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! 2 'GOODWIN'S WEEKLY. H CONCERNING LADY 0 'LOONEY H (Continued from Page 7.) H , hew I feel that by having had to sacrifice our H joys wo can now face life more clearly,- more H serenely. That is our hope.' H ( "Hope?" said Clara, rather bitterly. H "Yes, hope," and Grace's voice was ringing. H "Hope, because we've enjoyed things; you, your H triumph, and I, my love. It's made us braver H ' and fitter, don't you understand? Braver and fit- M ter for things that are coming fitter for the joys H j nnd braver for the pains. A ,d we shan't be H j afraid when the next thing comes, whatever it is, ' and it doesn't matter what it is; love or mother- H hood, or politics, or business, or nrt. I won't care H f what it is, we'll bo bigger and finer people be- H ' cause wo won't bo afraid of having a bad time and H because wo took our licking like men." 9 ! Clara looked at her steadily. "Like men," she H I said. "How funny you are, G! We're not men." Hl 'Wo should be," said Grace. "If men have Hf j beaten us, it's because they were finer. They H could do things better, and they could stand them H j better; what we've got to do is to do them and H to stand them as well, and then women will bo H big, serene people, too, and they won't be afraid.'' H' 'It sounds all right," said Clara. "Perhaps H you're right. But what have we got left, after SI nll?' WM "We've got our old happiness," said Grace, H "that can't die .Somebody said to mo once H Enoch said to mo once, 'ho that hath the ashes H of a friend hath an eternal treasure' that's about H Mary cuts in. M "Well, I've had good things, too." She H smiled. "A pretty good thing, now you come to H think of it; I've made something of marriage. H It isn't easy, you know, being what it Is. I've heard people talk of free lovo and all that sort of thing; I don't know, I'm not clever, but it seems to mo we've got to take it as it is and see what wo can do. Perhaps it means that we've got to find the thing to do when we're married I hardly know. Anyhow not to bo lazy or have a good time. Children, that's a way that's how I look at it. One oan't help being fond of them If one has enough a sort of habit, so Im not sorry. Sometimes I think it wasn't the best thing I could do, and sometimes I think It was the best thing In the world, and then the baby cries, or something, and I stop thinking, and it's all right. Marriage is pretty difficult, you know, but it strikes me that if you take It my way, well there's hope." "Hope?" murmured Clara. "I wonder whether there Is hope for anybody?' "Yes,, said Mary, very gentle, "there's hope for everybody even for wives." And here Mr. George closes about the keenest exposition of a universally discussed question that has been printed: a big, fearless, magnificently written, sad, sad novel. Will the reader, if not weary, turn to the old epitaph in Pewsoy church, which is printed just opposite the beginning of Mr. George's first chap ter. He will find it amusing and illuminating. "Here lies the body of Lady O'Looney, Great-Niece of Burke, commonly called the sublime. She was bland, passionate and deeply religious; also she painted in water colors, And sent several pictures to the exhibition. She was first cousin to Lady Jones, and of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." Ready's Mirror. EGG-STRA ORDINAR Y A paper put out by the government tells all about eggs, the extent of the business, the annual losses, the scientific method of handling; the extent of the business, etc., from which wo learn that the egg crop is next to the corn crop in magnitude, amounting to $750,000,000 per an- "ty num in the United States; that more than $100, 000,000 per annum is lost through carelessness and waste in handling; in New York City alone nine million eggs are lost annually before they can be disposed of as fresh eggs; then good eggs are often condemned because their owners have given them a premature age look through han dling ihem with soiled hands. How many that will not bear the tests are finally converted into cake by the confectioners are mercifully withheld from our knowledge. People who handle eggs are enjoined to gather them dally, to keep them in cool places; to assort them in cool rooms and to get them to market as '? quickly as possible. In assorting the different sizes must be con sidered, the different colors, and ages. Old man Wilson when he was at the head of the agricul tural department, wt " work to teach the peo ple how to handle t in a way to avoid the fearful losses. In r if the eastern states tho government sends cars around periodically to gather the eggs from the producers. These cars have experts abroad who have reduced inspection to so fine a point that they can tell by the color of a hen what kind of an egg she will lay. But the main thing is to keep the eggs in a cool placo and soil them as soon as possible. Casey They say Murphy is dead. He was afther ibein' quite an athlete. Maloney Ho was thot. Shure, he'll miss his could bath in the mornin' now. Town Topics. I IF YOU NEED LUMBER WE NEED YOUR BUSINESS "One Foot or a Million" ' r, When Quality Counts Our Price Compels EASTERN and WESTERN LUMBER CO., OF UTAH I 592Hyland593 Offices and Yard, Fifth East, Just Below Twelfth South ft ;!