Satan Sanderson By HALL1E ERMI.NIE RIVES. Aath?x ml "Hntu Coure|?ou?," Lie. Copyright, im the Bobba Merrill J Comply. gk Chapter 7 I WAURY SANDERSON as ? M he walked slowly back frern a leu* ramhlo In J I J B kniokerl**.Lets mud Nor >=^5' folk Jacket over the hills was Dot thinking of the lights nuil sounds of the pleasant even ing. He had tramped miles since sun down and had returned as he set out, gloomy, unrequited, a follower of baf fled quest Set back from the street la a wide estate of trees and shrubbery stood a great white porched house. Not a light had twinkled from It for nearly a year. The little city had wondered at firet, then by degrees had grown Indif ferent. The secret of that prolonged honeymoon Harry Sanderson and the bishop alone could hare told, for the bishop knew of Hugh's criminal act. He was named executor of the will that lay In the Korean chest, aud him David Stlres had written the truth. Ills heart had gone out with pity for Jessica, and understanding. The secret he locked In his own breast, as did Harry Sanderson, each thinUlng the other Ignorant of it Since that wedding day no shred of news had come to either. Harry had wished for none. To think of Jessica was a recurrent pang, and yet the very combination of the safe In his study he had formed of the letters of her name! In each memory of her he felt the fresh assault of a new and tireless foe?the love which he must deny. Outcast and criminal as Hugh was, castaway, who had stolen a bank's money and a woman's love, he was .till her husband. Hugh's wife! What could sue be to him? And this fevered conflict shot through with yet another pang, for the waking smart of com punction which had risen at Jessica's bitter cry, "Yea helped to make him what he has become!" would not down. That cry had shown him in one clarify ing Instant the follies and delinquencies of his early career reduplicated as through the facets of a crystal, and In the polarized light of conscience Hugh ?loafer, gambler and thief?stood as the type and sign of an enduring ac cusation. But If the recollection of that wed ding day and its aftermath stalked al ways with him?If that kiss had seemed to cling again and again to his lips as be sat in the quiet of his study?no one guessed. He seldom played his violin now, but he had shown no outward sign. As time went on he had become no less brilliant though more Inscruta ble; not less popular, save perhaps to the parish heresy hunter, for whom he had never cared a straw. But beneath the surface a great change bad come to Harry Sanderson. Tonight as he wended his way past the house In the aspens, through the clatter and commotion of the evening, there was a kind of glaze over his whole face?a shell of melancholy. Tomorrow began Harry's summer vacation, and be had planned a month's pedestrian outing through the wide ranch valleys and the farther ranges, and this should set him up again. Now, however, as he walked along be was bitterly absorbed In thoughts other than his own needs. He passed more than one acquaintance with a stare of nonrecognition. One of these was the bishop, who turned an Instant to look after him. The bishop bad seen that look frequently of late and had wondered If It betokened physical Ill ness or mental unquiet More than once he had remembered, with a sigh, the old whisper of Harry Sanderson's early wildness. But he knew youth and Its lapses, and he liked and re spected him. Only two cays before, on the second anniversary of Harry's ordination, be had given him for bis silken watch guard a little gold cross engraved with his name and contain ing the date. At a crossing the sight of a knot of people on the opposite side of the street awoke Harry from his abstrac tion. They had gathered around a per ipatetic street preacher, who was hold ing forth In a shrill voice. Beside him on a short pole hung a dripping gaso line flare, and the hissing flame lit his bare bead, his thin features, his long hair and his bony bands moving In vehement gestures. A small melodeon on four wheels stood beside him, and on Its front was painted In glaring white letters: HALLELUJAH JONEa Buffer me that I may speak, and after that X have spoken mock on. ?Job xxl, 3. From over the way Harry gated at the tall, stooping figure pitilessly be-! trayed by the thin alpaca coat, at the ascetic face burned a brick red from u Wot to them that art at ta*e in Zlon. exDoeurt to wind aoU kd, *t tfc? flash-' Injf tji*. tLe lmp'issfi>neti Mr-jeuiaeni lie paused at tbe curb ami listened curiously, for Hallelujah Jones with bis evangelism mingled a sploa of 111* seal of tbe socialist. Id bis thinking the rich and the wicked were mingled Inextricably in the great chastisement lie was preachlug now from bis fa vorite text: "Woe to tbem that are at ease in J^Jon." Harry smiled grimly. He had al ways Ik'Oii "at ease in Zlon." He wor. sumptuous clothes. The ruby In bis ring would bring what this plodding extiorter would call a fortune. At tbW moment Hede. his dapper I'lnn chauf fenr. was polishing the motor car for him to take his pool evening spin. Thai very afternoon he had put Into thf little safe lu the chapel study S'J.OOn In gold which he had drawn, a part fot bis charities and quarterly payments and a part to take with him for the "ilijeocies ef bis trip. The street evan fct-II?i utei I li-m pmui-bWiit piradlse and perdition to the grinning yokels often needed a square meal and was lucky if he always knew where be would sleep. The thread of his thought broke The bareheaded figure had ended bis harangue. The eternal fires were bank ed for a time, while, seated on a camp stool at bis melodeon. he proceeded to transport his audience tp the heavenly meads of the New Jerusalem. Two. three verses of an old fashioned hymn be sang, and after each verse more of the bystanders, some In real ?arnestness, some in Impious hilarity shouted In the chorus: "Palms of victory! Crowns of glory! Palms of victory 1 shall wear!" Harry walked on in a brown study the refrain ringing through his brain At tbe chapel gate lounged bis cbauf feur awaiting orders "Bring the car round, tlede." said Harry, "and I sha'n't need you after that tonight. I'll drive her myself You can meet me at the garage." The study was pitch dark, and Rum my halted on tbe threshold with a low, ominous growl as Harry fumbled for the Electric switch. As he found and pressed it and the place flooded with light, he 6aw a figure there, tbe figure of a man who had been sitting alone, beside the empty hearth, who rose, shrinking back from the sudden bril liancy. It was Hugh Stires. Chapter 8 ?H" W ARRY SANDERSON . I? stared at the appari tion with a strange ( I'/'- ?3 feeling, like rising ^rom VJLfcv^iJy the dead. The arlsto cratlc features were ravaged like a nicked blade. Dissipa tion, exposure, shame and unbridled passion bad each set its separate seal upon the handsome countenance. Hugh's clothes were shabby genteel and the old slinking grace of wearing them was gone. A thin beard covered j his chin, and his shift; look, as he | turned it first on Harry and then nerv- I ously over bis shoulder, bad in it a hunted dread, a dogging terror, con stant and indefinable. From bad to worse had been a swift descent for Hugh Stires. The wave of feeling ebbed. Harry j drew the window curtains, swung a shade before the light and motioned to the chair. "Sit down." he said. Hugb looked his old friend in the face a moment; then bis unsteady glance fell to the white carnation In his lapel as he said, "I suppose you wonder why I have come here." Harry did not answer the Implied question, nis scrutiny was deliberate. critical ana in quiring. "What have yon been doing the last year?" he asked "A little of ev erything," re plied Hugh. "1 ran a bucket shop with Mo reau in Sacra mento for awhile. Then I went over in the mining country I took up a claim at Smokv Mountain That's wortl something or may be some time." "Why did you " n ny aia you. leave leave It?" Hugh touched his parched lips with his tongue. Again that nervous, sidelong look, that fear ful glance over his shoulder. "I had no money to work it I had to live. Besides, I'm tired of the whole thing." The backward glance, the look of dread, were tangible tokens. Harry translated them. "You are not telling the truth." he said shortly. "Wiiat have you done?" Hugh flinched, but he made sullen answer: "Nothing. What should I have d ine?" "That Is what I am now inquirin? of myself," said Harry. "Your face Is a book for any one to read. I see thing* written on It, Hugh?things that tel* a story of wrongdoing. You arr afraid." Hugh shivered under the regard. Dli' his face really tell so much? "I don't care to be seen In town." h? said. "You wouldn't either, probably nnfler tne clrcumstnnte* ' ni? ? dropped to his frav?Hl i-nnt slwvp li his craven fear of soim-thln* thai h? dared not name even to hl'-??elf ' In hi* wretched need he remember*1 a nt?;ht once hefnre when he had *ldl?"* Into town drunken and soiled to a lu* url' the one he wore and was emptying th> old coat's pockets. "Don't sneak!" said Harry with sud den contempt "Don't von suppose t know a deck of cards when I see It?" The thin scar on Hugh's hrow red dened. He thrust Into his pocket the pasteboards he had made an Instlnc tlTe move to conceal and buttoned the coat around blui It fitted sufficiently "Look here, narry." he began, "you were a good fellow In the old days I'm sorry I never paid you the money I borrowed. I would hare but for what happened. But you won't go back on me now, will you? I want to get out of the country and begin over again somewhere. Will you loan uie the money to do It?" Hugh was eager and voluble now The man to whom he appealed was his forlorn hope He had come with no intention of throwing himself upou his father's mercy, lie had wished to see an.; body in the world lint him "If you will, I'll never forget it. liar ry!" he cried. "Never, the longest day I live! I'll use every dollar of ii Just as I say! I will, on my honor!" "Honor!" he said "Have yon enough to swear by? Yon are wli.it you are because you are a bad egg You were born a gentleman, but you choose to be a rogue. Do you know the meaning of the word honor or right or justice? nave ymi a single purpose of mind which Isn't crooked '" "You're Just like the rest, then," Hugh retorted ".III i I'ecu use I did tluil oi:e III.ug you'll ^ >e mo no more cliium 1>I the U . . m I did with '[lilt mono.- n;m ij s re myself. 1 pun] eve; j <1 !?t ol liouoi I had. That's why I'tu in ilie hole now But I get no credit for it. even from you. I wish you could put yourself in my place." Harry bad been looking sieadlly at the sallow face with Its hoof print of the satyr, uot seeing It, but hearing his own voice say to Jessica: "I was my brother's keeper. I see it now." j And out of the distance. It seemed, his voice answered: "Put myself In your place! I wish I could! I wish to God I could!" The exclamation was Involuntary, automatic, the cumulative expression of every throe of conscience Harry had endured since then, the voice of that remorse that bad cried Insistently for reparation, dinning In his ears the fateful question that God asked of Cain. Suddenly a whirl of rage seized him, unmeasured, savage, malicious. He had despised Hugh, now he hated him?hated him because he was Jessi ca's husband and. more than all, be cause he was the symbol of his own self abasement. A daredevil side of the old oil tun Sanderson that he had trained and barred rose up and took him by the throat He struck the oak wainscoting with his fist, feeling a red mist grow before his eyes. "So you paid every 'debt of honor' you had, eh? You acknowledge n gamester's honor, but not the obliga tion of right action between man and man! Very welL Give me that pack of cards. You want money?here It la!" He swiftly turned the clicking com bination of the safe, wrenched open the door and took out two heavy can vas bags. He snapped the cord from the neck of one of these, and a ring ing stream of double eagles swept Jingling on the table. He dipped his hand In the yellow pile. A thought mad as the hoofs of runaway horses was careening through his brain. Hp felt an odd lightness of mind, a tense tingling of every nerve and muscle. "Here is two thousand dollars?yours if you win it?for you shall play for It you gambler, who pays his debts of 'honor" and no other! You Bhall play fair and straight If you never play again!" Hugh gazed at Harry In a startled way. This was not the ministerial Harry Sanderson he had known?this figure with the white, infuriate face, the sparkling eyes and thp strange, veiled look. This reminded him of the reckless spirit of his college days, that ho had patterned after and bad stood in awe of. "now can I play," be said, "when you know very well I haven't a sou markee?" Harry stuffed the gold back Into the bag. He snatched the cards from Hugh's hand and a box of waxen en velope wafers from his desk. There was a strange light In his eye, a tremor in his fingers. "It Is I who play with money I" be said. "My gold against your coun ters! Each of those hundred red disks represents a day of your life?a day, do you undei-stand?a red day of your sin! A day of yours against a double eagle! What you win you keep. But for every counter I win you shall pay me one straight, white day, a clean day, lived for decency and for the right I" Hugh's eyes were fastened on the gold In Harry's fingers. Two thousand dollars! If luck came bla way he could go far on that?far enough to escape the nameless terror that pursued him In every shadow. Money against red wafers? Why. It was plenty If be won. and if be lost lie had staked nothing Wti it :i fIM>I llitrry v |*! Il.irry ku? i(m* shrewd. miculallui. look that rauie to bis eye* lie ruu^.ii hi* wrtxt "Vol here'" tie said Hoarsely l!e flung tt?- rbipi'l door eud pu*be? glanced half fearfully about him?ai Hurry's whire face?at the hlKb altai with Its vases of August lilies; nl til great rose window, now a mass <>l white, opaque blotches on which the three black crosses stood out with weird distinctness; at the lurking, un lighted shadows it) the corners, lie looked longingly at the gold, shining yellow In the candle light. It fascinat ed him. He lifted his tin- 1. It was trembling. "I swear 1 will!" he said. "I'll stand by the cards, Harry, and for every day you win I'll walk a chalk line, so help me God!" Harry Sanderson sat down. He emp tied one of the bags at his elbow and pushed the box of wafers across the table. He shuffled the cards swiftly and cut "Your deal!" he said. [If Chapter 9 4 W TjT ALLELLJJAII JONES had finished his labor ' Et j |j tor the night. The W"BV? I crowd had grown res ? tlve and finally melted VN^"? away, and, his audience gone, be folded the camp stool, turued off the gasoline flare, Bhut down the lid of his melodeuu and trundled it up the street. As he pushi'd up the street he came to a great motor car standing at the curb under the maples. There was no one in it, but somewhere in Its interior a muffled whirring throb beat evenly like n double metallic heart. Ue stopped and regarded It Inquisitively A rich man's property, to be surel He looked up. It was at the gate of the chapel. No doubt It belonged to the fashionable rector who had ben pointed out to him on the street the day before. He remembered the young, handsome face, the stylish broadcloth. Yet It was a beautiful edifice that wealth had built there for Christ He saw dimly the stoue angel standing In the porch and. leaving his melodeoti on the pavement, entered the gate to examine It He noticed now a dim flicker that lit one corner of the great rose window Moving softly over the cropped grass, he approached, tilted one of the hinged panels and peered in. Two men were there, behind the altar railing, seated at the communion table. Hallelujah Jones started back. There on the table was a bag of coin, cards and counters. They were playing?he heard the fall of the cards on the hard - Im wood OflW tllP gleam of a gold piece, the smear of melted wax marring the pol ished oak. Th? reddish glow of the candle was reflected on the players' faces The.v were gam bllngl At God's holy altar and on Christ's ta ble I Who would dare such a prof anation? He craned his neck. Suddenly be gave a smotb ered cry. The player facing him he recog ouuucTny tie gave a iiizecl?11 was TDO smothered cry. rector himself! lie bent forward, gazing with a tenso and horrified curiosity. Five times, ten time*, the cards had changed bands, and with every deul Harry lost. The gold disks bad slip ped steadily across the table. But he had seemed to be looking beyond thr ebb and flow of the Jettons and th?? pale face opposite him that glontid over Its yellow pile. Though that pile grew larger and larger? UniTf'? fmn ? hail never changed. lluuli i ?-m i: . ?baking tin ltd ?hi u he Uiranlpi h'-V ? con vu Ned features when ft* his dr.nv. the desperate anxiety when for n moment fortune seemed to wMj g ver. lie had never In his life had su<* ? lurk! He swept his winnings Into bis pockets with a discordant laugh as he noted that of the contents of the opened bag narry had but one double J eagle remaining. Harry paused an Instant He snap ped the little gold cross he wore from , Its silken tether and set It upright tfy him on the table. His band won, and the next, and the next Hugh hoarded his gold; Be " staked the red wafers?each one a day* He had won almost a thousand dollar^ but the secoud bag had not yet been opened, and the vampire Intoxication' waa running molten hoi In his reins. The oateuched bag drew him aa the magnet mountain drew the adreatur oua Siadbad?he ceuld have snatched It In bis eagerness. But the tuck had changed. His red counters diminished, melted. He would soon havo to draw on bis real win nings. Cold beads of sweat broke on his forehead. Neither saw the face pressed against the aperture. Neither guessed the wild and terrible thoughts that were raging through the mind of the selltary watcher as he peered and peered. Scarce knowing what he did, he clos td the panel softly and ran across the chapel lawn. On the pavement outside he met a man approaching. It was the bishop. The excited evangelist did not know the mnn, but bis eye caught the ministerial dress, the plain, sturdy pi ety of the face. In his zeal lie saw an Instrument to bis hand. He grasped the bishop's arm. "Quick! Quick!" he gasped. "There's devil work doing In there! Come and sec!" He fairly pulled him Inside the gate. The puzzled bishop saw the Intense excitement of the other's demeanor. Ho saw the faint glow In the corner of the rose window. Were there thieves after the altar plate? He shook off the eager baud that was drawing him towrfra the window. "Not there. Couie this way," ho said and hurried toward the porch. He tried the chapel door. It was fast. Ho had a key to this In his pocket He In serted It with caution, oi>eued the door noiselessly and went In, the street preacherAt his heels. What the bishop saw was photo graphed Instantaneously on his mind In fiery, Indelible colors. It ato Into his soul Uko hot Iron Into quivering flesh, searing Itself upon his memory. The evangelist of the pave had been horri fied, shocked to word and action; the bishop was frozen, Inarticulate, Im paled. For any evil In Hugh Stlres ho was prepared?since the forgery. Rut Hugh's companion now was the man whom he himself had ordained and anointed by the laying on of hands with the chrism of his holy ministry. An lrrepresslblo exclamation burst from bis lips. With the sound both men at the ta ble started to their feet. Hugh, with a single glanco behind him, uttering a wild laugh, leaped the railing, dashed through the study and vanished Into the night. Harry, as though suddenly turned to stone, stood staring at the accusatory figure, with the eager form of the evangelist Iiehlnd It To the bishop It seemed the attitude of guilt detected. What was Harry Sanderson thinking as under that speechless regard he harry stood staring at the accusatory Jigure. mechanically gathered the scattered cards and lifted the little cross and the unopened bag of double eagles from the table? Where was the odd excite ment, the strange exaltation, that had possessed him? The spindles In his brain had stilled, and an algid calm had succeeded as abrupt as the quiet, deadly assurance with which his mind now saw the pit into which his own feet had led him. He blew out the candle, replaced it carefully in its altar bracket, made shift to wipe the wax from the table and slowly, half blindly and without a word, went into the study. The bishop came forward, drew the key from the inside of the study door, closed It and locked it from the chapel side. Harry did not turn, but he was actually conscious of every sound. He heard the door shut sharply, the harsh grate of the key In the lock, and the sound came to him like the last sentence?the realization of a soul on whom the gate of the good closes for ' ever. in the dark silence of the chapel Hallelujah Jones smote his thin hands 'together approvingly as he followed the bishop to the outer door. There the older man laid his hand on his shoulder. "Let him that thinketh he stand eth," he said, "take heed ltst he fall! Let not this knowledge be spread abroad that It make the unrighteous to blaspheme. When you pray for your own seul tonight pray for the ?HHii of thJlt m?i? from woota Something li? tin churchlCM ni? K*H?t imwfe t? the voice of-?ccl?ifc?. authority. ae went withe t a won! I Iu -i-irtiLif Hfirrv rm4em?n stood K * iilpaw ni w|th the tads and the wg lof io.ii i to, les In ?? hand, i M ntllj "fpui (toe nrds and the caWM bag mcAbodicaUy into the gafu and ioee i iL;U irf i - (t by hla fofc 4H salt Cicirly and |lou !-to that L'Wk. Inifer h . cibo of cofcsJoiuti. -irf If hla ?ouiI ? "u (J i thut Is In the bad, and of tlio I.--..I if gowj. and "ftJo\i?J>f thum both. Hut I know that I am |A * JOrtmi^. ;;caiv no I^hgt a do my labor consistently before the wfcM and before thee. It I fiq defKentt It mint bo b* soma wkf of thine fwz ? oncelw, 4df 1- caUO help myself. Amen." He roes to hla feet, mechanl Lkf ar^re^'u htl .'fedc and hurled hlfi to4fcc *wt?W^ Harry did not hear the sharp fejy ?f pa I ii. Uls hand was on the lev^^ pushing It IIS !n?t notchi and the km ti^B%^jiv.rwiftfl8cfiog *lth a leap, <^m>4 -iuwij, ^IHi faster, through the night. l*o ?? edmrmtan>.t Bees Laxative Cough Svsuii^hIw?Xb brings quick relief u> cuuSi4 colijKJ hoarsenoHN, xvl^^lfc:k1%jV*,v :JU[ all bronchial andf^KHE fc.mbV Mother* especially recommend it iff children. i'lnksant . U). j'iW' irenwi laxative. Bold dy NOTICE. K The undersigned having qualified Executrix on the estate of J. X? J* rice deceased, hereby notitfift all persons having claims against xSj estate to present the same to me difr> verified on or before the 80tbday of ()?P ober l'.KJfl or thin notice will l>e pleadflT iit 4>ar of their recovery; and a'l peraoSA Indebted tx> said estate will make iJEf mediate payment This 28th day of Oct. 1908 \A Mum. L. Jane PriJL Executrfc? TRUSTEE'S AUCTION SALE OF F* T M A valuable tract of land, in Johnston CoiAl ty, N, C , containing 875 acres, more or leaL npon which there is a heavy growth ottimtlR? estimated at two million loot; the saM tr&y ol laud is situated about Four miles North wil Princeton, N. U, By virtue of a deed of trust from Maud fc." HeBwan. 4 hunliand, dated Jdth M a ft 1WJH and of record In the ofllce the Hesister of Deeds for fald Countj In llook C. No. 10. p. 264. default hav Ing been made iu the payment of a part of the debt therein secured, and being required tht beaetlelary thereunder so to do, I snail b; sell at public auction, on the premises, on .,, MONDAY,DBCEMIIBK,2ist laon. at 11 o clock a. m. i be said tract of laud, des cribed In said deed of trust as follows: that certain tract of land, in JohnBtion Ooonty. N. 0.. adjoining ihe lands of waiter Baker, Wm. Hoykin, Kllzaoeth Edwards, t others, and bounded as tollows: beglnnlnirat a stake in Wm. Boykln's corner In Ell/.inth Edward ? line, and running thence 47 >* eW B >4 poles to a siake in said Edwards'Corner, thence with her line * W W. 54.1 4 poles to 2Si ifo*LU?f' (8a<,d Edwards' corner); thence S7U >t h.9 4 poles to a pine stump, with rerjimmon tree pointers; thence 8 22 ii W 108 poles to a Pine; thence 8 34 E. 50 poles to a stake, with plno pointers; thence 82' W ? poles to a line; thence SIX3 W. no poles to a stake, (Walter Baker's corner); thence with iAi'ii1"5 '4 W-3i' Po.es lo a slake. 7i. ? V?"y pointers on the E.st Bank of I>ltt.e Itiver; thence up the water course of rIii1?ruto,.*8Uke'wlth Blaek Oum point ers. (Kit Holt scorner); thence S8? E 90 k " ?l"ke iu Holt's corner: thence ? ?> ?*?< poles to a Poplai, (said Holt's and hIm'JL,1! uo.rn?;); thence with his line 8 80* ' . poles to the beginning; betnx the same b?L?k '?>"?y se i'ru8 , 'i: on ?H'd 28th Mar. 1?08. by ?;L?:eTel;. TBi'M8: FOR CASH, as to thJ expenses of executing this trust. Including the commission allowed the trustee under said deed of trust, anv taxes that mav be due and to pay a note for $1000 00, with Interest from Mar. 28th. IM08 to date of sale: tho resl ?>ue ?,^rodlt as follows: $1000.00 on the 28th ?2?S* i?08, wltl1 Interest thereon from tho J8th. Mar. 1908, and JloOO.OO on the 28th. Mar. )oS; w t,h Jnterest thereon from 28:h. Mar, iw?<. and th> balance of the purchase price at such time as shall be announced at the aay ol "ale; the credit pa>ments to be sccured by a deed of trust upon the said property. A. K. Tno.MttH, Trustee. NOTICE. The undersigned having qualified as Executor on the estate of Le .'in Cole, Sr. deivased, hereby notifies all persons having claims against said ettate to present the same to me duly verified on or before the 20 day of November l!)0tt, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery; and all persons inrebted tj said estate will make immediate pay ment. This 14 day of November, 1908. Eddie Coli, Executor. NOTICE. The undersigned having qualified as Administrator on tue estate of Henry Holt deceased, hereby notifies all per sona having claims against said estate to present the same to me duty verified on or btfore the 20 day of November 1009 or this notice will lie pleaded in bar of their recovery; and all persona in debted to said estate will make immed iate payment. Thia 17 day of November. 1908. Chas. H. Holt, Admr. DR. G. /\. HOOD, Trkasckkh or Johnston Count*, Will be In his office at The Bank of Smlthfield, every Saturday nntll 1:80 o'clock and every Jrst Monday and Court Week. Partlee having bnstneaa with him can get It attended to at other times at The Bai.k of 8m!thl!el4.