on wealth, these mountains give forth| They are made better able to instruct Furtheradvance their pupils. fortune. With the passing of every|and WHAT AN INNOCENT SCHEME. And Now the fellows who financed the|year the larger towns will lean upon| more, it is a sort of recreation. legis-|Salt Laxe as their elder brother, as] they need that, too. the stockade deal are urging The men will, for the most part, The borders| lature to enact laws which will per-|their strong protector. mit the police to make legal some-|of this city's commercial realm will] find board and lodging in the downThe eminence of the capital|town hotels and lodging houses. But thing that is illegal; make right some-| widen. There should be these will be filled. thing that is wrong; make permissible | of Utah will be advanced. welcome in the homes of our people lf- They| something that is "impossible. And heads The ra‘ircad men of the nation-the|for the women teachers, want the slate of Utah to authorita-) tively, officially and solemnly declare | little cocerie that sits in Wall street-| of these homes should tell Miss PowThat is all required.|ers, principal of Sumner school. that licen-|give it justice. against that civilization's law Justice in| they would be glad to have one or two They| Fair rates for Salt Lake repealed. be shall tiousness want the state to take the authority | business, the fairness one merchant] or three or four teachers take lodging with them, in the home, while the conof saying that a forbidden act may be| grants anther. They may charge the With that fair dealing which gives|yention holds. permitted; that the red-light business They may and that the police|this city the ability to compete with|teachers if they want to. may be allowed . est justice ever advocated shall "regulate" it. dealers a thousand miles away, with] graciously give them the room, If that So far as eating is conAnd|that fair deallng in charges for trans-|ig desirable. That is a very nice scheme. the minute the state of Utah should} portation which will enable the mer-| cerned, these visiling teachers can enact Such a law-which it is never| chants of this city to hold their own|take care of themselves, for there is going to come within a thousand miles|in their own territory with dealers aja better feeding than a sleeping equipwill they But of doing-the very fellows who now} thousand miles away, there Is no sure|ment in Salt Lake, on the greatness the city|really need to be provided with beds. suggest it would shriek in horror at|estimale It will be a gracious thing for each can attain. the perfidy of the Utah legislature. And ib the day when the merchants | family that can provide for one visitThere will be no law by the state making legal the business of the red-|of this growing city shall have justice|ing teacher or more to make known a _ worthy help will It Mark that, and then forget it.|from the kings of transportation, when} that fact. light. There] the networx of pretense and sham and| cause in which every family is interAnd it never should be done. ig an underlying reason for the at-|ins{ncerity and prejudice shall have} ested, and prove again the hospitable the} spirit of our people, to fairness Maybe sin|passeq away, that titude of the community. will not utterly and entirely be erad{-| dealers will be reflected in fairness to And after all they convicted Ruet The prices now are there is ocea-|the consumers, But because eated. They are made so by the rates | of only offering a bribe! sional theft it will not do for society|high. dared to do "th is? } duct from the king Our host did not his shoulders He had a safe conhimsel answer; shrugging) instead, he openéd the | door, and ushered us into the eating room Some preparations for our meal had already been made at one end of tne long board At the other was seated & man past mide 10 age; richly dressed His gray hair, cut short about a massive head, and his grave, resolute face square jawed, and donnie lined, marked him as one to whom eee was due apart from his clothe ae bowed to him as we took our se He acknowledged ies Se tita, fixing a by eys mites. behind his chair wearing the badge we had remarked in the inn yard. We began to talk, speaking in low tones that we might not disturb Alm. The attack on Coligny had, if true, its bearing on our own business. For if na ‘ an one as Pavannes ran We had hoped to find the city Sarit: If instead it should be in a state of turmoll Bezers''s chances were so much the better; and ours--and Kit's, poor Kit's- so much the wor: Our companion ki by this time finisned his supper. But he still sat at Par vasked, iis tone harsh gentle men 7?' an high 1 "0 tel h We Raawhiad in thé affirmative. "Tomorrow " he questionec "Yes, we answered; and expected him to continue the conversation But Instead he became silent, guzin 1 stractedly at the table: and what with our meal, and our own talk we had almost forgotten him again, when looking up, I found him at my elbow, holdah: out in silence a small plece of ae sae was 580 But weutn at thes re were half a"dozen guests of a meaner sort at another table close by, I St that he merely wished to make a private communlieation to us; and Waetanaa Bs take the paper and read L t ntained a scrawl] of sel words only-_ cnasser lI'Idole No more. y locke d at him puzzle a able to make nothing out of it roix wrinkled his brow over it with the same result It was no cond aadive it to Marie, therefore "You do not unde rstand? ?' the stranger continued, as he put the scrap of pe my head We had all risen out of rampact . > him, and were standing a little group about aim. "Just so; it is all right then," he s nothing. Go your way ut-I have a@ son yonder not muon younger than you, young gentieusn: And ifyou had pug erae ea I should have aa: te you ‘Do not got There are enough sheep for the shearer He was turning away wits this oracular saying when Crolactte touched his sleeve. "Pray can you tell us if {t be true," the lad said eagerly, "that the Admiri al de Collgeny was wounded yesterday? "It is true," the other answered, turni his grave eyes on his questioner, while for a moment his stern look failed him. "It 1s true, my boy, ue added with an air of strange solemity "Whom tae Lord loveth, He ahieetantth And, God forgive me for aaa it, whom He would destroy, He first maketh mad.' He had gazed with peouper favor at Croisette's girlish face, I thought, Marle and r were dark and agle, by the t - on ie floo grade Black Silk Taffeta, good unusual money-saving sale that Regular $9.00 450 at... . => *-_ © © # @ Entire Stock of Colored Silk Petticoats at One-Fourth Off € To make the department additionally attractive and to invite Christmas purchasing we will place our entire line of colored silk petticoats on sale Monday and Tuesday at one-fourth off. All the y OF | wise. | the highest full flare; an great while. and Tuesday stylish colors-green, navy blues, tans, Copenhagen, steel gray, old Fe mocnein mse tom S000 63250 DEC OE rose, two tone effect, brown, red, pink, light Fownes' s- Gloves, ALS ; and. 12 prime quality button length, tans All sizes Pique Monitor Pique and yellow Belt Special Christmas Glove Specials ee blue Gloves, the black | merer Most serviceable on all colors glove ma $2. the) 00 Regular Women's latest navy Gooq Elastic buckles. 60c values. N Belts, with Special E b . id c EN d i; yA yn PRESIDENT very {Petticoats made of widths, deep flounce, only occurs once in a underskirts, Monday le called his $4.50 J Special servants efore him, the one carrying hi s dag: and the other, two candle Then I came down early: next morning. the first person I met was Blaise Bure...) He looked rather flercer and more shabby by daylight than candlelignt. But he saluted the respectfully; and this, since it was clear that he did not respect many people, inclined me to regard him with favor. It always is so, the more savage the dog the more highly we prize ita attentions. I asked him who the Huguenot noble was who had supped with us. For a Huguenot we knew ne must be. "The Baron de Rosny," he answered; ET h word "tonight But I did not hear t a "it. "Your lordships are golng to Paris?" he resumed in a different tone. Whe I sald we were, he loo a na nia aise way, half timid, half ay ea arrogant. ‘I all y ask ot you theau ne sald, KO ing to ars myself, J am not afraid of odds, as you have seen. But the values Women's Pique and gloves, regular tan shades, $1 Corset Covers | 25 $2.00 "4 Ribbon real over-seam, 1 F Rearreas colors 7 a 40c $1. 50) Special < Satin , Taffetas, } Values up | We Cc) in to are : fo line and | new Taffetas | PADIES' 25 to Special yard. $5.00 Each. ae a splendida CE s widths. and colors all 4S any 1 RUCI TINGS of NECKWEAR FANCY Off One-Fourth Taffeta Black ? Ke ere rol ew | in all slzes- § sizes, all Gloves, Prix-seam petiie 50 semrawee ec SE40' and $200 2 os fine Grenoble, kid $2 .---+4++++++-- all colors and Special .... 7 CLARK, grown n A. have R W. a boy." I was us of Some belief in Santa Claus, | wag a poct who recol- | ven when Than This is one of the most has made in years. When you us that they are indeed bargains. g |themselves to the conservatives who Utah people} THIS | never want to change. representatives | of SENA-| should be proud torial statement: PLACE, FIRST "IN. THE TO BELONGS NEWSPAPER TOR senators. In the course | ,pijqhood-this "Smoot and Sutherland | 9), time there 4 to the serv-| U nited States least of all | of it he says: day and Tuesday your choice at $4.50. fortunate purchases our buyer see them you will agree with lea ‘ It is not devoted It is any party. @ A silk petticoat value that has never been equalled or attempted in this city. The regular price of these underskirts is $9.00. Mon- thes to stable. th es, (CHAPTER THREE CONTINUED.) Such was the outward as tl r t not eatin rumors that oe ady CoIigny, taking advantage the footing given him, had ga uined an influence over the young ng. pa reatened Catharine de Meatel herselt The admiral therefore, to whom. the | eee not half of France had long oked to as its leader, was now the} 1| who things children On. permit "them oes an intensity which probably as not to be found tin the affection of his friends, popular with the latter ae she was, Jaboring in the interest of the general | are ngeligible quantities." And some | lected his childhood. He remembered till, pees who were not uShS pots little in his laid he a boy when like to} that who people, Utah j he a a egard for him as gr It is the private enterprise of; of our good public. enc nae and a gallant soldhar We winhis through out looked and discredited, | bed representativs their have of Mon-| A. Clark W. Senator Former -though we were of the old falth, and the the other side-had heard much of him in right saw a star dow, and & nuc § 1 tana, a non-resident of the state, and} ar feeling quite jubilant. yard spoken of him always as a great man, the in stood that tree a of forks | Of wrong. be may Blythe Mr. But holds his propwho a very rich man a nan mistaken, but brave, honest = him believe capable in his error. Therefore 1 erties-all of them, and they include|course he is right in the sense that) pis childish fancy made He knew that, when the landlord me orga ae senators from Utah need not be/+ho tree held up the star. pen his the Salt Lake Herald-to aim, I forgot even my hunger. And to manhood. he grew as of senate} potter matter the in Sy ea for of was shot, my lords as he caring to service; personal of | Di ideed pesenen the Rue des Wosses yesthe sentiment They have the good sense|then he expressed to | quarrels. interests; safeguarding his own terday," the in declared with bated | wrote: he when humanity all either enlist to not breath ue is ‘not known whether he balance the and working only for him. will live or. dle Paris is in an up| tic tae are dar oan wel RS In the issue of that paper for De on the side of Tee | roar, and there are some wao fear the en wors know To I'm off from farther Hea-| LaFollette, or Bee trying to follow first occurs cember the following edl-| "But," , aid doubtfully, "who has paper. {ce of DOZENS AND DOZENS OF BLACK TAFFETA PETTICOATS AT HALF PRICE. | a uneaT sbl ete te eben aes eae it unee 1 hims ae t Bure Catala "the ‘de "Cayhus) co py happened to y signa, the RS children of : a itaueee ne let- city the for by the trustful eee ngainst trothed. tal been has give in Sree ae 1908. Silk Petticoats Z. C. M. 1. Chapters, just been the marriage eer wD "ody ey aaKe ey ge . pone Loe Mie. de. Cay lis appealing more for to Sat-|..:6q statement concerning Preceding de Pavannes, a en M. le Vidame ie a Peto weak- Evening Post Mr. Samuel |have written. It is to be hoped the] will permit him to lend oue of the cleverest writers oR ae weet country, public/his |tors want current 3 = of a by-gone age OAS a SAE Se Oe incton BLYTHE of Huguenots had cemented by barkioine ligitimate of loss a solid rock of prohibition of wrong. It! Wuniished in many days than the story is the only logical, the only possible | found yesterday in The Republican to position. _. | the effect that many letters addressed The transparent plan to throw this/;, ganta Claus had been received at burden on the state is entirely fulile.|i,, soit Lake Panes. Mr. Thomas And it should be so. | ne as asked the department at WashMR. | be 13, A Stirring Sale of WEYMAN needs | Lluguenot, king of Navarr ret o lois, sist ‘rance traffic bureau goes] jie king At thet CG home hd Z > a Gayl a It moves S}hias just ‘announ ae trouble. all without is a/nesses per- must time io on|to | J. DECEMBER The scene of the opening chapter: aid in one of the French 1572 2 when peace between C .| common STANLEY a Author of "Under the Red Robe," "My Lady otha," "Phe Long Night" "A Gentleman of France," "The Man in Black," Ete appears and noble city, and of the state, and of the re-| Catholic' a ar tla step;| gion. When they shall have won dc Pavannes, At this junction onu the latter: approaches cen-|their fight, there will be a falling of|}a mob whom the Vidame ‘‘Here will be Society clear all BY | robbed by the rail ae i their money out of powers work of mail-order dealers are e They send Tae state, habit THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF for pays| in some meagow : Utah, since they 5 of ether keep centuries-and say: you urday Blythe, own basis | has which evil an for people Utah 1908. HERALD. OF THE such be people in by rufnous mail-order will the at ithe is.| WRONG. MISSION the consumer 5 is gait Lake cannot wrong thing which WHERE SUNDAY, that by never thfs the vet ure stand|cannot | THE than ronizing how! i that] E in and all. has has Man eete and Bie comparison case, years. . aiscone eee manttices-Dooly departments: in into} -++ 3-0)v | rising-until the perfect day. es There "just be no backward xplicit no concessions in the twentieth eam when| sea ment no ;.90\}ot tinne paper will be hohored only subscription is PAID EN ULL editorial pale of make aggravated Se false |There } ind Sunday ana which getting a little nearer right every day.|as the a 8 iow cena The progress may seem slow. ose} roaas. Sunday..--$_.75/}fell. c ay. 2.00 : Dally ro and s month, ce See : vices bes Men Daily and Sunday year,\Daily and Sunday.....- One are The SUNDAY, bf r Saori -50 expenses advances. UTAH, = more HATES One Year ..-.;. ----- Pald in 4 Advance . further CITY, Ue yyyaa wrong Six One Not +O these soclety -,| 1 an only in insignificance month, Sunday excessive state One Three not| and} able shall Paid in Advance. Dally and Sunday months, Daily and Sunday. will assault the tribute to the railroad kings Nothing can be more harmful to the Congtess/awful in it that LAKE Pak. of Newspaper fizht say SALT These battery may be permitted under "reg-| ulation." And if the thing is unthink- aecat Act to charge rei the Only Pepublican. Sicha Salt Lake City -_-_-__-_-_- SUBSCRIPTION oceasional REPUBLICAN. non-residents Y! TO a Lake City, under March 3, 187 . an society which Pd a= is for INTER-MOUNTAIN Because} N t (ah. entered rvary "tO, eri co Party stealing. MY there by Company. Republican regulate Gg the and BZFA Morning Republican of try y Every Orgon | to NI Published Inter-Mountain Official REPUBLIGAN Zz THE INTER-MOUNT AIN -_ 4 Our entire line of Black Taffeta Silk, ranging is price from 75c to $1.75 a vars all 25 Jo Off next week roads will be In a queer state if there | flame the twin towers of Notre Dame, | last palr of the ‘troop. hey were be anything on foot in the city, and-)} and the one tall tower of St. Jaques la | ¢ ae the street in Witch we stood, well, would rather ride with you,|} Bonk herie. A dozen roofs higher than | and had only a side view of them; or gentle men, than alone." thelr neighbors shone hotly; an a! eae of the nearer rider. He was a "You are room to join us," I said gre at bank of cloud, penieh lay north singularly enone man, ina go about "But we. sta in half an hour. Do|#nd south, and looke like a man's | twenty-two or twenty-three, with long you know Beis well? j hand, stretched over a city, changed | lovelocks falling on his lace collar and "As well as my sword hilt," he gradually from blood red to violet,| cloak of orange silk His face was plied briskly, releved I thought by my | #4 from violet to black, as evening | sweet and kindly and gracious to 2 acqulescence. And I have known tnata c ell. from my breee tung r you want a/|_ game at pau a pretty girl to| kiss, I can ae ‘You ‘ the ce for the; one or the other The halt rustle shrinking from the} , | marvel. Passing within the gates and across first one bridge and then eked ets we Were astonished and utterly mnfused by. the noise and niubbub thraueh which W® e rode undredgs seemed to be mov- great city which I felt, suggested to | Ing ; Is me that our swash-Guckline friend | Streets. Way and that in ‘omen sereamed ut he was a stranger to | Me. "T uld ha ve worn,' exclaimed le roteatio: that that was ge himself-M. ide avannes!"" ‘That? I answered, as we began to the narrow eee aa the crowd to one an- | 3; Jh, dear. no! melting before might help us if he would... "Do you/ other from. window to window. he ‘No! no! The farther man!" he exknow M. de Pavannes?" { asked imbells of half ia ee churches rane plainad pulsively. "Whére he Hyves In Paris, | the curfew Our co ntry ears wer But I had not been able to get a I mean? deafened. Still our aves lelsure tc 00d look at the farther of the two. "M. Louis de Payannes?" quoth he take in the tall houses with their high-| We turned tn our saddles and peered "Ye pitched roo nd here and . a | after him. His back in the dusk cer"Tl know " he replied slowly, rub- | tower built into the wall; the quaint | tainly reminded me of Louis. Bure bing bis ann -- : ooking ae me foe tonns noo sroups ae townshowever: wae ani os ey M. fcrounc n ough 1ere he ha his - ellows ome oO r s y ale aughe at the lodgings in town a while ago, before-| With a fierce gleam in tholr sen! idea. "Your friend," hee sald,"isa ah! do know! I remomber.,'' he | Who, standing in the niopthe of reeking wider man than that!" And I theught added, in slapping Paris a his thigh, fortnight es Go ; yan ee me you "T can ca went ago "when I was I was | @leys, told an EG answered ie guide us stra he reepllec that watched But us go c erjoyed.|our dismount' ners: ir | Ewa, to the house." sunny And you| presently ilcade path. of six They lounging we by. he was in had to werk emen Were apr their | chattering to one Sr oRne. unconsclous of the people stop. pa A 2a vette right there-but acros two aoe saddles an dis Settee mer not be the worse for ‘my|or the remarks they excited. Their company oe Is a queer place when/ sraceful bearing and the richness of 1ere is pe trouble fore, but your | their dress und equipme ldchehi heve:ccoto thei 1 pans surpassed i lp thn c rot the right man to|anything I had ever se doxen | mira] > year ae aw mean, cut of the 5 ues be better. then clothes. it might Rimi iets Rie Se antaag eee for crowd, bad. pathered to, watcha Mitle | be"awornts he wane at eee es Teeny: nc wes, the "They n The have e next one acne cs more 16 Other, who Comtedderig Rouche- they foucault."' We RiSnee as he spoke into a narrow street near the river » @nd d could Bailie far from _us a mass of dark pilot you through it." ages and lackeys were attending then sulldings which Bure told s didtb not ask him what trouble he|on foot, and the sound he Louvre-the king's 8 nd of thelr > jests &'s residence. Out meant, but ran-indoors to buckle on|"nd laughter came to us Gives this of this stre we turn into a short my sword, and tell Marie ene! ie rolsette | heads of the crowd. a one, and here Bure drew rein an 4 of the ally I had securea hey were White: T-wns i | ped loudly at some heay hile at i we took the some} was road in ecient much pleased, as was aia sootha that moyenants °o PRT REL ee 8 aso ae PR Re$ t ete that v eye aE eecaEON back opened: he led the ee se cinn coins ; uro| yard, the af- ernoon. Ceara but eA i nd a. smitl Marie'scet horse b then casteee« aL afhimselt Be as2 Oe. | Files atso far os t 7 where we stopped to lunch. oe an unconscionable time for it: the time at the first y was eastern ni 80 shts, heigh We at Rete ' ee waiting. hed wee Ral th rrAGient warming he and picking out ewit th Was acele BaVaEe see, oath: Bu uncalled Bl oe one arrested Beasroisette » who marie Us riding whip. exclieme er oy wed the ahices Rae v the tapped Look!" ae Poe as of my anahors frightened- | plunging had next moment of the ld ethlch lad's the "Bure's cues rou my arm with | ran h ees in |[foot aera z e crete begging us ann though The | coe ught ora | end continued projecting ‘ es eones ses Oo one to Z us to M. and we were Journey, that on Page n In one corof the men, dissmount, sald the de Payinat cn Five.) |