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Show S .C.: d .,..7 , , S404te 4 m T. u-n- Lasix - 4V. t Afifton future. Si Ter )YoNl per have beett taken from in the Topeka mine of Jury vtunty, Colo., that are aaid to t75,000 L.OOO in gold per iay.-'e- oi belieVt vein ' The hauling of oVXfrom the ilunts-mamine, in the La.1 country, to the railroad, has been discontinued temporarily on account of the high water ' m'thd (Trand rUer. At least 400 men will be put to work at Candelaria. Nevada, in the near future, a new cyanide process that will work tailings successfully having made this move possible. A interest in the Dixie group of mines, eonsisting of thirteen -- locations fourteen miles west of M. George, was. sold to Salt Lake parties last week for 82.ouft Returns upon the latest shipment of ore from the .Checkmate showed 3.56 ounces of gold, 15 4 ounees'of silver and 8.5 per cent lead per ton. with a valuation of over 8'J0 per ton. The finding of a very rich ledge in the Lucas mine at Mokelumne Hill, Cal., has created much excitement. The (trike has been kept as quiet as possible. It is said that 81,500 in gold is taken out in every car. Clarence K. McCornick of Salt Lake haa purchased a one-fift- h interest in the April Fool mine, at DeLamar, Nevada, paying 815, (MX) for the same. The has been taken by other four-fifth- s Rutte men. at the head of whom is W. A. Clark. Chambers of the Superintendent Ontario and Daly mines at Park City, is laboring with his company to induce them to resume extensive operations Park-ite- s e on that property, and have great confidence in his ultimate succesa. In the Pinto King and Pinto Mammoth, in the La Sal mountains, recently bonded to Peter McCourt of Denver and Ernest G. Miller and A. L. Searles of New York, ore has been found that runs 10 to 30 per cent copper, 60 ounces silver and from 81 to 83 in gold. Prospectors sre swarming over the La Sal country in search of gold and copper properties, and there is renewed talk of the branch to be built by the Rio Grande Western. The company " h as such extensive work on hand that it la dodbtful if anything will bidone n one-thir- d old-tim- -- this year. A new shaft is to be sunk at the Massachusetts, at Park City, ground having been broke last week. President Conrad, who last season acquired the Massachusetts group at a cost of 8100,000, feels confident of the result of his undertaking, and hopes to add it to the column of prdducers the pres-eseason. The cyanide plant at the Eldora canyon, near Prescott, Arizona; is proving to be one of the greatest successes of the age. The values are being saved up to 98 per cent, the highest ever reported with this process. The loss of pound to the cyanide is only one-ha- lf ton, representing a losa of 16 cents. tone of ore are worked Thirty-eigh- t daily, and the average value per ton nt Is about 830. Another big assay haa bero received from rock taken from the Gold Standard near Vernal. The returns show f 100 in gold. The Gold Standard is on the big ledge that created such a stir early in the spring by the sensational assays received. These assays were all from tbe grass roots. Subsequent developments revealed the fact that the values decreased with depth, and at a depth of fifteen feet were almost . absent. e The Black Warrior mine, an Dixie the producer, adjoining copper property, near St. George, was recently bonded to Dr. J. C. 8. King and others. The Black Warrior was worked by ita original owners quite extensively in the earlier days, when they treated great quantities of ore with a smelter erected on the ground, The ore carried silver-lea- d - . - veluea, aQd as depth was Attained copper cams in. The register at the gold sampling-room- s of the Consolidated Kansas City Smelting and Refining company In Salt Lake City, for.the month of June- ' established a new record for the cyanide the receipts of gold dust for that period amounting to six tons and 173 pounds, with a total valuation of nearly 8300,000. In the tonnage the camp of Mercnr was overwhelmingly in the ascendant, although Sunshine, West Dip and Lion hill each made an improved showing, with a number of contributors from Nevada aDd Montana. A eon trolling Interest-I- n the great SL Eugene mine, at Moyle City, in Kootenay, haa been sold to tbe syndicate of Toronto, on a basis of 8450,000. The mine was discovered by an Indian, who was attracted by the bright pieces of galex na float, bnt who knew nothing of their value. He took samples of the rock to the priest in charge of tbe Catholic work among theJndlana at ; Tbs priest showed East Kootenay. the ora to a prospector, who located ths great St Eugene ledge. old-tim- fnts, ' . a bright , fAaege. otoket X '. ...... txirrtit twr N hf Ilf York Exrkftnge York Kroner Alt AH OP 1 jj... ern ountry. CHAPTER V. The un had barely risen when the smoke from the huts showed that Red mount had once more awakened to the labor of another day.-- Tha delicious Kent of the wood Area as the fiamea robe in the freah morning air proclaimed that tea was being mada to be served out prefatory to the two hours' work that had to be got through ' before breaRfaM-ttmc- . Men stumbled out of their huts, towel and soap in hand, and straggled down to the creek to waeh the "cobwebs out of their sleepy eyee. "Momln, Doctor. cried one, aa he passed the kitchen door. Good hund at plum-duf- f, Doctor? inquired another. "We'll see what youre made of on Sunday, mate. Nona of your stkkjaw. mind. Haw, haw! And so on, each one having some rough, greeting for ths "new chum. Thomas Haynes, the cook, was a smart, dapper-lookin- g fellow, about the average height, but eilm, and he went about his work with a rapidity and style that created a good impression at once. In appearance ha was Daly-Wc- Lark Dai ton The pictures thrown on the canvas st Sal lair on Professor Stevens birthday Were Fresfdebt'Shtfw, Brigham Young, Major Young and Major Grant, a group picture of the artillery officers. Professor isteveus. the temple, tabernacle, Eagle gate. etc. It is estimated 'that tbe long proposed and much needed change of the Tabernacle organ console or key box twelve or fifteen feet to the front of the instrument, would cost 8l(,0O0 as the improvement means substituting the electro-pneumataction for the presic ent arrangement. Owthe cost to the ing change is not looked for until such a time as the church is a little more flush than at Dxur. Regie Four Ace. . . Grrter-Mttiio- L Oaleha. Galena King .... U G. Ex Grand Central. . Hertrbel Horn SiUer . . . ngot Malvern Mammoth Mercur Lower Mammoth Northern Llgb Omaha Ontario Pet.ro.. Sacramento .. . . Sunshine..... Silver King. Star ConauHdetrd 40 JM . Shower Couaolutaied Swansea South Swanaea Suubeam Utah. .... Blue Bird Sec Con .. good-naturje- d . Bright Light B B Tumiel present. Buckeye A De La Mar A reunion of the descendanta of Boatoo Boa Tweed Bird Extension George A. Smith, who died in 1873, was Blue Big Camas held Jaat week at the residence in Salt BUI Nye Crown Point Lake City of Apostle John Henry Comstock Smith and Mrs. Susan E. Smith, his Century Camp Floyd son and widow. The occasion was the Columbia Crusader Con eighty-secon- d anniversary of the birth Centra) Mammoth of George A. Smith, and it is intended Dalton Diamond Consolidated to hold similar gatherings annually in Ragle JLUiue Bell Emerald There were present 141 Frlsoo. the future. Kagie members of the family, besides digni- Golden Golden Star. taries of the church and other promi- Gold Hill...... Homeatake nent citizens. Hercules..... The historic Beehive bouse, President Brigham Young's home, has been purchaaed by the Mormon church and offices of the first presidency end the residence of the president. President Lorenzo Snow will occupy the mansion, and he will be the first of the church leaders to do so since the death of President Young. The late President John Taylor lived in the Gardo, and President Wilford Woodruff occupied his own subarban home. The need of a suitable office for tbe church has long been felt By the present programme the main entrance to tbe Beehive will be the public oor. will be used ss tbe entering there s large hall 1b hard wood. To the right and left are long parlors; and ihese.rooma, with the hall, will be transformed into handsomely sppointed offices. The west parlor has a door leading to the office at preseot occupied by President Snow, aud these will be kept up for clerks and others employed. President Snow and family will move into the building as soon as possible. The family entrance will be the State street door, and the whole of the addition, as well as tbe upper floors of the main building, will be used as the private dwelling of President Snow and bis successors. In this way the church provides a suitable office aud home for its executive. The Beehive house was built by President Brighsm Young in 1852. It was designed for his private residence. Previously he lived at the White honse, now standing a little east of the EagiV gate. He wanted to be nearer to hie office, and so the big house was bnjlt on the corner. It was completed in 1853. Truman Angell was the architect, and he chose a Colonial design, the front being the same today ss in the original plana Jh foundation is of ent granite, anA the wails are of fonr thicknesses nf adobe. The upper floor contained long hall on the east aide, used for a parlor, and sometimes for parties and 'family dancea Down stairs tha east front room was the Upstairs tbe rooms are much the same aa of old. Tha long room on the east side, known as tha hall, la still intact, with ita aneient plaster work and heavy window casing which surround the windows looking oqi upon the Colonial The hall, with ita doorway porch. leading ont to the porch, la unchanged save for the handsome stairway and a door opening into the addition. The southwest room was tar a long time the private room of President Brigham Young, and looks unchanged except In a new style of paper that adorna the walL He Also used the hall aa his On the third1, floor are the garmom. ret rooms, with a closed stairway leading to the glassand wood cupola nnder the beehive, and from which is obtained a fine view of the city. A proposition to send the tabernacle . cbolr to the Paris exposition next year Is being seriously agitated. The scheme contemplates a wide range,- for U In addition to tha exposition trip, a lour of Europe and the eastern eities of tbe United States. The weather was just in ita right mood to begu.Mi people to Saltair June 88, and tie celebration of Professor Evan Stephens birthday by th chureh choir and lu friends took all the young people aud made heavy inroads Into the ad nit population. On ia International Joe Bower Joe Bower Kremlin Little PHubur Midnight Bower May Day Manhattan Martha Washington Monarch MoKiuiey North Swansea Orient... Richmond-Anaoou- Rabbit's Foot Rover Silver Cloud Sucre .. Sea Swan..- Tetro , , ... , Triumph.......... Valeo West Mountain Placer. West Merrur.. Yankee Con ..... . . Fissure Little Chief Bingham. O. P Uk. City. Sal. tvffl.v. Craeked eorw . v x ... i -- Crt..e ... hay..,. a W Old rooHters Broth ra, each Old duck Tanu Geese 10 M e 1630 K Esxa.Utub. percuss Butter, creamery Hunch butter Ban Cash wheat December Barley New December r rauclsou u rain. ,..l 07)4lI 19 IT 514 ! (6 LIVE BTOCK. Chicago, Oood to ehole e ill Medium cradea . .. I IS 00 ..IN 00 . gtockcreand feeders..' Bulls ovi and heifer. .. 00 .. 4 00 .. 4 TO .. 4 00 Westers fed steer.... Texas steers Clipped lambs... Vearl'ays Spring lambs... ,.000 .. 00 .. Kansas City. Native steer heavy Medium steers Light Texas steers Texas Cows. Native (cows and heifer Stoekera end feeders Bulls and ataga Lambs Clipped mutton. Stockers end feeders 4 00 mi n 5 10 44 00 f 10 5 10 7 no 5 10 u 4 4 to 05 7 50 . Culls 5 45 5 10 5 40 4t5 l (IN 5 14 1 10 75 t 4M 4 00 1 00 l go 90 W m 50 W ( 40 5 5 S4 Native beef steers Western steers Texes steers. Cow. and heifers Canner Stocker. and feeders... ; Built end stage......,. Western mutton. Stockers;...... Lambs ........ i. ... m ss 80 50 4 M 5 90 4 0 4 M ..... t 4 TO W ..... 4 90 ... 5 00 t4 00 w w US- 1 50 5 Ml 04 50 75 Deavav, Beef Cow stoers,,,, 3 50 I 00 Feeders freight paid to river.. , I Stockers, freight paid to river,, . g St Bulla and .tag. It Good fat motions 4 00 4 75 lenln,,,,,,,,,,,,.. ,,H IB 4 a 4 50 5 00 a 4 n75 00 usiirrs. Chicago Cattle Sheep.... Hannas Sheep. Omaha.. Sheep Denver .000 10,0(41 City-Catt- le... Cattle Cattle 1.50 8.000 8,500 500 800 bbeep Dynamiting Colamdw Snowdrifts. art at work with and shovela oa tha mountain ygUm of ths Colorado- and Son them road. Without the aid af dynamite. It U claimed, in Denver, the banks would, not disappear before the Fourth of July. Snow flghtsrt Tvsap Problem Solved. seems to have Hagerstown, Md solved the tramp problem. It puts tbe bob os to work upon the streets, end: thus enforces emphatic object lessons In Industry at the same time It lm- Drcrves the appearance of the city. -- tart her." "Ye. Luke. Anything wrong with HalL Mr. "Thai's possible replied You eeem to know the name someIt? "I remember a man on board ship once know how - 'pig-face- 10 10 -- br wife locked up In her e, replied Tom Bar wbo kept bis hi face flushing at being made the cabin tor three months, and carried til -her meals In loW Jlmsel" Frtject of a general scrutiny. "Twenty-threWell, you don't . .What - jbrutc !". ?ried , Mary, ,"Do you mean- to say he never let her out look it" "Never mind, fom youll grow old t all? In fine weather, "Only at night-tim- e fast enough, shouted another. "You her marched he and then up and down ha muan't mind Black Dlck'a talk the deck for only an hour or two. don't mean arf what he says. Wheres the missus?" inquired the Even on theso nocturnal occasion shs max who rejoiced in the name of Dick. was so thickly veiled that nobody 8ho la tired," replied Bayaea. "She tenld get a glimpse of her feature." d lady Perhaps shs waa a la never strong at the heat of tlmea. for her doilart,1 "Thata bad newa. We waa la hope that he had"ormarried she might have commitand said Jack; of sTing a few quadrille-parti- es and be was helping Ich like when we card a lady was ted eome crime, A murder perhaps te her escape. us. Owever, you coming up to Jins Good Baynes, how you made give er my werry kind respects and me gracious, Jump!" tell er as ow Ill call in eome time CHAPTER VI. thin afternoon end drop a card, conAs Jack Hall was speaking, Tom tinued the man, who had a high opinBaynes happened to be passing tho ion of hla own witticisms. with an armful of plates Thus, with some coarse Jests and open door and thess bs suddenly let aud dishes, as and tha meal chaff, the passed off, a crash with fall upon ths ground. men atrolled back to the ahed tha cried Mrs. Hall, "how "Dear ms," to aeemad be the that general opinion careless of you, Tom! How youngster knew what he was about, dreadfully and was a better cook than the dirty art ws to replace them? What could old fellow who had preceded him. you have been thinking about?" "I am so very sorry, ma'am," he reSoon after they had departed, and while Baynes was engaged In washing plied. "I must have slipped oa somedon't know how;" and up tin plates and pannikins, Mr. Hall thing I really he leaned up against the veranda-pos-t, looked into the kitchen. looking as though bu for that support "Getting oa nil right, Tom 7" ha he would have fallen down. n Job. "Thata good cheerily. "Well, there don't look so scared, men np here at these Rogulah lot of Mr. Hall times, hut they mean no harm youll man! said toon get nsed to them. You think "Pick up the pieces why, the lad There are youll manage the work, eh? There looks quits frightened. than that at sea ay, art a good number of mouths to feed." worse accidentstoo, tor the matter of "I aa not afraid of the work, air," and on shore, replied Baynes, and think I shall get that! Baynes did as hs was toldrbut he on all right with the men. They all had turned white to the very lips, Aa eeem enough." Aa ha npoke Mr. Hall fancied ha he walked away with the broken detected a curiously sad tone In tha crockery in hto cooks apron, he te himself mans voice, and ha thought what a on shore, too, for ths matend '"Ay. soft, gentl rotes it waa compared with ter that" of the rough tones of the ordinary bush After a few months Mrs. Baynee rehand. curiTour wife is the pretty well thla tirement cessed te excite much was an idiot, the wss too She osity. her after he long Journey?" morning sh was anyasked, scrutinizing him rather sharply. ugly to face ths daylight, suggested "Tea, air, thank you." replied Tom. thin that could possibly bementioned-, was name her whenever as be to stooping down, anawered, pick to bands ell voted was by but Baynes np a doth he had dropped. "Mm. Hall will look la and tee bar," be an obliging fellow and a capital continued the master of. Redmount, cook, so the men soon ceased to worry some time In the course of tha morn- him about his wife. One day Baynee aaked permission to ing." allowed to repair and occupy an old be "Thank you, air," answered Bayne; "but I would much rather that la, she hut which stood in a bit of neglected 'mould rather not she is ia such a garden upon the hillside eome two vary nervous state, and her eye hundred yards or more from the men's trouble her so much, that if Mrs. Hall quarters. Mr. Hall told him he might o as he pleased, so, with ths assistwould excuse her, perhaps abe may he took trow stronger with rest and cars, and ance of one of the men, then of the place,- and very epoa Ob. rery well!" aaid Mr. Hail, managed to make it snug sud comturning upon hla hed. When he I fortable. Thither he removed his few goods feeling better will do as well, only my wife thought she might help her a lit- and chattels. Including Mrs. Baynes; tle with some needlework and such but at what hour he made the exodus things; but If her eyes are so bad ' was never known, for the firet intimaThey are not so bad as all that," tion the station hid of bis having left Baynes remarked only hto old quarters was tha smoke Issuing hurriedly sometimes. I am sure she will be bap- - from the chimney of the renovated hut P7 to undertake any needlework Mrs. early the next morning. Hull wants doing. She is not quick. Mrs. Halt had, by her husbands ld- e! , Timothy Strew, per bale Live Turkey uobbiere Live Turkey Heue Chickens, hen. Calves..-.- log-lir- e. nag, -room. small-pane- d ed Twenty-thre- W84 Rys Barley Oets. Alfalfa Mixed vice.' eye-alg- ht day." The doctor, as the cook Is generally tyled on a station, proved hlmaelf to be as punctual aa he waa competent, and as tbe clock struck seven he rang the great bell outalde the hut which called all hands to their meat Up they came, running and skylark-lngfrom the ahed, hungry aa wolvea, and eager to see what sort of a hand the new chum was likely to turn out. Blessed if those scone ain't tiptop," remarked a bearded ttockmai You keep at with his mouth full. that, youngster, and we shant fall out, Ws 'eard as ow you were a married man whats Tom? namsT yer Well, all 1 caa say is, youve took the plangs pretty early. Why, you alat got no whiskers yet How old are you?" Exteuaton fin-tub- dining- dark almost to swarthiness, hut this had evidently been produced by exposure to the sun. Ills boyish-lookin- g face and youthful figure would certainly never have led any one to suppose that he wss a married man; and, M many of the men remarked on first catching sight of him. he had gone In for double harness pretty early in the La Heine worry abi, 7elleworhyhr f 'Leave well alone le my ac Mr. HalL. found It extremely convenient to have a woman upon the station, even It sh did choose to remain Invisible.. A Tom Baynra had at first stated, hie wife waa not quick' it her work, but waa a wonderfully skillful needlewoman, and she saved Mrs. Halt out she la very with her needle. many a weary hour's darning ' If I might go up the hoiise and On evening In the middle of April., fetch the things she will set to work some five months after Tom Barnes' at once." arrival h was eittlnf In the kitchen Time enough for that when (he ia with some of the men, when a swags-ma- n well enough to see Mrs. Hall,"- recarrying a bundle slung oa a stick turned the squatter. Women like to walked up to the door and asked for chat together over that eort of businights lodging. ness, I always find. Job, mate? asked "Looking for 9P from There ia something very- - odd. about one of. the, njcn,.as bg gjjnced - that young chap, with his soft voice his game of euchre. "Tea." and his shy manner." Mr. Hall thought "Knock"What lay are you on as he walked on to the shed. His wife suffers from bad eyes, too, yet about hand." New chum?" she can do needlework has a nervous Ay; not a very old one anyhow, complaint, and evidently is not anxious to be invaded. I wonder what governor." How long have you .been out?" Pshaw its only my fancy. I suppose! Only a few months; but 111 an A few weeks passed by, and shearwer your questions better after Ive ing waa a thing of the past. The station hands had settled down into, their got outside a square feed and a pot 'be bound. Tri com ordinary routine of work, and the ex- of lea. ril .. tra men who had been employed dur- goodlah atep today.!'.. mate! Here are, Interrupted you ing the busy season had passed on to Tom Baynee, placing a plentiful supfind similar Jobs elsewhere. of bread and meat In front of him. It is very strange, remarked Mr, ply Sit down and tackle that, and never Hall one day to his wife, that on never seas Mrs. Baynes. What caa mind their jaw." Tbe, men laughed and went on with really be the matter with her? He their game, until the stranger, having to eo bad tells me that her satisfied hi hunger and lighted a pip, that she cannot bear the light inclined foe being put That is odd," replied hta wife, "for, seemed more Els paces. through if her eyesight ia so bad, how in the here?" a ha chance of Job "Any world does she manage to hem these handkerchiefs so beautifully? I never presently inquired of the company in general saw better work in my life." Yea, I should think there ought to "Well, that is curious! iaterpoee answered one. "You had better be,! Aad shutting herself up Jack Hall. to-ihouse and see the boss In too ao persistently in Baynes hut go up He la pretty short-handmakes no end of gossip on tha station. the morning Charlie and Big German since A fellow asked me yesterday when I was over at B umber fa whether it was Jack went off t8ulllvaus to blow true that we had a maniac shut up their cheques" Baynes was sitting on e bench on here. If gossip of that sort to the talk on side of tbe hearth, resting hie chin we shall of a place fifty miles away, soon be getting a fine name tor our- on hto hands, and looking moodily Into the flickering selves here at Redmount" "Where have I seen your fac be-"Oh, as for gossip, youll find that asked the strauger suddenly. fore?" everywhere!" remarked his father. Ill swear." "Somewhere, "And, after all, Tom Baynee is the "I dont remember ever having seen smartest cook Ivt had for many a day, and a pleasant enough fellow, too, now you,?1 replied Baynes, scrutinising theX features; "indeed 1 am sure hes got ever that shy sort of manner others which he had when be first came up.' never hare. What may your asm Terhaps he is jealous of the other "Mine's Boh Luke. WhstS yours?' men, father, suggested Mary slyly, Luke!" echoed the cook, with a look them at to "and dees not liks M Bishop Marcellus S. Woolley wss chosen county commissioner of Silt Keme Lake county to fill the vacancy caused Mioe OCtlOl by the death of Francis Armstrong. Atx 81xth of the Jumes Watson AlUanc Bishop Albioa Ward, Salt Lake City, is recovering Bullion-Ber- k Chloride Pulat attack. from a prolonged rheumatic reotrautalureh His recovery will be cheering news to Coofor. his miny friends throughout ths west- Deity Dmly . ad good-natured- ly. good-temper- ed on perhaps you something against It?" said ' Baynee,- - I never Ynsw nypocy that 1 am subject: to k stitch some-- : tlnlee which takes me suddenly. Know haytklng against it?" Ha, hs! How could I? Why, I never even heard of It!" 1 thought perhaps you might, thats There all," rejoined the was a maa called Luke a relation, too, of mine and he got Into trouble, but his character was cleared from tho charge. It makes a man touchy who happens to bear tbe. same name; and when I saw you start I thought perhaps you'd heard about it, and and what may your name be?" "Mine? My names Tom Baynes. I'm Londoner, and a new chum, too, new-come- r. Uk you." (To be Continued.) CONSUELO'S QUESTS. , Tsktsg ths Kaelpp Cass Every Htnlaf S SMitlfil Bleahetm. Consuelo, duchess of Marlborough, Inherited from her mother, Mrs. 0. H. P. Belmont, the talent of aa expert entertainer, Progressive and charming eleven and rich, she le constantly' de-- ' ' vising new ways to amuse her guest aad succetds far beyond most other hostesses la England. For n month beck she and her husband have been-- . amusing themselves and their friends with what they call recuperation parties. Blenheim, one of the finest old eountrseate In England, to at its love--, llest in tbs early fall, -and Just now If crowded with guest,- mostly young people resting after their dissipations of summer and building up against tho avages of a winter society campaign yet to come. Tbe Kneipp cure has many devotees among - Consueloa gusstsiuid evary morniBg tlioy jnsy b seen walking barefooted on a demy lawn a large as a city square. 8ome-wh-er near 100 people ere staying at Blenheim, and over half that number are taking the Kneipp cure, bettering that daw upon the feet In the morning acts as a nsrre tonic, freshening up the entire system for all day. The time for the dew cur la between I and I In the morning, for after that the sun has absorbed the dew. The walk to taken before breakfast, with only a glass of milk In the stomach. The bath follows, then comes breakfast, and after breakfast tbe Kneipp girls ply tennis. It takes only a tew days of this treatment to bring back bright eyes and roses, but jrhether Improved condition Js due to the Kneipp cure or to the regular life and early hours which tbe young duchess Imposes upon bar gussts may- - well be regarded as aa open question. Oh, you neednt talk," said the Indignant wife, "What would you bo' today If It werent for my money, Id liks to know?" "I really dont know, my dear. calmly replied the heartless wretch, "but Im inclined to think I would be s bachelor," ' , , ,, -r- -- it J. -- . |