6 AT SUNRISE. A rtoudless sky-line stretching far right and left, where hilltops bar The eye's untrammeled view; .Hugging the faint horizon's edge, It taptrs to an ether wedge That cleaves the distance through. And stretched above this belt of blue. In colors of the brightest hue, Sky-hung, a picture swings; Painted on rifts of splintered cloud. White as the robes th« saints enshroud. And light as angel wings. Curdles of crimson, pile on pile, St catches the blushing Dawn's first smile, Purple, amber and gray; With rosetlnts from the rainbow's dye, And the blue of an Irish colleen's eye, And gems of purest ray. Khimmering lights and shadows play Across 'ts surface, like the spray The foaming torrent throws; Fault penciling.-! of sapphire trace Its border, wrought of liimy lace, In colors of the rose. '•r-f- Brief ns the raptures of a dream Its splendors fade, while yet they seem To be but scarce begun; Faint now Its crimson dye«, and pale; Its banners fall and meekly trail, Hefore the rising sun. —Charles H. Doing, in Washington Star. KARR"^ till^ v/aR d5. Copyright, ISD9, by J. B. Llpplncott Com* pany. All rights reserved. CHAPTER XII.—CONTINUED. "What is it we can do for this woman who has been so badly treated? She lias no cause to doubt me. Tell me how I may serve her." llcr voice was calm and insinuatingly conciliatory. "She demands a public marriage, madam. Until th« year she has be lieved herself less than the legal wife of Raymond Ilolbin. though God knows *he never intended to be less than that. She was his wife abroad, openly ac knowledged as such, and now Bhe has proof of that fact —absolute, undoubt ed proof of the highest character — affidavits of acquaintances, registers, letters addressed to her in his own handwriting and photographs. All this mass of evidence is properly cer tified to in duplicate, and she has one copy of each in the hands of her law yers in Washington and one copy here. Madam, your son has lived with this •woman a's his acknowledged wife, and I am assured that under Virginia law she is his wife and would inherit his •estate." "Ah! She wishes money?" **Xo. She wishes to have her child •restored." "Her child? Raymond's child?" "Alas, madam, one word answers you—yes!" "He has not told me this." said the mother. "It is all that he had left to tell; his life has been a great, a pain ful disappointment to me." "It is likely that he has not told you •other things. He is preparing for transmission information which he thinks is good for a vast sum of money; •and there is the trouble, for I believe, as you sit before me, madam, that, having given me his sacred promise, his sworn promise to send it by Louise, join her later and right all her wrongs, he is really planning to desert her again. And in that event, madam, he ■would leave a desperate woman be hind." "What could such a woman do then? Who would believe her —a self-con "fessed spy?" "That thought has already impressed me deeply. I am satisfied now that the woman's safest plan is to see that he doesn't leave until he has met her demands. And, madam, you have the power to control him. At six o'clock, unless I see you both earlier, I shall address an anonymous communica tion—" "Will you take tea with us at six, in stead—in my own apartments? I think that better." "At six then. I like the idea!" In the privacy of her own room Mrs. Brookin gave unrestrainediexpression to a rage that was consuming her. No one who knew the cool, suave, tactful woman of affairs would have recog aized her at that moment. She paced the luxurious apartment with the fury and abandon of a tigress entrapped, her crushed parasol and the emblems of her mourning beneath her feet. Re sponsive to her furious ringing, Wil liam came running to the room at in tervals of five minutes to answer over and over: "No, ma'am, Mr. Raymond ain't come in yet," and returned to tell below Ktairs that "Mistis is done gone plum mad over some'p'n!" Raymond cume at last. As he entered his mother's room such a storm burst upon him as he had not dreamed could emanate from the heart of a woman. She had been humiliated, outwitted and belit tled by an adventuress, she declared; mb.e had been threatened and would be forced into a compromise with a crea tureofthe gutters, and if they carried out their contract, what a triumph for ISrodnar and the jealous, envious peo ple who had resented their entrance into Richmond society! At the mo ment she hated even her son; she blamed him for his insane disregard of her wishes; he had been a marplot, «he declared, balking her efforts to advance his fortunes, winning disgrace where she had opened the path to honor; and now nothing was left for him but marriage with a low woman, and the loss of all for which she had striven. "Take her," cried the despairing woman, "and out of my sight forever. Co down to her level—starve, and leave jour miserable offspring to wretched ness." She gave way at length under the strain, and Raymond for the first tia< in his life beheld his mother abandon herself to tears. He stood moodily looking from the window un til she giew quieter. When be turned she was carefully righting the room, her face was pale, but her old expres sion of resolve had returned, and a dangerous light shone in her eyes. "You spoke of marriage," he said. "Do you think Louise will insist upon that ? Will bhe not be satisfied with the child?" "She will dictate the terms, not you. She is desperate enough for anything; and I know what a desperate woman will do to save herself." Raymond turned quickly and looked at his moth er. She did not avoid his questioning gaze. "She will denounce us both to the government if you do not marry her and give her back the child. 1 should if 1 were in her place. And she will make public announcement of her claim to a common law marriage with you." lie waited in silence a minute, as though to weigh her words. "Whether or not Louise substan tiates her claim, proof of your immoral life would kill the will of my husband, for public policy would not compel Frances to marry you to inherit her property. It will not compel a young girl to condone immoral conduct for which it would grant a married wom an divorce." "Then we are ruined!" said Ray mond. "I shall look out for myself. Promise her anything to-night." The selfishness of the decision would have been appalling to anyone but his mother. She looked at him a moment, a sarcastic smile hovering about her lips. "And I shall look out for myself." She began this self-preservation in stantly. and with a falsehood so in genious that ils use at that moment would alone have proven her ability as a diplomat. "Hut hard asitisupon me. great as is my disappointment, for you the blow is heavier; I should not, except under these circumstances, tell you, as I do tell you now, that Frances and I have reached an agreement; she has consented to carry out her father's wishes; she stipulated only that you were not to be informed of this agreement untrt she chose to tell you; she will not place herself in a position to be harassed or worried by a lover now; her whole thought is on the wounded soldiers." She saw the sudden rush of blood to her son's face, and then the pallor return. A groan burst from him, and he turned away; and therein was apparent the vast dif ference in the natures of mother and son; helplessness, weakness and sur render w as possible with the man; but with the woman, though storms of ad versity might overwhelm her and clouds darken her path,nothing could long daunt her fierce, relentless sirit. For her there was no such thing- as complete despair. Her time had come in this battle which she was fighting against odds; she approached her despairing ally and laid her hand upon his shoulder. "Raymond," she said, "what would you sacrifice to clear the way for mar riage with Frances?" He saw the calm, confident look in her face, and a breath of hope stirred his fainting manhood. "Anything—everything!" he said, at length. "If you will yield implicit obedience to me—if you will be guided—l shall clear the way for you. Will you?" "Yes." "Human life or lives must not be regarded. We have no friends; we are surrounded by enemies; we must [cs] Mi Wrm, I m SHE PACED THE APARTMENT WITH THE FURY OF A TIGRESS. put aside conscience and sentiment to win; we must hesitate nowhere. Do you understand? And do you con sent?" "I shall leave it all to you, moth er. What is first to be done?" "Meet Louise here at six o'clock, and take your cue from me. She must be disarmed of suspicion." From the moment of his surrender Raymond Ilolbin was ripe for any thing his mother might suggest. It was her mind that conceived the plan to convince Louise that she would be permitted to ride through the con federate picket line; that, under an arrangement secured by Raymond through friends' in the war depart ment, only a pretense of firing upon her would be made. It was u plan that would have deceived no other than a woman. That six o'clock tea was the tri umph of a brilliant diplomatist's ca reer. Louise was forgiven, caressed, received back as a member of the family, her claims and wrongs ac knowledged, and full reparation agreed upon. No one could have ex celled Mrs. Brookin in the tender ness with which she treated the now happy woman. She blamed Raymond openy for having concealed the truth from her. "I knew nothing of the unfair nd» vantage he took of you—nor of the child," she said to Louise. "My hus band's niece! It was inaieed a crime! And yet I see now that I largely have been to blame. I threatened him; my heart was set upon another plan. My dear child, if loving care and sym- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY ir, 1901. pathy can compensate In part for what you have suffered, they shall be yours. Rut although the circum stances seem to demand that mar riage should at once be solemnized, the ceremony must not be performed in Richmond. In all likelihood this city will be your home, and you should come here as Raymond's wife. Fortunately, he has given no one here reason to suppose he is single, and it will be very easy at the right tin;e to have you and the little girl arrive. 1 assure you, my daughter, that your reception will leave no room for doubt as to your future position." As Louise sat looking into the benevo lent face of the older woman, with tearful eyes, her heart overflowed with gratitude. "My child, madam," she faltered. "Where is she?" "Near the city, but just now be yond the lines. You will be directed how to reach her when you get through; or better, Raymond will join you, and together you will find her." Louise went back to the hotel al most content. CHAPTER XIII. Raymond Holbin had found it diffi cult to advance his cause with Frances, if for no other reason *>ian that few opportunities for seeing her alone presented themselves. He had sought interviews repeatedly and ottered the many little courtesies which the male resident of a house may extend to those of the other sex, but they had been declined with a persistance that only added fuel tc# tae flames which were consuming him. The girl seldom dined with the family; she had during her father's long illness instituted a little house keeping plan of her own and took her meals in her apartments, a mat ter very conveniently arranged by reason of the position of the apart ments and the constant attendance of mammy. Occasionally, yielding to the insistence of her stepmother, she joined the family upstairs, but on such occasions she carefully avoided a tete-a-tete with Raymond, with drawing always with the elder wom an. On such occasions, the inevitable topic had been the war, its vicissi tudes. and the responsibilities it in volved. In these meetings and the presence of great events she after awhile learned, if not to like her step mother, at least to suspend judgment upon her; indeed, sometimes she had been tempted to doubt the correct ness of her former judgment, for when the city began to be crowded with wounded Mrs. Brookin threw open her house to them and gave much of her time to their care. The gentleness with which the elder wom an entered into this work, her gen erosity and her universal courtesy were bound to impress such a girl as Frances. Once, as though yielding to a noble impulse, she placed her arm about the girl and said: "My child, you have surprised and gratified Kie of lf 1112 I had known you years ago we should never have been less than friends. Try to forget the days when I seemed unkind, please, and do not cherish anger towards an old woman." Frances tried to forget, but always in the presence of Mrs. Brookin she felt a constant. She seemed ever to have entered an atmos phere that had been stripped of its elec tricity. Try as she might, it had been impossible to respond unreservedly to her advances; the best she could do was to meet them with courtesy. The presence of wounded men in the house gave Raymond for a short time an opportunity to see something of Frances, and he, too, became a famous nurse. But one day Frances assured him that if he should prove as good a fighter as he was a nurse promotion would follow; then he came less often. Twice before she had been unable to resist the temptation to touch the raw place; once she had asked him directly how it was that a man could keep out of a war in which other men were win ning fame; and once, in reply to his question: "Will you ever like me, Frances?" she said: "A Virginia woman should not be expected to like civilians overmuch when Virginia soil is invaded." At length, to avoid him. she gave more of her time to the hos pital, j ielding the care of those in the home to her stepmother and the trained nurses. Mrs. Brookin won golden opinions in those days. A week seldom passed without the appearance of her name in print coupled with lav ish commendation. Dr. I'rodnar, busy every hour of the twenty-four in which his giant strength could sustain him awake, had but little time to spare for Frances; but one day in the hospital he got a brief report of the girl's new experi ence. "If I had not discovered that I am better at sawing off legs than fighting scheming women, my child, I should say that you have never been in so much danger as now; but I have re tired as an adviser of young women. By the way, have you decided that you will come out and keep us company at home? My wife sends an invitation not less than once a week." "No," she said, "it would seeni like running. But tell Mrs. Brotlnar lam very grateful for her kindness." "All right. Come when you please; and, Frances, call me a fool as often as you wish, but be careful what you eat in your stepmother's house—and take no medicine there! How have you sat isfied them about the night when a friend of ours got his wound?" "They have never been satisfied, I think. They tell me 1 am full of whims, and perhaps they class that night among them. You have not heard —?" "Not a word. Good-by!" Dr. Brod nar in the brief meetings with Frances would never discuss Somers. It is likely that his friend's choice of sides had been an immense disappointment. Frances was bound to receive Brod nar's hint unfavorably when she con- sidered the new and continued kind ness of her stepmother. Often the lat ter said: "When it is all over u jpy child, thil cruel war, these scene* of suffering, we will take our trunks and go abroad somewhere for a year of rest." The idea seemed to be a favorite one with her; she told all of her acquaintances that she and "poor dear Frances" were going abroad as soon as hostili ties closed; thr-t the child was simply worked down. And in the face of this tender solicitude and the old lady's de votion to confederate sufferers, peo ple shook their heads and acknowl edged that one should not always be lieve the unkind things whispered of a neighbor. From the isolation of a sus pected person, ir. a year Mrs. Brookin achieved immense popularity and won the confidence of even the highest of ficials, in whose home circles she was as welcome as they were in hers. How welcome they were might be estimated from certain government records, if the records were accessible and possi ble of translation now. [To Be Continued ! GOT THE WRONG RECIPE. Unexpected Ilenalt of a Colored Cook's KlTorta at Cake Making. It has been said that the black serv ants of the south have no objections to cooking in their own remarkable, though usually highly palatable, way, says the Troy Times. A northern lady tried for a long time to procure a cook who could read, and so make, according to recipes, some of the remembered New England dishes. She got one final ly, a mulatto man, who could read. She gave him a recipe for making cake, written plainly on a scrap of paper. When the cake came on the table it was not a white cake, which the re cipe was calculated to compound, but had a remarkable gold color. The lady called the cook. "Did you make the cake according to that recipe?" she asked him. "Oh. yes, mum." "Did you putin all the eggs?" "Oh, yes, mum." "Pyt in everything?" "Oh, yes, mum, vinegar, too. I putin flour and sugar, 'cause I knew them was required for a cakc. But I putin all them other things, too. Vinegar, mustard, pep per," he enumerated, thoughtfully. "Vinegar," cried the lady, "mustard: get me the recipe." On the back of the paper was written a recipe for salad dressing. "Well," said her hus band, looking at the golden paste On his plate, "it tastes good. It's the best cake I've eaten in this house." And the housewife looks only a little dis couraged. A year ago she might have cried. Too Much fop Him. There is a story of a Layman who conducted a service one day for a western mission. He had been a stout old soldier in his time, but his knowl edge of Hebrew was limited, and his pronunciation of unfamiliar Bible names a thing to wonder at. When he opened the Bible that day he could not at once find the place, and, after turning the pages nervously, in the face of a tittering congregation, he finally took a passage at random and began to read. As ill luck would have it, he lighted upon one of the genealog ical chapters in Ezra, and there he struggled hopelessly through half a column of Hebrew names, seeking all the time for better luck. At length he turned the page, in the vain desire of seeing some change in the substance of the chapter on the other side. What he found proved too much for him, and, after one fright ened glance, he thus concluded his reading: "And a page and a half more of the same kind, brethren. Here endeth the first lesson." The Good Katoreil Qneen. A characteristic story is told of two church dignitaries who were one day vis-a-vis at a dinner party with Queen Victoria at Windsor. One was a courtly, polished cleric, high in hei majesty's good graces, the other a blunt but important personage whose rank entitled hiin-to a position on the queen's right hand. She talked tc him for some time, and then, turned to Dean , referring accurately tc the dramatis personae of a long past event. "What a wonderful memory your majesty has!" murmured the dean, suavely. "Nonsense," interposed his brother cleric, "it's nothing ol the kind. I told her majesty all that myself five minutes ago!" And hor rified guests, who almost expected tc see the earth open and swallow up the plain-spoken ecclesiastic, were re lieved to observe the queen smiling with the most evident delight.—Troy Times. He Didn't Like the Chene. "A few years ago," said Harry Cun ningham, of Montana, to a writer o) the Post, "the late Charlie Broadwa ter, of our state, gave a banquet tc about a score of his personal friends It was an elaborate spread, and one of the chief items was some 20-year old brandy that cost Mr. Broadwatei a fabulous price and regarding which he spoke with much enthusiasm. At the wind-up of the feast coffee and Roquefort cheese were brought in, though the latter was not common ly down on Montana menus at thai period. Sitting near the one of his special friends, who, nftei eyeing the Roquefort a trifle suspi ciously, tasted it, made a wry face and shoved his plate to one side. 'You don't, seem to like that,' re marked Mr. Broadwater. Indeed 1 do not, Charlie. Your 20-year-old brandy is all right, but I'll be hanged if I like your 20-year-old cheese.' Washington Post. Auctioneers Are Obliging, Auctioneers are an obliging lot; the} always attend to everyone's bidding.— Chicago Dailj fvewi. WOMAN POLICE SERGEANT. Sdrm. Mary E. Owena, of Chlpugn, Hold* Tliiai Hank, und IN KuriiiiitE ller Sulnry, Too. Sergeant Mary E. Owens, of the Chicago police department, is the only woman in the world holding such rank and title, and if she is not a good ofli cer six mayors of that city have failed to find it out. She is on the regular police pay. roll, wears sergeant's badge No. 07 and reports daily tot hief Col leran, of the detectives. Nobody, from the chief of police down, gives her or ders. In the language of the street, "she knows her business," and it is an open secret that she knows it so well that she can wear her badge and draw her salary as long as she likes. She began her otlicial career in 1839, Bays the Chicago Reeord-llerald, soon after the death of her husband. The support of a family of three young children devolved upon her suddenly, while she was yet ignorant of any pro fession, trade or method of money making. Her husband's friends brought enough pressure to bear to have her chosen one of the live wom en health officers appointed by Mayor Cregier. She did the rest herself. When the women were dropped by the health department Mrs. Owens had made herself so conspicuously useful to the police that the elder Carter Har rison told Chief McClaughry to ap point her patrolwoman, with a special assignment in the sweatshops, depart ment stores and shopping districts, where most of the violations of the child labor and compulsory education laws were being violated. "I never arrest anybody," said Mrs. Owens, laughing, "and it is mean to eay that I am 'the shoplifting sleuth.' I have nothing to do with general detective work and never had. "For years I have been attached to the board of education as a spe cial officer. Of course, I have full police power, but I find myself more than busy rounding up truants, look ing after cruel parents and prevent ing violations of the child labor law. Sometimes I arrest tots whom I find peddling around the saloons or sleep ing in down-town doorways when they ought to be at home in bed.-One night, not long ago, 1 picked up a mere baby dozing in a doorway, all MRS. MART K. OWENS. played out and with a box of chew ing gum she had been peddling. I took her to the Harrison street an nex, and when we got there the child's father and mother suddenly appeared and claimed their baby. Of course they had been hiding in some adjacent doorway while their little one worked on the sympathies of passers-by. I kept the child all night, and the parents, protesting in vain, waited for her. But they never again sent her out to peddle among saloons or on the streets. "If a truant is reported at the school headquarters as having gone to work under the legal age 1 make a round of stores and find the child. The affidavit of the parents stating that the child is 14 years old or older must be forthcoming or I send the little one home in a hurry. "I can generally get the truth out , of the children, and storekeepers are I usually anxious to aid me. I have j known cases where the earnings of a child 12 or 13 years old were abso- ! lutely necessary to the support of a widowed or invalid mother. I don't j push the law too hard in such cases, j and so long as the affidavit is there ' I don't bother them." Mrs. (Jwens is nearly 35 years old, | but she looks younger and is en- j thusiastic over her peculiar situa tion. She has four children, three boys and a girl, the eldest of whom Is 18 and the youngest 12. She is ' giving them all a good education, and ' her housekeeping is done by a hired maid. City officials agree in stating that, aside rrom her police work, she has accomplished great good in the cause of charity. Every factory employer, manager and owner of a i store in.the business district of Chi- j ca?o knows Mrs. Owens, and she has | made most of them her friends. Carry Your Own Lunoliron, It is very curious to notice how j the custom of carrying a lunch on a j train is steadily coming back into ! favor. At first everybody did it, juat as they now do in England, on ne count of the absence of dining cars, j When these were introduced the ; really fashionable people immediately began to patronize them, and left the lunch basket to those who could af ford nothing better. Now, however, it is considered the correct thing to have one's lunch put up in a dainty basket by a good caterer. LANGTRY'S NEW HAT. Fainoim Knel;«h Artrena a Millinery Fntlilon That Should llecome I'ojiulur, From across the water comes the news that Mrs. Lang-try has a -wonder ful hat which she wears with stun ning: effect in her new play, "The Roy al Necklace." It is a leghorn, that charming straw of smooth, delicate weave which is beloved by every wom an who ever looked into a hat window. It is heavily trimmed with a simple wreath of May flowers. As every woman knows, these "sins pie" effects are not simple at all, but "simply maddening" to arrange. Since MRS. LANGTRY'S NEW HAT. Mrs. Langtry has set the style it ia likely that there will soon be a raid on American millinery counters for these particular hats. There is something deliriously charming about a hat of this style. It is so distinctly feminine and its waving brim can give an air of co quetry to even the most uncoquettish ; face. Correctly, it should be worn wit'h a dimity or organdie gown of many ruffles, with silk mitts—which are quite the vogue—and with a para sol that is a fluff of chiffon and a foam of flounces or a great big slapdash boquet of real lace. Probably no style of hat is so becom ing to all ages and all types of women as the leghorn. It is pretty on the petite girl with her fluffy pigtails tied with ribbons. It is picturesque and lovely on the large girl—the Mrs. Langtry type, for instance. Even on elderly dames it is not en tirely out of place, and everyone knows how cunningly lovely the leg horn hat is on babies, its waving, lilt ing brim shading kiss-able curls and sweet laughing eyes. All hail the leghorn! Mrs. Langtry has not tucked it back in feminine hearts, because it has never been out of them, but she has re minded womankind of its perfections, and for that womankind will be more than grateful. THE ATHLETIC GIRL. Her I'rpitlKe I* Slowly Dot Surely lnurped by the Soft, Clliiß'iiitc Mnlri of Yore, Backward and forward swings the pendulum of fashion. We fancy we have put away certain frivolities for ever, and, presto! here they are back again as pronounced as ever. The fact is that the man and woman ia esse have not changed at all. Circumscribed as we are, therefore, by the limitations of our humanity, we find in our orbit that now, as in the days of Solomon, "there is no new thing under the sun," and fash ion must perforce swing around in an erratic circle of periods—the Vic torian, the Napoleonic, the Louis XVI., the Renaissance, the Grecian, etc. —to gratify the love of change. This may seem like a rather elabo rate preamble to an analysis of the coming summer girl of 1901, but it is curiously apropos to observe that the i athletic girl's prestige seems to be I more or less on the wane, and that I a soft feminine creature, like the I grandmother of 50 years ago, who I does nothing but look supremely pretty in her muslins and laces and makes herself entertaining, is com ing very much to the fore. | A couple of years ago it was gen | erally thought that the athletic movement which was so j all over the country would develop I a new woman, and that the fluffy | summer girl of yore had vanished | forever, but to the great joy of the ! maidens (and they are not a few) j who have all along secretly detested 1 sport, it seems now quite on the j tapis that they may be as much in | the fashion this summer as their I more amazonian companions and 1 may openly avow their preference I for shady corners and tcte-a-tetes ! without incurring disapprobation.— j Chicago Daily News. How to WnMh Kent I.ntc, Duchess point or any real lace may be cleaned by washing it carefully in tepid water with 4ine soap, rinsinjf well and pinning it carefully while wet on a board covered with llanriel. An iron should not be allowed to touch this lace, and the points must be pinned very carefully, so as to keep the pattern true and even. If it becomes dry before it is pinned, mois ten with a damp spong and let the lace dry thoroughly before removing it. I'y careful handling the lace may be made to look as good as new. •Jacket* with Low ColTapM. The English fashion of breakfast jackets with low sailor collars is be ing taken up by many beauty seekers. It is ft sensible and becoming style,, and the best possible way to acquire a pretty neck and throat. Any num ber of society girls are jr.iking a practice of having all their house gowns constructed without collars,, and as a consequence the improve ment in t* le color of the skin is much hastened.