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(Continued from Uit week) She was very serious now, for by her mounting sne naa, sne realized, so arranged matters that at a time when John Stnart \yehster's very life depended upon his Immediate departure from Buenaventura, he was planning to stay and face the music. Just to be obstlnnte. "You must reconsider your decision to remain In this country," she Insisted. "Your life may be the price of liberty of action, you know. Isn't Billy capable of developing the ndne after you advance the cash?" "I wouldn't advance him a cent for his mine until I had Investigated It mVself." "Then you should make some arrangements to safeguard yourself while making the Investigation, and : leave 8obrante Immediately thereafter. ; Isn't that a sensible proposition?" i "Very?If I felt like leaving Sobrnnte. But I do not. If that mining concession Is a potential winner, I'll have to stick around and make a winner out of It before I go away and lenve Bill In charge. Besides, Tm worried about Bill. He's full of malarial fever, and last night I got thinking about him and decided to send him back to the Colorado mountains for a few months. I want some regular doctors to work on Bill so he'll be fit when he gets back on the Job." As a matter of fact, this Idea of sending Billy to the United States had but that moment occurred to Jack Webster; he reflected now that this plan was little short of an Inspiration. It would give Billy and Dolores an opportunity to marry and have a honeymoon ; It would leave him free of her disturbing presence, and enable him to leave Sobrante when the Gearys should return. He resolved to speak to Billy snout it. Dolores' voice broke In upon his cunning reflections. "But Billy tells me you nlrendy have a fortune suttlelvnt for the needs of a caliph without a court. VVuj i'iok your precious life to acquire more? Money Isn't everything in life." "No, but the game Is." "What gurne? Mining?" "The gatue of life." "But this Is the game of death." "Which makes life all the sweeter If I can heat the game. Perhaps I can better illustrate my point of view with a story. Some years ago I was sent to Arizona to examine a mining property tmd report upon It; If I advised Its purchase, my principals were prepared to buy at my valuation. Well, when I arrived, I found a miserable shanty close to a shaft and dump, and In the shanty I found a weather-beaten couple. The woman was probably forty h*t looked fifty. The man had never been anything but a hard-rock miner? *4 n -lay had been the limit of hi* .'timings In noy one day until n? stumbled on some float, traced It up, and located llie claims 1 was there to examine nnd try to btiy. "Ills wife had been a miner's daughter. knowing nothing but drudgery and poverty and continuing that existence after marriage. For 20 years she had been darning her husband's socks, washing his clothes, and cooking his meals. Even after they uncovered the ledge, It wasn't worth any more than the country rock to tliem unless they .could sell It, because the man had neither the money nor the ability to develop It himself. He even lacked the ability to sell It, because It re quires real ability to unload any kind of a mine for $1,000,000, and real nerve on the part of the man who buys. I examined the mine, decided It was cheap at $1,000,000, and so reported to my principals. They wired me to close, and so I took a 00-day option In order to verify the title. "Well, time passed, and one bright day I rode up to that shanty with a deed and a certified check for $1,000,000 In my pocket; whereupon I discovered the woman had had a change of heart and bucked over the traces. No, slree! She would not sign thet there deed?and Inasmuch as the claim was community property, her signature was vitally necessary. She asketi me so many questions, however, as to the size of the stamp mill we would ( install and how many miners would he employed on the Job, that finally I ! saw the light and tried a shot in the dark. "My dear Mrs. Sknggs," I said, j "If you'll sign this deed and save us . nil a lot of litigation over this option you and your husband have given me, I'll do something handsome. I will? on my word of honor?I'll give you the exclusive boarding house privilege at -this mine." "And what did she snv fhillnli?" "She wild: 'Oive me the pen, Mr. Webster, and please excise my hnndwrltinu; I'm .that nervous In business matters.'" x Dolores' silvery Inuffhter rippled 1 through tlie room. "Rut I don't see . the point," slie proteste<l. "We will come to It presently. I was merelv e*i>ln(nlnif on? nnrunn'? point of view. You would not, of i course. expect me to have the same point of view as Mrs. Skaggg of Art?onn." "Certainly not." "All right! Listen to this! In 1007, at the height of the boom times In Goldfleld. Nev., I was worth $1,00(T,TKX). On the first dny of October I could ! have cashed In my mining stocks for , fl,000,000?and I had a lot of cash In , bank, too. Rut I'd always worked so ; heed and been poor so long that my wealth didn't mean anything to me. j ) wanted the exclusive privilege of more slavery, and so I staked a. copper prospect,'which later I discovered to .1 I iBSTER <VN'SMAN fer B. Kyne Yuthor of "Cappy licks," "The Valley if the Giants," Etc. stain. In order to save $100 I did ray own assessment work, drove a pick Into my foot, developed blood poison, went to the hospital, and was nice and helpless when the panic came along the middle of the month. The bank went bust, and my ready cash went with It: I couldn't give niy mining stocks away. Everybody knew I was a pauper?everybody but the doctor. He persisted In regarding me as a millionaire and sent me a bill for $5,000." "How perfectly outrageous! Why, Cnllph, I would have let Mm sue me." "I would have, too?but I didn't. I Induced him to settle for $100,000 shares of stock In my copper prospect. The par value was $1 a share, and 1 was going to sell a block at 10 cents, but In view of his high professional standing I let him have it for a nickel a share. I Imagine he still has It. 1 bought hack later all the other stock I sold, because the property was worthless, and In order to be a sport I ofTered him $500 for his block, but he thought I was trying to swindle him nnd asked $5,000." "Oh. Caliph 1" "Wonderful frame. Isn't It?this came of life. So sweet when n fellow's taking chances! Now that 1 am fnlrly prosperous again, the only thing In life that really matters Is the uncertainty as to whether, when finally T do leave Sohrante, I shall ride to the stenmshlp landing In a hack or a hearse." "Rut you could go In a hack this morning nnd avoid that uncertainty." "The millionaire drudge I told you of could have gowe to live In a pretty villa on the Riviera, hut she chose a miner's hoarding house." "Then why," she persisted, "did you leave the United States with the firm Intention of remnlnlng In Sohrante Indidlnltely, change your nilnd before you were here eight hours, and cable this Neddy Jerome person you would return In GO or 90 days?and the following morning decide to remain, after all I" "My denr young lady, If I changed my clothes as often as I change my mind, the whnt-you-mny-call-'em chaps nun iiiuniiiaL'iiire a certain grand or clothes couldn't keep me dressed." "But why?" "Thnt," he answered gravely, "Is a secret." "Women delight to pry Into men's secrets." "I know It. Hnd a friend once? married. Every night after dinner he used to sit and stare Into the Are and his wife used to ask him what he was thinking about. He would look up at her owllshly and tell her It was something he couldn't explain to her. hecause she'd never understand It?and that was nil he would tell her. although right frequently, I dare say. he. felt like telling her some things she con Id understand? She brooded over his secret until she couldn't stand It any r'.ore. and one day she packed her duds and (lew home to mother. He let her stay there three months, and tiuully one day he sent he) a biue print of what he'd been thinking about." "Wliat was It?" "An Internul-coiubustlon engiue. Tou see. until she left him, he'd n**ver been able to get set to tlgure out sunieuiuig in connection wun ine it let valves " "Stop right there, Caliph. I'm r<buked. I'll let you get set to think??" "1 didn't mean that. Yon let me get set yesterday?and 1 figured It all out then?and last night?and a minute ngo. I don't care to do any more thinking today. IMease talk to me." "And you refuse to tell iue why you cabled your frleml, Jerome?" "You will never know. I told you It's a secret." "Bet you J find out." "How much? That $10,000 you expect to make from the ttour-gold In your black-sand claim? And, by the way, $10, please. 1 won It for guessing you were Interested In a mining proposition." She returned to him the bill she had won from him the day before. "Ten thousand dollars suits me. Of course, I haven't got the money Just now, and this is what Billy calls a finger bet, bt|t if I lose, 1 guarantee to pay. Are we betting even money? I think that Is scarcely fair. Under the circumstances 1 should he entitled to odds." "Nothing doing! No odds on a bet of this nature to u seeress who has already jarred ine from soul to vermiform appendix by making good ! You know too blamed much already, and how you discovered It Is a problem that may drive me crazy yet." After breakfast they repaired to the veranda to await the result of Webster's experiment with Don Juan Cafetero. Sure enough, the wreck hud again returned, he was seated on the edge of the veranda waiting for them; as they approached, he held up a grimy, quivering hand, in the palm of which lay ?a live-dollar gold piece. "What?" Mr. Webster said, amazed. "Still unchanged!" "I thried to cliunge It at half a dozen cantlnaa," Don Juan wheezed, "but divll a bit av systlm did any av thlm have. Wan offered this In spiggoty money an' the other offered that, an' ancA <# TM l.bAe al.rv v ii A u taituii I lie urni uiai wnn offered me In exchange, ye might have t'ought I'd tuk more nor wan dhrlnk." "Bravo I Three long, loud, raucous cheers for Don Juau Cafetero I" Dolores cried. "Was It terrlbti task to come back without a drink, Don Juan 7" He shivered. "A shky-Wu* kangaroo wit* a pink tail an' frsen ears chased I H? into thU "?*** ma.'am." aHMMMUi does It feel to win back your selfrespect?" Webster asked him. . t "Beggln' the youug leddy's pardon ?It feels like bell, sor." "Caliph, don't be cruel," Dolores ' pleaded. "Call a waiter and give Don Juan what you promised him." So Webster went Into the hotel bar and returned presently with a bottle of brandy and a glass, which he filled and held out toward Don Juan. "One of the paradoxes of existence, Don ' Juan," he observed, "lies In the fact that so many of the things In life that are good for us are bad for us. This Jolt will disperse the menagerie and j quiet your nerves, but nevertheless It Is a nail In your coffin." Webster, accompanied by his pro- ' tege, strolled uptown on a shopping tOUr. Here he outfitted Don limn | neatly but not gaudily and added to bis own personal effects two hlghpoWer sporting rifles, three large-caliber automatic pistols, and a plentiful supply of ammunition?after which he returned to the hotel, first having conducted Don Juan to a barber shop and given him Instructions to report for orders and his mid-day drink the Instant he should have acquired the outward evidences of rei spectablllty. ! At the hotel Webster found two messages awaiting him. One was from Billy deary, up at San Miguel de Fad- | ua, advising him that everything was In readiness for a trip to the mine; the other was a note from Rlcardo , 1'uey, but signed with his alias of Andrew Rowers. Webster read: "Dear Friend: "A certain higher-up has been convinced that it would be extremely Ini Ivlsuble to eliminate you now. It 1 is been pointed out to this person t int you are a prom. clt. up In your , ii ;ck of the woods and dangerous to i onkey with?personally and because i :ch monkeying may lead to unpleasrut complications with your paternal ; ivernment. A fur more artistic and < TppIIvp wnv nf rnltc'ntr hull wlfh ??un 1 is been suggested to this higher-up J idivldual, and be hns accepted it. In?ioed, the plan pleased him so much iliat he laughed quite heartily. Heallv. It Is quite diabolical, hut remeniI er, lie who laughs last laughs best? I s nd I'm the villah In this sketch. "Barring accideuts. my dear Webs' ter, you are good for at least si* weeks of existence. Beyond that 1 <:are not guarantee you. "Thine, "ANDREW BOWERS." "That makes It nice." the' recipient of this comforting communication soI Rloqulzed. He went up to his room. packed a duffle hag with such belong. ings as he would tind necessary dur! ing a prolonged stay in the mountains, ! and at luncheon was fortunate enough ! . to tind Dolores in the dining room , ! when he entered. "I'm going up to San Miguel de Tad- j tin this afternoon," he announced as I lie took his seat. A look of extreme | anxiety clouded her lovely face, and : lie noticed it. "Oh, there's uo risk," he hastened to assure her. "That ' scamp of ? brother of yours, thnmgh | j his friends In high places, has inan. nge?T to ,<et uie a reprieve." He liandI ed l'.er Iticardo's letter, j She looked up, much relieved, from j her perusal. "And hew long do yoo I expect to he gone. Caliph?" I "Quite n while. I'll ho busy nround i..at dratted concession for a couple ! of weeks, surveying and assaying and what-all; then, while waiting for our machinery and supplies to arrive from the United States. I shall devote my , spare time to hunting and fishing and j reforming I>on Juan Cafetero. The cool hills for-mine." "What a selfish, unsociable proi grain!" she reflected. "I wonder If | It will occur to him to come down I here once In a while and take me for a drive on the Malecon and talk to me to keep me from dying of ennui before I meet Rlcardo. I'll wait and see If he suggests It." However, for reasons best known to himself and the render, Mr. Webster made no such Interesting suggestion; so she decided that while he was tre( inendously nice, he was, nevertheless, a very queer man and thoroughly exasperating. Just before the train pulled ont John Stuart Webster took Dolores' hand. "Good-by, Seeress," he said very soberly. "The trail forks here for the first time?possibly the last, although I'll try to be on hand to make good on my promise to present I you to your brother the day he oc, cuples the palace. However If 1 i shouldn't he In town that day. Just ; pro up and Introduce yourself to hint. It's been wonderful to have met you I and known you, even for such a brief period. I shall never forget you and the remarkable 24 hours Just passed." "'I shall not soon forget them myself, Caliph?nor you," she added. "Haven't you been a busy little cup of tea. Caliph! Within 24 hours after landing, you have changed your mind three times, lost the best Job In the world, had your fortune told, been marked for slaughter, acquired n newfound friend and commenced actively and with extraordinarily good results the work of reforming him, soused a gentleman in the fountain, spurned another with the tip of your boot, rode with tne around the Malecon and listened to the band concert, bundled poor Hilly off to San Miguel de Padua, discovered my brother presumed to be dead, and received a reprieve from your enemies, while they perfect new plans for destroying you. Really, you are quite a caliph." "Oh, there's a dash of speed In the old horse vet. Miss Itnev." he ssanred her laughingly. "Now listen; don't tell anybody about your brother, and don't tell Hilly about my adventures since he left for San Miguel de l'adua." "But I'm not liable to see Billy " "Yes, you are?extremely liable. I'm going to send him back to you as soon as I enn spare him, because I know you'll he lonesome and bored to death In this lonesome town, and Bill Is bully good company. And I don't want you to tell him about the tuess I'm Id, because It would only worry him; he can't aid me, and the knowledge that I was In any danger, real or fancied, would he sufficient to cause him to rebel against my plana for his honeym?for his vacation. He'd Insist on sticking around to protect me." He looked dbwn at her little hand where It rested In bis, so big and brown end hard; with hit free band I be petted her band paternally. "Good- ' I by, Seerem," he said again; and tarn just n? the train started to move out of the station. "Goo?good-b.v?Caliph," she celled mournfully. Theu to herself: "Bless bis heart, he did remember I'd be terribly lonely, after nil. He Isn't a bit queer, but oh. dear, he Is so exasperating. I could buuip Ills kind old head against a wall I" She turned her buck on the train, fearful that from where he clung on the steps be could, even at that distance, see the sudden rush of teurs that blinded Iter. However, Don Juan Cafetero, with Ills rubicund nose to the window of the last coach, did see them?saw her wnniu uic inn i?m* witilluR take her hack to the hotel. "Why, shure, the poor darllnt's cryIn'," he reflected. "Bfc the Great Gun an Athtone! Share 1 t'ought nil nlong 'twas Billy Geary she had her eye on ?God love lilni! An' be the Rame token, didn't she tell me 1 was to shtay sober an* take care av Mlsliter Webster. Hah-hah-a a I Well! I'll say nothjn' an' I'll be ueutliral, but? but?but " From which It may be Inferred that romance was not yet burned out of Don Juan's Gaelic soul. He would be "neuthral," but ? but ? but ? he reserved the right to butt in I CHAPTER XII. Arrived at San Miguel de Padua about midnight, Webster found the climate temperate. In fact, decidedly cool. Billy was waiting for them and was properly amazed, but not scandalized when Don Juan Cu Otero, abusing the station hands in a hurrl ble hodgepodge of English and Spin Isli. superintended the landing of the baggage on the platform. "I had to bring him with me." Web stor explained. "I'm going to wean him, and after that baby quits cry ing for his bottle, believe me. Bill, we'll have the prince of a foreman for our mine. Quite a character. Is Don Juan, when you dig down into him." "Die far ennni?h Into tlint ?.,.i you'll find Are crackers," Hilly admit t<'d. "However. .Tolin, I'm afraid h<' won't explode. The powder's damp I low did yon leave Dolores?" "Fit ns n tiddle. Hill." "How does she slack tip on better acquaintance. Johnny?" "She's a skookum lass. She sent her hue and I promised to send you hack to tur I*. D. Q. So don't bother mo with talk about her. You'll see her rr!'ii In a week ot ten days. I hope." "Noi Is *hat so. Johnny? BulJy for you. j u old wampus cat. Teh I >on Juan *o steer you over to the (J I oho tie Oro. He knows the place. I've got to go and hire a mule or some other quadruped for Don Juan if we're to avoid a late start in the morning. Hood night, old fellow." , They were up at daybreak, and with three heavily laden pack mutes In charge of two semi-naked mozos, while the cook Jogged comfortably along on his big splay feet In the rear, they set out for Billy's concession. For .'10 miles they followed the highway. and then debouched to the southwest along a neglected rond just wide enough to accommodate the clumsy ox carts of the peons. The country was sparsely settled and evidently given over to stock raising. Darkness had descended on the valley by the time they had pitched camp nt the claim. They were up at duwn the following morning, however, nnd Immediately after breakfast Jack Webster went to his duffle bag and brought forth a dozen little ennvas 00 stir u nrwt o nrnononf Ar'n M*<U ? |Z. WUJ/VVWI O IKtlllllld . "Now tlien, William, my son," he announced, "light the lantern and we'll , see If you've forgotten nil I taught you about mining." They clambered up the dump to a point where two light steel rails pro- ; Jected over the edge. On top of the duiup, lying beside the rails, were two small, rusty, steel ore cars; the rails led from the edge of the dump to the\ mouth of a tunnel in the hillside and disappeared therein. I Webster stood a moment, looking around him. "How did you happen to locate this ledge?" he demnuded. ' "Was It grass root stuff, with an out- J cropping l|ere at the foot of the hill? No, of course, It wasn't. You haven't i enough ore on the dump. What the devil were you driving at?" "Only a small portion of that dump ; $ Tired 6 1 WA M relates Mrs. Kula Burnett, of ^ SDalton, Qa. "I was thtn and ^ Jnat felt tired, all the time. 9 k X didn't rest well. I wasn't Ml YA erer hungry. I knew, by U 9 this, I needed a . tonic, and 9 1 M as there Is none better than? ju ICARDUII SThe Woman's Tonic 6 ... I beean uslne Cardul" 9 B continues Mrs. Burnett "After my first bottle, I slept k4 better and ate better. I took w| M four bottles. Now I'm well, A feel just fine, eat and sleep, Wi II my skin is clear and I hare M 0 gained and sure feel that k Cardul la the beet tonlo ever W made." JS Thousands of other women M _ hare found Cardul just as A JH Mrs. Burnett did. It should K M help you. "M At all druggists. IwBsrJ DR. J. T. RUTLEDGE Dental Surgeon At Pageland Tuesday and Wednesday. Remainder of time at Chesterfield, office in Rank of ChNlfigjfaty HUhsMMHI t2 A pipe's a Seven days out of joy and real smoke c< to a jimmy pipe! Bu Packed with cool, del pipe's the greatest ti tizing smokeslant yoi You can chum it ' you know that Prin parch! (Cut out by Why?every puff of every puff hits the b last! You can't resi: And, you'll get the you roll up a cigarett ing flavor you never d cause it's crimp cut? |>RIHCI the nati Is mlae. Jack, and I didn't locate the . ground originally. I came into this valley from the south, and as I worked up the range, I found a bald spot close to the top of the hill, and a gallows frame over an abandoned shaft. Naturally, I went down the shaft to see why It had been abandoned. To my surprise, I found a 12-foot vein of free-milling ore, on a contact between aiuleslte and Silurian limestone. The ledge stood straight up and down, which seemed to argue great depth." "Somebody had found an outcropping on top of that hill," Webster declared with conviction, "and sunk a shaft on the vein to open it up and determine Its width and direction. And what did you do, Bill?" "I got my trunslt and ran a line from the shaft on the hill, following the direction in which the ledge was running, and marked out the exact point toward the base of the hill where I would start my tunnel to cut the -ledge. To my surprise,_ I discovered my predecessor had selected that lurniii ui apuu ou i vvnuni my * mi- . culatlons and then sat down to think It over. I remembered that frequent and violent earthquakes occur lu this country, and it seemed to me a rea- ! sonahle hypothesis to blame some au- | clent and particularly violent seismic i disturbance, which had fuulted the vein and set It over a considerable , distance. According to my calculation. that other man should have cut ! the vein at 83 feet?yet he had gone on IOC before quitting. So 1 got half a dozen peons and drove ahead 111 feet on the other feilow's tunnel; and by lleck, Johnny. I cut the vein!" "Bully boy! And then?" "I drifted ten feet on the vein, and the ore suddenly guve out. It stopped i Just like that, proving I'd come to the upper end of the vein where It ' had fuulted; so I Just worked up and "around, stopelng and sinking a winze here and there, until Just about the time my cash reserve was getting pretty low I picked up the true vein and opened It up for the full width. Cotne In. and I'll show you." They entered the tunnel, to the slg nal dismay of dozens of large hats. When they reached the vein, Webster broke off samples of the ore every three or four feet, crawled after Hilly up through the stope and back to the true vein, from the face of which he also took numerous samples; then be crawled out Into the sunshine again, hot, dirty, and perspiring. "Billy, you'll be a real miner yet; i see If you won't," was all the praise ; "Billy. You'll Bo a Real Miner Yet." ho tendered hla youthful partner. : stand it.* beside htm In anticipation of ? compliment, as Webster apt out hla port* bio aaaaj outfit. UMUttlRtihhlUUiJ-J pal packed v every week you'll get real si Dntentment?if you'll get clos ly one and know that for youi ightful, fragrant Prince Albe reat, the happiest and most a i ever had handed out! with a pipe?and you will? ce Albert is free from bite our exclusive patented proc P. A. makes you want two n ullseye harder and truer thai st such delight! s smokesurprise of your life 1 e with Prince Albert! Such e lid know! And, P. A. stays pi and it's a cinch to roll! You t: : ALBER onal joy smoke WamWe Hill N^itinniil Laoing At Ureatl; Farmers Hard Rhode Isl Eggs at $2.50, $3.00 and $4.0 Also a few good cokerels at $ jet the good kind. J-W.I Is authorized to take and file Land Bank of Columbia. Rate of interest G per cent. Loan The Federal Land Bank will lo per cent, on insurable improvem Filing your application with \V; Association is the first step tak< Federal Land Bank of Columbi The bank will complete all loar make the money available. The bank desires to meet the nc application will insure you to g< The Wamble Hill National Far business in the entire county, a services if loan is made, other w cost. Bring your land deed for ii tion. B. j. Douglas Wamble Ilill Ofiice in Rear of Bank < J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attoraey-at-Law Office in Courthouse Chesterfield, S. C. TROTTI & PARK, D?ntal Surgeon* Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross Ruilding. E. MAE EDGEWORTH Optometrist Eyes examined and glasses fitted coinntifioalln Office hours 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. Office upstairs in Ross building. TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS We wish to announce to our subscribers that it is absolutely imperative that we begin cutting our supscriptions closer. At the present high price of paper <>ur bill for this commodity is enormous. We can only pay these bills when we have cash in advance for subscriptions. Please watch the date on your label, and its best to renew just before the time expires. Hard Furn Farmin /"I . * rotli P. A.! noke ;e-up self! irt, a Prlnea Albart la Bold in toppy red bags, tidy red tint, handsome pound .once an^ ',a" P?und tin humidors and in the nn/1 pound crystal glass humidor with GSS ' ) sponge moirtener l I Copyright 1921 ^ ? by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Wioston-Salem, N.C. Farm Loan Association applications with the Federal s made on improved farm lands, an 50 per cent, on land and 20 ,ents. limbic Hill National Farm Loan ?n to secure a loan through the ais as fast as it can sell bonds to oils of the farmer, and an early if : i ? mil luan qilll'KUr. m Association is entitled to do nd it charges 1 per cent tor its ise all is refunded except actual ispection when making applicaxl n rri ' * s, dec. ireas. N. F. I.. A. >f Chesterfield Building Printing Brings Clients I Not every business his show | window. If you want to win more i clients, use more printing and use | the kind of printing thit faithfully I represents your business policy. You save money and make money for your patrons. I)o the same for yourself by using an economical high grade paper? Hammermlll Bond ? and good printing, both of which we can give you. If you want printing service and economy ? give use a trial. ware, iture, g Tools yT Reduced Prices ware Company I??J T??J_ idiin neus 0 per setting of 15. 14.00, $5.00 and $7.50 each. 1ANNA in