showed them around. "When everything is finished I shall have one of the most up-to-date jewelry works in this part of the country."
"Are you going to move the old office furniture into this new place?" asked Dave, noticing some old chairs and desks.
"For the present we'll have to. The new furniture won't be here until early in January."
"What about your safes?" asked Dave. He remembered the big but old-fashioned safes that had adorned the old office.
"We are to have new ones in about sixty days. I wanted them at once, but the safe company was too busy to rush the order. I wish now that I had those safes," went on the manufacturer, in a lower voice, so that even the clerks near by might not hear.
"Why, anything unusual?" questioned Dunston Porter, curiously.
"I took that order to reset the Carwith diamonds, that's all."
"Oh, then you got it, didn't you?" went on Dave's uncle. "Were they willing to pay the price?"
"I told them they would have to or I wouldn't touch the job."
"What do you suppose the diamonds are worth?"
"They were bought for sixty thousand dollars.