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Show - V y- - L, Apple Slump. a dozen tart. Pare, core and qua-te- r Juicy apples, pour oer them a cupful of hot water an place m a saucepan on the back of the rane Let them land five or ten amines, then add two cups molasses Cook ten minutes, cover with a paste made from a heap ing pint of sifted flour, a teaspoonful of sugar and two of baking powder, with enough sweet milk to make a soft dough Spread this over the ap plea, cover the kettle closely and cok 25 minutes without uncovering Servo with lemon or foamy sauco Order Oil Burners. Thirty-Tw- rtte Mexican Central railroad has ordered 32 consolidated engines, equipped with oil burners, delivery to be made In November, December and January. The engines will be built by the American Locomotive company And at Your Expense. His Idya of a lousier la any on who drinks nothing stronger than wa ter." How ridiculous' If you Why, a lobster laid enough he a take a nip press bound to Unflattering. "Wonder why It s so easy for a feP low to get engaged at a summer "Ever look Into one of these sum-mhotel mirrors?" Yes." "Well, when a girl sees herself la one of those, she s ready to accept almost anybody "Cleveland Leader. et His Bait Good Enough. You can't fish Keeper HI, boy! here without a permit o Roy Well. Im getting well enough with a worm! Tit Bite. Constituent Wanted Much. Senator of Nelson, Minnesota, claims to number among his constituents the American citizen who has th most primitive ideas as to the po ver and duties of members of congress This voter, who lives in Sleepy Eye, wrote Mr Nelson, sayWhen yon go to the capital ing: the next time please go to the pension office and get ray pension Increase pushed through, and then see If the flsh commission will give us aome trout seed up here Same time see the postmaster general and have Nila Swenson madL postmaster at Ko day, and If you see him, tell Secro tary Wilson we all up here want next spring plenty new cabbage Next time go In attorney general's office and poke up Moody to get Halvot H ors out of jail for selling whisky to Indians. Thats all now." Paupers Were Well Fed. In the records of St. Thomas hospital, London, ia an entry of the year 1570, to the effect that "In consideration of the hote tyme of the yere, the poor he allowed every on a lay three .pyntts of Ber for two months" a quart at dinner and a pint at supper and at the end of two months return to "there olde ordinary allowance, wyche is one quarto." The food at this ancient workhouse was to be dealt as liberally as the drink. The wl no al jer and steward were to byfle but of the beat, without bones and In speclall without the marybon, and none other to be bowghL" We Make Travel Easy. Five trains daily via the 'Atchison, Topeka A Santa Fe, Colorado to Kan-sa- s City, St Joe, Chicago, Galveston, Ask me El Paso, Ctty of Mexico. C. F. Warren, about reduced rates. O. A., A. T. A S. F. Ry, 411 Dooly Block, Salt Lake City, Utah. Wind Cuts Out a Car. heavy freight car, the sixth from a .boose, on the Northwestern train near Scarvllle station, a short distance north of Mason City, la., was blown from the rails by a high wind, the drawbars being pulled out The train was moving at the time, and no other cars were affected by the storm. No serious damage was done In th country. Have Chang of Menu. Is not good economy to cook the same thing day after day. Study up It new dishes and use up all the of bread, cereals, anything of the cakes, and they proved. serve them daintily, and put bits mashed potatoes, or sort In your griddle left-over- s; You will be greatly Im- Cant Lose Aay nosey taring Dlsaosdf free as. We bay aere. terry aore sad sell nore thsa aay Dls-no- sd bouse la tbe west Floe goods only ressoaablo trices. at mm j 1 f 8 S R; CROCKETT. Autxr of Tie fo feet as the young Dane also had done moment before. Maurice recognized the man who stood by ihe door as the same whom he had een o the ground In the yew-trewalk hen he and Joan of the Swor1 Hand had faced the howling mob cf the city. For the second time e Priiice Wa-- p had interfered with the amusements of the Princess Margaret. iCopj right. 1SHS. WOO, by 8. R Crockett.) The lady looked haughtily at the in own land and then come back to flout CHAPTER VIII. Continued. ler tru At the litt e chalet among the hills her for It. To what. she said, am I so for Maurice understood her to refer to a here the Duchess Joan had so sud tunaie as to owe the unexpected honor the la two of the kiss given and returned decly disappeared they found this v udy ? of aot and her aged nurse darkness of the night. He knew I came to pay my respects to your Impatiently awaiting their mistress. of how many other indiscretion! h highness. said Prince Wasp, bowing had ho To them entered that composite and was now to bear the brunt, or i did not low. know the princess and turned on the spot and fled one more puzzling outh the was amusing herself It Is my ill Plassen-huracross of the river. secretary of the embassy not mv fault, that I Interrupt Princess. he said, standing hum- fortune, Johann, Count voa Loen And, ed at a ;oint so full of Interest wonder of aonders. In an hour Joan bly before her, I did wrong. But conYou are al of liberty to leave me darkness the of the Sword Hand was riding eagerly sider the temptation, now," the princess, falling hack " towards her capital city with her due the night on a ceitaln haughty dignity which The darkness of the night," she she retinue, as If she bad been only taking kepi behind her headlong Impul Ina little summer breathing space at a said, stamping her foot, and In an slveness Inare seat. country stinctively mocking tone; you I madam he replied; but It was six months afterwards that deed well inspired. You remind me of first obey I hve a message from your the Sparhawk, who had been given the what I ventured that you should b brother He asks you to be good command of a troop of good Hohen-stej- free. The darkness of the night. Inlancers, asked perfulssion to go deed! I suppose that Is all that sticks in your memory, because you gained on a Journey Whither would you go" asked his something tangible by It. You have eorri-dor- s mistress forgotten the walk through th someof the palace, all you taught me To Courtland." he confessed, what reluctantly, looking down at the In the rose garden, and and how apt peaked toe of his tanned leather rid- a pupil you said I was. Pray, good Master Forgetfulness, who hath foring boot. And what takes you to Courtland? gotten all that, tell me what you did in Courtland eight months ago?" said Joan; you are In danger there I came I came, faltered the SparBesides, would you leave my service hawk, fearful of yet further committing and engage with some other? Nay, my lady," he burst out; "that himself, I came to find and save my dear mistress. will not I, go long as life lasts! But he hesitated as he but the truth Is The prinYour dear mistress? spoke 1 cannot get out of my mind cess spoke slowly, and the bine eyes the Princess who Kissed me in the hardened till they overtopped and beat dark. The like never happened before down the bold, black ones of Maurice to any man. I cannot forget her, do von Lynar; "and you dare to tell me what I will. No, nor rest till I have this me, to whom you swore that yoa looked upon her face. had never loved woman In the wotld Walt, said Joan. Only wait till before, never spoken to them word of Out of my the spring and It Is my hap to ride to wooing or compliment! Courtland for my marriage day. Then sight, fellow! The prince, my brother, I promise you you shall see somewhat will deal with you." of her the Lord send It be not more Then all suddenly her pride gave The disappointment was too than enough! way. So through many bitter days the keen. She sank down on a ottoman by the window side, sobSparhawk abode at the castle ot she added, Only in the heart! bing. Kernsberg, 111 content. bride to the to his enough accompany Now Maurice von Lynar was not minster has been 111 He woman CHAPTER IX. quick In discernment where all day with his old trouble, and canwas concerned, but on this occasion not wait In person upon his betrothed. The Sparhawk In the Toll. was he recognized thst he blindly play- Hdmust abide in solitude for this day full the and It was the end of May, ing the hand of another, a band, more- at least. Your Is apparently bursting glory of a northern spring, over, of which he eould not hope to men fortunate! highness cavalcade bridal at the last when see the cards. He did the only thing The purpose ot the Insult was plain; wound down from the towers of the which could have saved him with the but the Princess, Margaret restrained on Castle of Kernsberg. and sank near came He princess. henelf, not- - however, hating the In A they rode toward the gate of one knee before her. suiter less. a Courtland they were aware of splen"Madam, he said humbly and In a 1 pray you, Prince Ivan," she said, reto out came which be to cavalcade not did moved v.ce, I beseech you return to my brother and tell him the of prince, angry not to condemn me unheard. ceive them in the name are ever an honor, and to conduct them with honor to the In the sense of being In love, I never thg his commands to the letter. anl shall be obeyed them for loved any but yourself. I would rather palace prepared dismissal bowed in lie dignified I In the center of a brilliant company , than put the leaat BUght upon one a P u S wep Wasp iPce whose rode the Princess Margaret. At sight memory1 BurpBBBngiy fair, of his of the duchess party the princes ha never departed from me, sleeping,f sling the fioor with the depth alighted from her steed with the help or waking, whose Image, dimly flashed out his sting, of a cavalier. At the same moment has never for a moment been erased nsment-hleave highness with less reyour down fl Hand 8word leaped Joan of the from my heartr tablets, . 1 that solitude has lts perceive is of her own accord and came forward "But you aald just now that you grit he said cotipensattons! new sister. meet her to came to Courtland to see your dear The pair was left alone, but all The face of the princess showed a mistress?" thfags seemed altered now. Margaret trace of emotion. She appeared to be The young man put his hand to his of Courtland was silent and distrait she recollection some head. struggling with Vw Lynar had a frown upon his brow, was unable to locate with precision. "You must bear with me," he said, sad his eyes were very dark and I hope you will be very happy with If perchance for a little my words are after then wild. I had, indeed, no right to speak Mgry, time I must kill the fellow! my brother, she faltered; fNext a moment she added, Have you not of you as my dear mistress. muttered. He took the band of the hi own? of your perchance a brother Oh, It was of me that you spoke and respectfully kissed It princess But before Joan could reply, a repre- said the princess, beginning to smile "I am your servant," he said ; "I will forcome had the of sentative prince a little; "I begin to understand. do your bidding in all things, In life or to her ward to conduct the bride-elec- t "Of what other could I speak? said In death. If I have forgotten anything. rooms, and the princess gave place the shameless Von Lynar, who now In been remiss, believe me thst aught to him.. began to feel his way a little clearer. it was fate and not I. I will never preI have Indeed been very 111, and But all the same she kept her eyes sume, never count on your friendship keenly about her, and presently they when I am In straits my head is still past your desire, never recall your rested with a sudden brightness upon unsettled, It springs from a secret ancient goodness. I am but a poor sol the young Dane, Maurice von Lynar, wound That at the time I knew noth- dler, but at least I can faithfully keep at the head of his troop of horses. ing of." my word. He Is different he Is changed, - The princess withdrew her hand as As he kneeled thus the prise how but to wait bent over him with a quizzical expres- if she had she said herself; been somewhat fatigued. till we get to the palace, and I shall sion on her face: Do not hh afraid, she said a little soon find out You are sure that you speak the bitterly, "I shall not forget. I have And Immediately she caused It to be truth now? Your wound Is not causing not been wounded in tbe head! Only intimated that all the eaptalns of you to dote? In the heart! she added, as she troops and the superior officers of the Indeed, turned away. Nay, said the Sparhawk; escort of thg Duchess Joan were to be tls almost healed. (To be continued.) entertained at the palace of the Prin"Where was the wound? queried Northern Settlers Hospitality, cess Margaret. the princess, anxiously. "The north So at that moment when Joan was country settlers are Vos "There were two, answered said A. 8 not if hospitable, nothing "one in my Lynar, diplomatically; Power of Ely. "It Is proverbial that and of shoulder at the base my neck, the traveler is always welcome at the other, more dangerous, because homes In sparsely settled regions in on the head, itself. nearly all parts of the world, and the Let me see. rule holds good through northern Min She came and stood above him as nesota. he put his hand to the collar of his "In traversing the vast stretches of doublet, and, unfastening a tie, he forest thst still remain in the country showed slipped It down a little and to the north of you only occasion her at the spring of his neck Werner ally come acrossEly a settler's cabin, but von Orselns thrust. when such a place is reached, you "And the other, she said, covering nay be sure that you will be welcom It up with a little shudder, that os ed to for the stop night or longer. the head, where Is it? If there is at home, which The youth blushed, but answered la often the case, you will In almost valiantly enough. very Instance, find that the door is "It neverwas atr open wound, and Unlocked,' and perhaps there will be so Is a little difficult to find. Hers, a notice written on the door Inciting brow where my hand Is, above my you to make the most of the conveni"Hold up your head, said the prin- ences about the house while you recess. On what side was It? On the main In thst vicinity. It Is seldom You It right? Strange, ! cannot find if ever, that such privillges are abusare too far beneath me. Tbe light ed. falls not aright Ah, that Is better!" the To the man making his way along rivers and lakes In s canoe the Von Lynar looked at the princess In Their position, was one si charming opportunity to stqp over night housed tuch aa ILls with a stove to ww as it was dangerous. They cook on, s usually eagerly seized. kneeling opposite to one another, their Duluth Herald. Have you not, perchanct, a brother faces, drawn interest the together by of your own?" apof the surgical examlnation7 had Deepest Haul of a Net. taking her first survey of her cham- proached very close. The dark eyes The haul of a net ever made With deepest one blue. entire wing squarely looked Into the bers. which occupied la thq world was achieved by Amer! In of he great palace of the Princess of stuff Inflammable, fire and tow in the cans Courtland, Margaret the Impetuous such conjunction, who knows what South on the Tonga Islands Pacific. had had already commanded the presence conflagration might have ensued The trawl struck bottom 23,000 feet of the Count von Loen, one of the Von Lynars eyes continued, thus to below the surface; that Is considerdwell on those of the princess? commanders of the bridal escort." But the young mans gaze passed ably more than four miles down, hut The Princets Margaret was standwas as man the over window the her shoulder. Behind .Margaret even at that depth animal life lived young by ing found. Those beings strange flashed of curia In standing Courtland man entered Her golden he saw a In water whose temperature was pon the late sunshine, which made a kind at the door with his hand still on tbe of haze of light about her beg d as she latch. A dark frown overspread hi utantly Just above the freezing point, and under a pressure of 9,000 pounds turned the resentful brilliance of her face. The princess. Instantly to net that the Interest had gone out andthe square inch. To sink that eyes upon Maurice von Lynar. bring It back again took a whole "Is it a safe thing, think you. Sir of the situation, fallowed the direction of steady labor. SL Nicholas. with Apririceaainbft. n. Lrnars eves. She rose to her KnlghtrAo ( hr tire-maide- n d i i- e no-on- 170 'MAIN St SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. LIST OF UPRIGHT USED PIANOS All standard make, mailed with plicae for tho asking HEW YORK PIANO Cl). & WESTERN S3 NtriMl Sir SsH Lsko City Union Assay Office 1441 M. S. i MUa. jet JCt-Vo- 1r e ..n. MINES AND MINING NEWS A greater number 6f dividend payers are to be found In the mines Of Tin-tidistrict than In any other district of the state of Utah. A report from Elk City states that a crew of fort) men will be- - employed at the Buster mine during the winter In extensive development work. There- - has been found to exist In Utah possibly a great a variety of rommerrlalTy valuable minerals as la to be found Bi any like area on the face of the earth A report has been received of an Important strike In the Bluejacket mine on U rooked creek near the Salmon river !u the herly end of the Buffalo Hump A tunnel Is being driven on the vein la the Mark Warrior min In the Black Warrior district of Idaho, assays of the ore encountered showing values of 152 3 per ton lire nt the Consolidated Mercur mines at Mercur, Utah, .last week destroyed a number of buildings; but It Is not believed tt wilt be necessary to close dowu- - any part of the workings. With the Increased output of the mines of Utah has arisen the need for Increased smelting facilities and every smelter in the Salt Lake vailey has either Increased or Is Increasing its capacity, until today the valley la a very Important smelting center. A most striking feature of copper mining In the Bingham district in the last two or three years la the complete success of experiments made In the treatment by concentration of the disseminated ores. In which small particles of copper sulphide occur disseminating through altered porphyry. Utah la putting on the market over a million and a half tons of coal per year. This aupply comes principally from Sevier, Emery, Carbon and Grand counties. In the east central part of the state. Three other coal fields of less Importance are the Weber river, the Sanpete and the Iron county fields. Park Ctty. which has long held the reputation of being one of the leadcamps In this country, ing Bllver-leaholds Its own In the advancement of mining In Utah. The oqtut for the past year amounted to upwards of 1,000,000 tons. The Sliver King, the e and Little Bell are the heaviest producers. Professor F. E. Fielding, for thirty years chief consulting engineer and expert on the ataff of the Comstock magnates, Mackay and Fair, has been Bmkteg w vwSmIIm f tlx Cbiaago Nevada company's properties, la the Dietrich district, eighteen miles out ot Virginia City, and has nothing but words ot praise for that district. Eastern Copper com-panThe Utah operating the Dixie mine below SL George, Utah, now has Its copper smelter at 8bem, a few miles from the mine, In full operation. From the treatment of about forty tons of ore a day approximately 7,000 pounds, or three and a half tons, of copper la being produced every twenty-fou- r hours. Alta the once famous Little Cottonwood camp, has recently come again Into prominence. The production of lead, sliver sud gold from tbe old Emma and Flagstaff properties during the '70s and early '80a amounted to millions. After a period of lesa activity recent developments In this disore trict are disclosing enormous c d Daly-Wes- t, Daly-Judg- -- y, bodies. Utah has Immense deposits of rock gypsum within her borders. The most Important deposits occur In the central and southern portions of the state. In Juab county, east of Nephf, In Sanpete and Sevier counties near Satina, In Millard county at White mountain, near Fillmore, and In Wayne county In south Washington. The great Sierra Madre mountain north of Ogden seem to carry it only many of the rare metals such as tungstate, molybdenum and other anch metals, but It has a ledge of the rare 'stone, the garnet, which Is used so extensively as a polisher for the metals, and the supply of which In the United States 1 not equal to the demand. As a result of meetings of the directors of the Nevada Consolidated and Cumberland Ely Mining companies In New York, the latter part of last week, R has been. .agreed that the Cumberland Ely company will have a half! Interest In the $5,000,000 reduction works to be built by the Nevada Consolidated company, and the Cumberland Ely company also secures a half ownership In the Nevada Northern railroad, which was built by the Nevada Consolidated company. This Is considered a first step In the ultimate consolidation of these two properties, both of which are controlled by the Guggenheim. At present the main workings-o- f the Crackerjack mine, In the Buffalo being carHump district of Idaho, are more than ried on In ore that assay $100 to the ton. and this la being stored ready to be milted. Just as soon aa the new plant la completed, which sill be In lesa than three weeks. Joseph T. Jenkins, for many years Tribmining editor of the Salt Lake une and for the past year editor of the mining department of the Republican, has tendered his resignation In order to Join force with a big brokerage and promotion firm In New York. , Inter-mountai- n SUMMAEY Major Alfred Dreyfus has taken up duties as major of artillery. Three persona were killed and twenty Injured In a railroad accident at E person France. All the misers who were entombed as the result of the explosion In the ery Wlngette-collinear Durham, Eng lsqd. have been rescued. Three children of Anthony Hughes at Flandreau S. D.. were burned to death In s fire that destroyed ajarn In which they were sleeping. Mr. Lena Cowdln, daughter of Bishop Henry Potter of New York, committed suicide by, banging at a private sanitarium at Cromwell, Conn. Rev. A. E. Kelly, promoter of the Beulah religious land settlement in Dickson county. Tennessee, has been arrested, charged with using the malls to defraud. Bernard Duffey, who waa convicted of holding up and robbing a man of has been sentenced by Judge Lawler of Ban Francisco to ten years In the Folsom prison. Jackson Norris and his father, Geo. Norris, were both killed and Joseph Richardson was probably fatally shot during a quarrel between the three near Rising Sun, Indiana. Three Christians and three Jews, who were caught October 12 robbing the offices of the firm ot Friedberg, al Rostov-on-DoRussia, have been tried by court martial and shot. Lieutenant Robert Calvert, of the Twenty-fourtInfantry, U. S. A has been killed by Sergeant Taylor of the Twenty-fourtinfantry at in the province ot Leyte. Ten men were burned to death, two perhaps fatally Injured and anothei slightly hurt aa the result of a fir which destroyed the boarding houss of Mrs. E. E. Watley at Birmingham hla military h h Ala. - .. The force of laborers engaged in clearing the streets of San Francisco of debris under the direction o. President .George Duffey, of the board ot public works, has been increased to 500 men. Lewie A. Gelsler of Paulding, a senior at Ohio Wesleyan university at Delaware, Ohio, and right end on the 'Varsity footfall team, fell- dead of heart disease on the field after running down a punt A caravan consisting of forty camels, conveying German goods to Morocco City, has been pillaged, and Dr. Boeemthe German iplalatee, has tered an energetic protest with the' Morroocan government In a raid made by the police of San Francisco, five persona were arrested on the suspicion thst they may have been connected with the robbery and murder at the ftlmmon Ginko or Japanese bank a few weeks age. Governor Folk of Missouri has granted respites until December 10 for Mr. Aggie Myers and Fraud Mott man, sentenced to be hanged on October 28 for the murder of the womans husband in Kansas City. Major Ladd has reported to Governor Magoon that he had finished counting the funds in the Cuban treasury knd found that they totaled a little more than $12,000,000, mostly In American gold. Tbe books balanced ex- actly Mrs. Topsy Logsh was held up by two footpads In East, Oakland, Cal., and robbed of a small sum ot money, after th men had seized a baby which she was carrying and threatened to' dash it to the sidewalk If she did not give them money. MacFadyn ft Co., the London house of Arbuthnot ft Co., hankers of Madras, announced Saturday that they had been compelled to suspend payment The firm did considerable Indian hanking business The cause of Its suspension was not divulged. A verdict ot guilty of granting rebates on sugar shipments was returned by a Jury In the United States court in New York City against the New York Central Railroad company and Frederick L. Pomeroy, the general traffic manager. A girl only $ years old committed suicide In. Vienna, throwing herself from the window of her mothers house into the street The. child, had., an Intense dislike of school work and. her mother had threatened to punish her if she did not go to school. Judge Foster has denied a divorce to Mrs. Carrie Fisher, of St Louis, who claimed that her husband went Judge fishing every other Sunday, Foster held that a man had a perfect right to go fishing every otheFliua- day if he did It In the proper time. Willie Hoppe, of New York City, haa again proved hla right to the title-o- f the world's champion at balk line, one shot in. The young lad waa - challenged by the veteran, Jake Schaefer, of Chicago, and won at the Madison Square Gardea concert halL Tbe control of the commerce of the Panama canal and the whole Mississippi alley is the incentive for the creation of a deep waterway which Congressman Joseph E. Ransdeu of to Chicago touislana proposes in an address at the Preee club. com--pan- h - |