AdvertisingKates. The laraa and reliable circulation 01 tbe C. naia KtumN com mends It to to. Isvoraole . flderatlon of advertisers, whose favors will t rtd at tbefollowlnir low rates : 1 Inch, S times t 1 1 months...... I a months..... " 1 " 1 year C 1 " month - 1 1 year ' S 6 months.......... ......... l 1 year ' - W ool'n 6 months ' 12 a months.. v-. ; la ruMts.e4 Weakly at If V JA.HLS H. II ASM). it- scHscKirnos rstes. - t.i.v i roar m iJvmm -..!. h) V .?.' " if not -t wlihi" month- ; ,, lo i,n..t.i.lthln m-nth.. itc - Jo d It not iMltntiHh -r i.r..n rsstJ.mr outsl.le of the county ! ,JL. -.Miuonal t-r Jr will be cbarxed to 9mIriTZ event will the above t.rms be ao , 'I. ,,. sn.l those who .Ion ei.n.uli loeir Yf..t tiv imyinu" In iiilvane. BUI not e. r,v ',o hrr.lMi " .i ...m. MM .. ?, i-etthis iiwt be distinctly understood from i t''" ........ .tn i ir tn H lyer.- t suntlilM ..... lyear- Rosin ess items, first Insertion loo. per line ; e." lahMqaent insertion So. per line. Administrator s and fcxecater's Nf Usee..... Auditor's Notices Stray and similar Notices fW RtMOlHtionM or procetdin of any corpora or tocietv, i communication denanra to cau a . . tun to an? matter 0 limited or individual mt mutt e mw jot at advertttementt. Joi ruxTiss el all kinds neatly and ezr oosly esecnted at lowest prices. Uon'tyou u JAS.C. HASSON, Editor and Publisher. II 18 A niMlH WHOM Til TKUTH UIU TXXK, i AXI, ill 8LATU BXsXDK.' 81. SO and postage per year. In advance. VOLUME XXII. EBENSBUEG, PA.. FRIDAY. .TUNE 15. ISS8. NUMBER 21. i t.Tu must None but scalws do otherwise Jon t a soiw-n'e is loo snort. I WW mi b CUMtS nUc All ttot tM.i. OMtt'ooch Syrup. TitrfU Ui to time. Hol.1 St ilrusvist". I believe Plan's Cure for Consumption saved hit life. A. II. Dowkll, Editor Kuuirer, Eden tou, N. C, A wil 23, 18S7. PISO Tlie iikst Couch Mm11- rint is Jim)'i CTRS for CiiNsi'MFTioN. Children Vako it without otijurtioiu liy aii druggisUJ. "J5c r.ilili& WnShi lL tlii t AILS. Kcett hyrp. Tutu cwl. C( . FOUT Z" S NORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS o Ho w'll dm of four. Box. or Lew F Tia, If Ki'uif. I'nwd.r. ar. In tim. Kotttr. r"o-ir. willrtlr. a1 .r. nt HorioTn4. F hi tx l'nwn via prl KiPfi 1 lowu. r.xul rmni will l.rrM lii. q.antttT at mil -anti rmun Iw.mr r niu ana ai.K. u usmt Aria U'l .w.t. Krnu. KnwrtPTt wlT car. or twh! alwmrt awn ST 'P'sr. w nh Harwi nl .iu. m-. Mitot. ; ol'Tt' Po.ru. will ATiaraCTWS. rj rwti.r. S1VU X. roUTX. Troprt.to. I 14LT1HOM, KU. tor sale at DAVISON'S In-iif Star. ! ONLY 520. ffi Style PMlaielpMa Ste tw tt." rr " .i-.::.?.ra.s:. ilir.t'in'ii rliri; trmn S-10 to S'fl. -. f.-w 'tj ntfni binont. mth miu-kni.. Al ; J .l.ii... JlnnVr. Johnson Tin ker, au4 W ol "oiir ' I1. IHIO..-.II.I IWI.T. I T1U AI. ' in tomtoo'ii hon. l f. you v ii"at. Svrry aioliin- WAHKASi I I.il OK 3 Y EAK. biid f"r I'iivuliAr. ! C. A. c:oMi4Jsnr, 17 orlU IOIU St.. lIiilttlelphl. Jsw iYOU CAN FIND THiS PAPER .1 tiir 111 TlTT-lir-:..!! t Ihr A.vrtimir l-nreau 01 r, .:::;v. EEHINGTOIT BROS. l.o ojuu.ui loc aai'iii.in .it lui" rates. YAIMTE DY ?.aS?es to LEARN TELECRAPHY. fcl .'K ;.r l. .!!' vm lir tint Lustucn miJ t-torr On t n iS M rl I LLLuilHrn vU( ww PATENTS HEXEY W ISi: u ARN ETT, AttormeT-at-Law. WaSHINGTON, D. C. X-f- to si ..MlJ.,.,i r.ik. Wiuhinrtnn. D. C -SEKD I OF. INVEMTOJL'8 CBlDE.- IjflRGINlA FARMS FOR SALE. I'JS i--v. .k1 mik.t. ll.al-lty cuoiaw. S'.w it "J lil-pr..p.. w n t..r Irr-nl.r.c .ul.iai ou 1 rii.u.oi. vwfr.. fVH t IiiHaVVA' f lua X"l. sT4IL AhIllS,ttonsiaVs. CatawrH -E L" S- SSrsfCREAM : BALM. lraa.e. the Xaw al rataagrs, Al i'ldBvf w.HAD laya Pain aad I a- aaiiaallea, " v or ) r 1 fes Nswrll. HM-i fc-K V particle Is auplleU Into each nostrllsnd la Streihl.. rlr. M .nt at lruTlflts : by mall xt.'.rr.l. so ets. kL.V BK'kS, tltl)mnwik A , Nsw York. Xemp'sMannTfi Spreader I Vala.Ulr lmpr.niot. for 1S. Per Cent. Cheaper than any other, all things considered. ' . ; ii on r v. k rk. t. I: fVrf. r 'Mia cti rr . .. Ii '..i 1 :il"ll. r .l.-.l 1 In u ir t-i . i.i.i.l- a ui. i;n-. i i. tu t- ru u. N. V n. r ..... ..fi'ablo lticr.M!lerta. iu:h i n .irti sj-kiiol - ty tno ta. li- il '.ri.-.ion lo h'j tt, ,niw potent r'a.11 '.i i.-riko r"npil.fs i'ii-ti t. medical i-u-e. Itrurvrs without 1 al every caao. Chranlr Catarrh f oewnTnpl Inn, ''Tirrnl wnsi 'ryon lebillty. puraliria. lirnnin lihenma- tm. Hiatwlirt. Mane la th UlmliiVr, Briirtu'it IMwsip, lr. (s'P'.ia. l.iTr Complaint an1 lti4as ot tke Mo mark. J If your I'niinrin I out of nrpmoh- I ,4 i.in i,:, of Litis. or If yxiiaxe I ""' ' um'Iit a 1tsu. n. t mentions ft i'ili.ri:i tli.-.j a l .'rrtisrrvnta. aildres. H i frorlet i-a, S. H ilirunu A ( ., I n- aiubun, uliiifc (So. 4.) iVa A HALin IXZIW. -n...o. l i.ru and iMurrliu-o. by all I :,. OnodHWr l- r bottle; six t.ir 9 "irw'i'insm hiiKh.h and Gormao. El e CI m k A I : JV JUL, L 1 Absolutely Pure. Tno powaer never vane. A marvel ot purity strength and wbolesomeaess. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and eannot do sold la omp.titlon with th. m altitude of tbe low test. snort w.ljtht, alum or phosphate powders. ua only Is ciu. Kotil Hllia rowDllUo.JOS WallSt..Naw Yon- NATURE'S CURE FOR CQNSTIPATIOH. K K LI IB LI KK1KDI For alrk. tesarB. lor Torpid Liver. Billow Head ark. 1'e.tivraeae, Tarvaafa a'ffcrveareat Sltater Aprri.iit. It Is certain in Its effacU It Is n.ntlo la Its act Ira. It Is palataable to the taste. It can bo raltod upon to onre. and It cores tiy assisrtwo. not by oatraw-Ina-. nature. IM not taka violent porijailT.i yoor s.lv.s or allow tout rhll- dren to take than, always usa this elegant phar maceutical preparation, which tans bean lor atoro than forty years a public tavorlte. Sold by irwjaittt rvemtcktrm. Sick-Headachy AHD DYSPEPSIA. WANTED SALESMEN to sell Nursery Stock. All (lonl. Wrrunt. r irm-olAsa. hermanent, pleonant. protlt.t.l 1 pomtlons tor the risiht men. Oood salaries and expenses paid weekly. L4ber. al Inducements to beKtnners. No previous ex pcrt.nee necessary. Outfit Ireo. Wrlto l.r terms, srlrtnif ago. CriAKI.Cd H. CHASE, Nurseryman, Kochcstcr N. Y. Mention this pajier. April 6, 1SM.-SL D. LAN CELL'S ASTHMA AND CATARRH REMEDY. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Havtnir stmairled "A) years netweea III and death wrtt ASIHMA or PHTHISIO. treated by eminent physicians, and receiving no benefit. 1 was coirrpelleil durlnir the last 5 years of my Ill ness to sit on inv chair day and ai ht ijasplna- tor breath. Mv safleiinits were beyond description. In ile'palr I experimented on myself compound-In- nxiM and herbs and Inhallnw th medicine thus nhtalned. I lortunntelv discovere-4 this WONPFUKVL. CVKE 1'UK ASTHMA AN If CATARKH. warranted n relieve th. most .tub horn case of ASI HMA IN K1VE MINUTES. '.hat tha patient can lie down to rest and sleep comfbrtaMy. I'lease read the fo41owlna; eondena ed extracts lroni unsolicited tenimonlale. all of re cant date : tillver V. IS. Holmes, San Jose. Cal.. write: "I flml the Ketnedy all and even more than repre sented . 1 -re.-elva Instantaneous relief. K. M. Carson, A. M. WaiTen. Kit., writ; " W.l treated by eminent physicians ot this coun try andserroany : tried the climate of different States nothing aUurded relief like year prepara tion." L.. B. Phelps. I. M. Orlirirs, tthlo, writes ? Snf fered with Asthma 0 years. i our medicine ia S minutes does more for me than the moat eminent ph jsleiaas did for m In thre years." H. :. riimpton. Jollet III., writes: Snd Ca tarrh Kesoedy at once. Cannot et aloast w It hoot It. I find It the most valuable medicine I hare ever tried." We havo many other hearty testimonials of ear or relief, and In order that all offerers troua Asth ma, Catarrh. Hav rer, and kindred dtseaa.s may hav. an oppnrtunltv of testina; tbe valuo ol the Kemedv we will send' to any addreas TKIA1. PAl KAt:v; FKEK t H A K( K. It your drc prlst tails to keep It do not permit him to sell you some worthless Imitation by his representlaa- it to beiu.tr as Kt. bnt send directly to as. Writ vour name and aildres. plainly. Address. . I. ZIMMEKM AN A -O.. Props.. Whulcsa'.e Iruicl!ts, Wooter, Wayne Co.. O. i ull size Box by mail ll.uo. last it. l7.-ly. B. J. LYNCH, UNDERTAKER, And Manufacturer Jfc Dealer In HOME AND CITY MADE FURNITURE! nmw m mm sms, LOUNGES, BEDSTEADS, TABL.B8 CI1AIK8, Mattresses, &c, m ELEVENTH AVENUE, A I -TOON A, PENN'A "Citizens of Cambria County and all nthra wishing to purchase liooast FL'KNl Tl'UE. Ac. at honest rrlcs are rrapcif oily Invited to Kive ns a call before bavin else where, ms we are confident trat we can meet every want and plea.se every tast. Iri-es tbe yery lowest. 4-l6-'80-U. 1 PATENTS Obtained and all PATFNT PI'SIXESS at tended to for MODEkATE FKKS. ur office ia opposite the IT. S. Patent Ooice and we can obtain patents In leM time than tboa remote from WASHINGTON. Seed MODEL OK DRAYVINO. We ad rise as to patentability f reeof charwe ard we roaWeMiCHAUUEUNLEsa PATENT US SECCKKI). We retire, here, to the Postn:aster, the Supt. of Money Order Dir.. and tc the offi cer of the U. S. Patent Orflce. For Circu lars advice, terme and references to actual agetita in you' own state write to c. a. sxow fc no- Opp. Pateal ORiee Waiklat.a, . C. IVKTO-rOTlTES. I NWI.iUJ I) IN Tons, tell, Worteatsiiin & DmMIitT. TTT.r.IA3I RABE at. CO 5k and ? VTest Baltimore Street rirrlmnva. Nut iu r'lfUi Aveaa. Kiw Turk. I DURE FITS! Wh t Ml M. I mm lu. T I. S"T II t. .4 ... .m tli.m rluri. - I rwA',nZT', I s... m,. 4im .f rm ur i trxv SiU-ix SU H.M - . Illh Mdj. I rrm4 rM rmn tu .m . iun. , ih.. a. l i r." ia u w ri.w .m... uca fr. a. i'l pi t..g iA-r ' r.y. 4. hsi 1 V . r. in i. iw.i. . tnl. m4 I enlrw. if. ; 'iT,iii,,.:-.,.vviu- FATHER'S TEMPTATION. I A Story In Two Parts. BT EDCAli FAWTETT. ' Author of "Aa Aoilililmm Wumtn." "A flcu'le maa of I.e. ..ire." "Tiukltoc Cyojoala, "Advra lurea of a W ulow, etc. I. Any one who nhonM drift dovm by chance to-day Into that long, broad street which runs diagonally from the Bowery into Oraud street, and which still bears the rather KUKrestire name of Henry street, would find little there to remind him that thirty years ago it Tras a domain U-Ioved by many of our most prosperous :nd cultured citizens. True, the houses are mostly wide of front and poasesa itootis ami doorways which retain a cer tain dignity and frruce of outline. But ihabbiuess, neglect aud occasionally so rue thinK worthy of a harsher name prevail everywhere. Henry street is now but a ' liuif memento of what it originally was. TIioum nils who nuce dwelt there with ease, thrift, and even elegance aa well, have giine down into narrower and final homes. Many whose early memories con-ni-ct them with it are domiciled iu smarter up town localities. The tir and push of all great cities has pathetically told npon it, for Heart y all threat cities are remorse less with their souvenirs of place and habitation. A quarter that is classic from reminiscence to-day is to-morrow steeped in th dreary oblivion of decay said auil u re It is a little more than thirty years since a Kentlcman named Camptrll Law rence) dwelt here in Henry atreet with his wifeand one child, a boy. Campbell I.aw rt'iicw had been what the worldly verdict would easily pronounce a fortunate man. lie had left Kugtand. bis native country, at the age of with the aim of aeekitiKa livelihood here. I! bad been graduated at Oxford, h;td strongly scholarly tastes, :vnd had embarked for tbee ahores with the ide.tof securing a position as teacher iu some New York school. Not a lofty ambition trnly, and yet Campbell I.aw renre, believing that he conld earn his bread in no other way than as an lust rue- . tor of young people, let his hopes of the fu ture aspire toward the ultimate proprie torship of a school modeled upon au ideal plan of his own. These hopes were never fulfilled, hut realizations of a much richer and hand somer sort came to him with succeeding year. A certain lawyer of considerable wealth, named Ezra Morton, who lived in one of the large, quiet mansions whira then lined Henry street on either sidej had recent ly lieen stricken with a linger ing paralysis. Itwrence had brought a letter to one of Morton's friends. The In valid gentleman was just then in need of itaei-retary. Lawrence's graceful aud at tractive presence, alietted ly the protig of bin Oxford training, secured hiui this position a few weeks after his arrival. He nctjuitted himself capably in his new ca. I.4city; a friendship soon ripene'l between t!ieniployer and his assistant. Old Mr Morton's days were numbered, but his faculties were still clear and alert, and he bad always prided himself upon a quiet. unerring judgment of human character. Itrfore a year had passed, his respect for Lawrence was no le-s thorough than the trust which be reposed In him. The old gentleman had a single child, Kosa, aged about IS, who had been motherless since she was a little girl. Kosa. Morton was not a beauty In any florid or romantic sense, and yet abe had a winsome, wom anly, cultured personality that inspired love in the young secretary's heart after a rather brief acquaintance. He begau by secretly smiling at what be termed her "Americanisms" (and such national traits at that remoter day were keener than in theso times of swift transatlantic goings aud comings), but he soon ended iu hon estly loving them. Rosa was an heiress; she would have the Henry street house aud a certain fortune of a hundred thou sand dollars besides. This meant ample wealth for any New Yorker in the- ear 1355, and Kosa could easily have taken her choice among well-to-do admirers. But she preferred the penniless young man from England, and soon found that her preference was parentally sanctioned. During the next year she and Lawrence were married, a little while before the last sudden stroke which terminated Mr. Mor ton's life. Lawrence now awoke, as it were, to a recognition of the extraordinary kindness of destiny. He had married where his heart lay, and he had won a faithful, ex ceptional wife. But be also won while still iu early manhood, position, affluence, the most enviable mental and physic! comfort. No need, hereafter, to struggle and toil for mere daily sustenance. Tbe old ambitions died within him a natural death, and new ones took their place. He bad long ago despaired of ever securing; that placid leisure which be believed in separable from all worthy literary pro ductiveness. But now the leisure once believed unattainable met bim on every side with its soft and welcome contact. He could live bis life just as be had once fondly dreamed of living it. And tbe wife whose desires and purposes were only too ready to blend their ardor with bis own smiled the moot loving indulgence upon the fresh future which bad opened! before him. A boy was bora to them in the second year of their marriage. They named him Gerald, after Lawrence's dead father la England, who bad been rector in a a mall country town, and a man whose fine intel lect and spotless character hi American ized sod was never tired of recalling with filial praise. Gerald was the only child given them and they both lavished upon him untold love and tenderness. Among all honors which a man of let ters can ever le permitted to reap, that of enrollment with the poets of bis time was to Campbell Lawrence most satisfactory and enticing. He had till now looked with a sort of dubious reverence upon all personal attempt to acbiere poetic fame. Tbe fervor, the aspiration, perhaps even the genuine ability, he argued, were all within him; but would there not be the audacity of desecration Itself in mingling those high and fine moods of the muse with tbe jar and worry of practical self support It did not occur to Lawrence that if he hail (ossessed the true voice of thefHM'this songs would have rung out high and dulcrt above all workaday dis- ' cords. However, his environment, as be told himself, bad now become forcibly stimulating. lie fitted tip a room in the house as bis study, filled it with looks, and made it one of those attractive re treats in which luxury is tempered by the nicest refinements of taste. Here be would !end hours, writing bis Verses. Often bis wife would enter the apart ment, his pole admitted and nndiatnrbing visitor during the period of his labor. He would sometimes continue writing when ahe appeared, aud if she chose to seat her self near bim, he would itretch out bis Haul aud silently press her own. Or uow and then he would read her passages from hU work. Phe would always praise it, for it always seemed to berstrikingly worthy of praise. She was far from being ignorant or unlettered, but if her fund of critical acu men had leen much l.irjrer than it was s ho would no doubt have praised precisely the same. Ixve blinds us to many misdeeds besides those embodied la the stanzas of oiirw ivea, husbands or sweethearts. Mrs. Lawrence thought aiucrrsly tuot'cb. that her husband's coming volume of poems would be a series of masterpieces, and she already aaw bim wreathed with the laur els which his generation must gladly ! stow. "My collection Is now nearly complete," be said to her one day, abont three years after their marriage. 'I have only to write the dedication to yon aud then all will be ready for a publisher." She smiled and looked affectionately Into his face with ber brown dove-like eyes. "That will be no labor for you, I am sure, Campbell," she said, "or at best only one of love. "True," he answered. And then as if shaping in words what bad long lain in bis thought, he slowly added: "But Kosa, 1 want an opinion ou the work Ijefor it goes to press. You understand, my dear?' "An opinion?" she questioned surpris ed ly. " Ye. 1 want some man of proved gen Ins as a poet to read my lines aud tell me frankly what he thiuks of them. And who is there here in New York? It is, after all, only a big overgrown commer cial village. Of etiurse, it will intellectu ally change during the next twenty years or o, but at present I have scarcely an acquaintance here who would even sym pathize with my poetic design apart from either understanding or appreciating it Now in Boston it is different." "Boston, Oh, yes," ruiirmuredhls wife, showiug that iustant respect for what was then truly the "Athens of America," which so many cultivated minds iu our larger city had securely acquired. "But whom do you know in Boston, dear Camp bell, whom you could saJVIy consult" "A pleasant correspondence, as you seem to forget, Kosa," was Ijiwrruce's answer, "ha of late sprung up between tbe Poet 1j and myself. L is still young in fame, hut his accomplishments have not merely received the approval of all impor tant critics; they are beginning to lie recognized as a rare and national product. I think I. would receive me with cour tesy if I weut to biui, and extend to me th candid valuation of which I ataud in need. I have already more than half made up my mind to visit bim during the uext month." Lawrence soon afterward decided pos it ivrfy to make this pilgrimage. He did so, and L received bim v. ith all desired gentility. But when it came to a frank criticism upon the proffered verses, there this Boston poet's reception underwent a marked chill. He read all the poems at tentively, and then did what so few men tinder like rircumstauces will ever do: he told the plain truth. "What you have shown me, Mr. Law rence," he said, with the gentlest amia bility of manner, "has an unerring cor rectness of metrical form. It is evidently t he work of a scholar. But I regret to tell you that it is no more." "You mean that it is not poetry?" ex claimed I jiwrence, aghast. L, slowly nodded. "Yon have made it easier for me to give you my honest judgment," he answered, "by putting me that abrupt quest iou. Yes, I do lutau that it is not poetry." Iawrcuce returned to New York a sad der and wiserman. Whatever humiliating conviction of their truth tbe Bostouiau's words may at first have engendered began rapidly to lessen aud vaui.-h after he had left L 's preseuce. His wife, too, almost angered by the unfavorable decision re ported to ber, und certainly stung into a loving sense of injnry Ly its presumed un fairness, mingled her cousolation with tbe sort of eulogy that he who heard it found preciously grateful. "Every poet, my dear Campbell," she insisted, "has bis own special ideal, bis own peculiar cult. Will you be foolish enough to accept as infallible the dis approval of one fellow-writer, no matter .bow much you respect bis abilities? Seek the more liberal acknowledgment of th world. You have influence enough to publish your book in England ; there is that London publisher of whom you have often spoken as your father's old friend. Let the book appear on both sides of the ocean, and then watch its effect with that select lew whose approbation or disfavor will alone have telling weight." Lawrence took the easy counsel con veyed in these words. He published bis poems both here and in England and waited. The liook failed to stir the least ripple of interest- It was not assailed nor contemned ; it was not commended nor lauded. It was dismissed with cold ro epect and nothing more. The influences of Iscott, of Wordsworth, of Byron, of Keats, were in separate reviews touched upon, one after another. The flawless method of prosody was repeatedly not iced. But not a sneer of animadversion, as not a pulse of enthusiasm, gave dis tinctive spirit to the general reception of the volume. It fell flat npon tbe reading public, and was in most cases, very prob ably, forgotten as soon as read. Iawrence suffered keenly. The truth bad dawned upon him at last, and it dealt him a crushing blow. What, after all, bad this windfall of early prosperity meant to bim but the realization that bis aims far transcended his powers T If he bad fojght and striven for years against harsh odds of poverty, be would at least have kept the cheer within bissoul of hav ing been born fer nobler ends. But now the veil of illusion was ruthlessly torn. He saw bis own weakness and shortcom ing. Opportunity bad been given bim, and he had failed to grasp it. He would always thus fail. The cruel truth was dear at last. He wept tears of blood ; it was an actual anguish of poignant self discovery. It was one of those noiseless and covert tragedies of the human soul, bitter, perhaps, as any that we know. "I shall never write another lina of poetry as long as I liv:" he told his wife; and be kept his word. But be wrote, nevertheless. Like so many men who are fated to feel though not to create in the largest imaginative way, be possessed the natural gift of a fluent and lucid prose style. A scholar of no mean acquirement, the idea came to bim of writing a history which should combine rigid accuracy with picturesque and eloquent narration. He chose Byzan tium, from the accession of its first, em peror to the final overthrow of the Koman Empire, and he set to work upon bis un dertaking, after several mouths of de spondency, with a vigor that put gleams of encouragement into his wife's tender eyes, and spoke well for his own inherent fortitude. If he could not win the golden prize he would try far the silver snc The crown of oak leaves would have its value, even if he missed that of bsy. But his wound acheI and Med, alw.tTS. It never really healed. He strove to bide bis chagrin, bis disappointment, and did so to all except bis wife. She alone knew and understood, and yet it was only at times that the sad truth plainly rose he fore her. She took keen interest in his new literary plan, and when it became necessary for bim to delve among tbe re sources of the famous foreign libraries, she readily sailed with her young sou and himself for European shores. . They remained abroad several years, and Lawrence's great work (it had now lsscome tacitly accepted as "a great wort" by the two most concerned in it) was still far from completion. When Gerald was in his thirteenth year they returned to New York. Their son had meanwhile ?rown to be a ccat winnicg aud Iovabls boy. Ho had the brown eyes cf his mother, and his hair was a rich chestnut, shot through with golden threads. His aptitude for all kinds of study vers re markable. There had been some. talk, of sending him. to Columbia College, then a mere high school in King street, but as his intelligence gave wider proof of its capacity. Harvard College was Ceter tained upon. Gerald studied under tutors for two years longer in New York, aud then en tered Harvard with flying colors. His va cations were always the bringing home of more thsn merely creditable reports. He had gained the highest rank in all de partments of study. He was head of his class, as our American term has it, in everything, r Lawrence toot the deepest pleasure in his son's collegiate triumphs. As for Mrs. Ijiwrence, she was overjoyed past expression. Her boy's brilliaut promise atoned for tbe disappoinlmeut wrought by her husband's thwarted aspiration. As a matter of course, Gerald boc-atiie ac quainted with his father's absorbing pur suit. He was naturally reticent, and those who were in bis society often left it with the impression that be was not conversationally notable, while ut the same time they some how admitted his excellent endowments. Social New York life in thoso days bad not the modish flutter aud ostentation of to-day. When Gerald returned home from Harvard be was not lured into the fashionable foilies of the assemblies, the Patriarchs, or the F. C. D. C. Dancing Class. All these blooms of civilization were yet iu the bud. He went to certain decorous aud simple entertainments and enjoyed them. But he showed no taste for feat iv pleasures. Always li seemed like one who feels tbe visitant presence of some continual brooding preoccupa tion. Both his parent a noticed this, aud in the last year of his sojourn at college both communicated their solicitude one to another. Wes Gerald ill? Had some sentiment seized bim with its delicate, amorous grasp off there in Cambridge? What was really tbe matter Was any thing really the matter, or was their pa rental love merely at fault? They soon learned that something ser iously was the matter, though the anx iety which they suffered may have sprung from a different origin. One day, acarr-ely a week after Gerald had returned from Boston with credentials that certified ho had been graduated from Harvard at the bead of his class, he fell buck upon a sofa in the drawing room of his parents' Henry street bonse, while several guests were assembled for tbe purpose of giving Lim their congratulations, utterly uncon scious. Before s doctor had been snmrr.nEed be had rallied and recovered. He laughed lightly at the attack, aud declared it simply a result of overwork during tha last examination at Harvard, and nothing more. He quieted the fears of both bis parents by soon afterward appearing in bis usual health and spirits. But the physician who had attended him thortly after his swoon had spoen caudidly at his own solicitation. Gerald, brave mid full of self-command, bad insisted that the physician should reveal nothing of the real truth to his father or mother. They both lov me dearly, Dr. Soul h ton," he said, "and if they knew I bad a luottal malady of the heart they would lw in a pcriwtual state of worrimeut. You will promise me, therefore, that you w ill tell them nothing?" "I promise," Dr. South ton had an swered. !-- It is possible that Gerald's deportment toward his father changed from that time thenceforward. They had always beeu on the most intimate terms together. During Gerald's early schooling in Geneva many had been the loving voyages paid to hiiu from Paris by his father, absorlied in studies at the Bihliotheque Natiouale. Gerald kuew of the Byzantine history as he knew of bis boyish hoops and kite. He came, one morning, into his father's library, and after watching tbe usual work at the long-meditated manuscript, be "Father, you hare never known a cer tain fact about this boy of yours, care fully as yeu hare watched and guarded him." "You have a secret frons me, mysoo?" Lawrenees asked surprisedly. '"Yea, father, a secret. 1 have tried ray band at verse." "At verso!" The words of Lawrenco rang with a certain scoffing bitterness. "Yes, father, at verse." "Let me. bee what you hare done," said Lawrence, and as he spoke the wrords a cogent memory of his own defeat aud surrender swept through bis soul. Gerald sank into a chair near bis side. He drew forth a manuscript and quietly began to read it. He bad read for per haps five minutes when bis father sud denly and harshly interrupted bim. i . "Gerald, is this yours?" ", "Yes, father,". Gerald answered. "Do you like it?" "Like it?" murmured Lawrence, "why, my dear boy, it is wonderfully fine!" And it truly was. Youth spoke in the Yersea, but genius spoke too. Tbe imag ery, the feeling, the selection of epithet, was more than merely remarkable; each told of a nature endowed with capacity to express in tbe sure, sweet phrase of art, sensibility, passion and careful reflection. Lawrence bad felt, as be read, the sense f a new personality in literature. It had rnahed warmly, blandly npon him like the breeze of a summer dawn. His son was a true poet! He bad never been one; be had only bad the longing, the scholarly equipment, the eager and fervid intention. But Gerald, after no apparent struggle, after w hat seemed to be solely the most natural and easy im pulse, bad attained something unique and brilliant in poetic composition. Lawrence put away bis son's manu script, telling Gerald that he would retain it for further consideration. The subject of the poem was Cortes, tho Mexican con queror. Its material was ev:dently taken from Prescott's immortal history. But Gerald had woven abont the whole tale of that memorable rnnqnest a glamour, an enchantment, which the real poet can alone fre'if. An ncoay f Jealousy nrvtv nssailed Ger ald's father. He had always loved his son, till now, in the most disinterested and devote.l way. But now be was wildly, almost fiercely, jealons of him. He strove to conquer the new sensation, but iu rain. He locked himself w ithin bis library for hours and remained there, doggedly pac ing tho floor, with licnt bead and com pressed lis. His wife wondered at his altered moods, but he told ber nothing. He would rather have died than reveal the truth to her, or to any one ou earth, lie almost loathed himself for feeling as he did. He hated to have Gerald ap proach him, though he still loved the boy as fondly as ever. And yet Qerald's very existence now seemed a mockery, a sar casm upon bis own! 'Campbell, his wife said to him one T. "you are ill. You must see a doctor. Do not attempt to deceive me. You remain closeted for hours, but it is not your his tory which alsorbs you. I suspect you have scarcely touched it for weeks. .And Gerald" . "Well?' he questioned. "Wtat of "iou never notice the boy. When be speaks to you it is seldom tnatyou ever give him au answer. It is just as if yon bad taken some strange dislike to bim.' And you have grown haggard, thin you are no longer your dear self. Oh, Camp bell, what in your trouble?" "Nothing," wasthc answer. "You say this to me your wife?" "Yes," Ijtwreuce replied with a fierce accent. "Nothing is the matter. Pray, Kosa, leave me alone." And he passed cgain into bis library. But Gerald approached his father some duys later, ami gently insisted on his kindly heed. "You are in some wretched sort of trouble," he said, "and you must not continue morbid cud uncommunica tive like this. You must reveal your trouble. What can it be? Mamma and I will share with you. We are both full of sympathy for you. Matters cannot go on as they arc doing. Father, tell me the truth!" I haro nothing to tell you, Gerald," Lawrence nuswered. Aud then, suddenly, he gave an alarmed cry ; for Gerald's face had takeu an ashen pallor, and tho youth sank backward upon the lounge near which he had been standing. It w:u an attack of his heart disease, aud m attack from which be never revived. When his father reached his siilo J-e was gasping aud half unconscious. He lingered fir two hours in a state of coma, axd then quietly died. '-"TV Gerald's death was the mr.st dreadful of blows to Inith his parents. Mrs. 1 jiw rence was unable to attend the funeral. so thoroughly had grief prostrated ber. I jswreuce suffered tortnre for .lavs, and finally showed himself among his ac quaintances with hair and beard perfectly white. Bat sorrow had not entirely wrought this chango. He had loved Ger ald, an 1 he had keenly suffered ou losing him. Yet the passionate temptation to put his uame f the poeiu Gerald had left was now strong iu his heart. WLo could rver know the actual fact, if be did so? The world would surely admit him to la a pott if ho should print "Cortes' ns his own work. I Ic had read it over again aud again, since his sou's death, nud each new reading convinced him the more clearly of its beauty aud power. Of course the auppressiou of its true authorship would be horrible. He recoiled before tbe crime even while he felt tbe deadly stress of its fascination. He had never voluntarily committed a sinful act before. He had never till now known the rial mt-auiag of temptation. Honor aud rectitude had been with him has natural us the process of drawing his breath. The ouly great emoliou of his life, for years aud years, had been ambi tion t shim as a poet nd the sharp dis t;,;xiiiiT nient, of conceding to himself that this wits an unattainable dream. A little while ago, if he had heard that r.ny such baleful desire as the preseut one could l.ave lured him, he would have scoffed at the prophecy as something which dealt in the wildest improbability. As it was, the guilty longing had sprung n;iou him with au iusidious, ticr-like sudden ucss. He struggled against it with secret energy, nud silently cursed himself for having it. All the morality of bis past life was ar rayed agaiust it. There were moments when be assured himself that he had laid it aside forever, and that it would here after revisit him only ns the gloomy memory of some hateful nightmare, lint then, after a few hours, the demon awoke with added malevolence. He began to recognize that his power of resistance was weaker than the force of his subtle foe. "It conquers me," he at last told him self. "I yield to it. In my own conscience I shall forever be a villain, a traitor. But lefore my fellow-men I shall at least go to my grave with unblemished repute." His Byzantine history needed but a few more chapters to effect its completion, but be could not touch it. He doubted if he could ever add to it another capable line. Bis mind was in acute aud incessant tor lueut notwithstanding tbe strange lurid kiud of pleasure which his final decision bad wrought iu him. The extreme change In his manner, his fits of moody silence, his groping and in secure walk, his alstracted and tremu lous language, wero all assigned by his wife to but a single cause. SUe herself was heart-broken at the loss of her son, and sho never dreamed that the severe alteration in her husband was occasioned by another reason than that of poor Ger ald's death, "I must Iks frank with you,' she said to him ono day. "You seem to lieon the verge of an illness. We bad let go abroad again, and as soon as ixwsible." "Go abroad," he repeated; "no, no. I have work here." "Ah, you niean the history," Mrs. Law rence said. "I ani glad, Campliell. that you have had the heart, to iiuish it to concern yourself with it." Certain words rose to his lips, bnt an intolerable sense of shame kept hint from uttering them. Ho knew that his wife was wholly ignorant of the existence of "Cortes." Gerald, in his absolute mod esty had told no one of the work. Aud yet Itwrence felt what his wife's horror would 1k if she learned the act which he now really meditated. "I must lie to her," he thonght after ward, while seated in the seclusion of his library. "I must tell her that I have com posed this poem ia secret, and that I have at last determined to give it to tbe world. But how to begin? Ah, how ghastly will such hypocrisy seem ertea employed to ward her!" He at lenah resolved that he would place "Cortes" in the hauds of a pub lisher, and not refer to it in the hearing of bis wife until the poem was printed, bound aad ready for the public In this way he could rid himself of the tortnro entailed by preliminary falsehood. She would read his name on the title page when the book appeared, and it would then, perhaps, le easier for him to deceive her concerning its origin. Meanwhile his beall It grew feeble, he lost appetite, and slept cither in the most wretchedly fitful waj or else dreamed for what seemed hours at a time the most agonizing dreams. One night be awoke with a ter rible start, and found that he was stand ing in his night dress lw-side the half faded fire of his library. He had risen in a state of somnambulism and traveled several chambers to the desk iu which Gerald's poem bad lieen placed. All through the following day this cir cumstance caused hir.i the keenest mental anxiety. He could ill remember the dreara from which he bad awakened ou finding himself a sleep walker, but he had a vague recollection that it somehow concerned an injury which was leing done to his dead hoy, and which he had been swayed by the motive of averting. The dream haunted him, and on the evening of the next day, while he sat withiu the library, a:i idea, abruptly born of it, seized upon his tormented mind. Why should be not in a certain manner cleause his conscience of the darker crim inal stain which must follow this deed of false appropriation? His Byzantine his tory the labor of years lay in the same desk with bis soli's extraordinary poem. What if he deliberately destroyed the his tory, making it thus a kind of votive, pro pitiatory cflerius to the dead? His own work should thus get down into oblivion, as it were, with Gerald himself. This would be a sacrifice that might appease the sting of remorse licreafteratid perhaps add to the zest cf hi triumph us the ac credited author of "Cortes." He brooded several days upon this ides, nnd one night be determined to carry it out. The weather was chilly, and a glow ing coal fire burned in the grate of Lis lib rary. His wife had retired to rest an hour ago; it was now past 11 o'cloc k. He went to the desk and took forth the manuscript of his history. It made a solid bulk of sheets. The tears filled his eyes as be gazed dow n at the closely written pages, representing so many hours of careful toil. But what were they all in theirclaborated rhetorial finish comiiared with the sweet, i-pontaneons brilliancy of "Cortes"? Hun dreds of men could have written this ele gant, easy pros?. Hut the verses of "Cortes" had in t'ucm the divine, unteach able spirit. They were that rarest of rare rhings, mnst'-rly ami exquisite jxetry. The history of Byzantium might mean reputat ion, but "Cortes" might lueau au t-iiiiost everlasting fame. Lawrence, with faltering steps, drew near the lire. Its greeily heat devoured the leaves as he dropped them upou the scarlet cals. The work of destruction was soon elided. It is always so much easier to destroy tli!' n to create! What years of patient work had acconi;ili.h.d a few brief minutes annihilated. He sank down ou his knee vrlien the. last p'tge was consumed. He was terribly mritated, and the uie:.;al turmoil of l.ito weeks made bim seem like t he hantoui of his pa.-t self. He moved bis lips ns if iu prayer. He was, in reality, praying for pardon to his dead son. The words were inaudible, yet his clasped, uplifted bands betrayed thrircharncteraud import. But presently he rose fro-ii his knees with a jialpabl'.' shuiMeras if cueof fear. On the threhoM of a fearful crime, what right bad he todeal in prayer? The sacrifice of bis history coil id, alter all, avail not hiug. His wrong to the dead would not be oue shade less dark on this account ! He thought something of ret ii irg, espe cially as it was then a little after mid night. But uow that he bad taken the first positive step in evil, he felt a dread !.-st his wife might be roused from sleep by his entering their ibamlier, and should address to bim some question which he would be forced to answer. "And how could I speak to her this tiiiht," ho thought, "without betraying my secret? I fear it would crus'i its way through my lips no matter how close 1 locked them !' He sank tilKin a lounge, covering his face wi' h hot h hands and let t ing his head fall backward into one of t lit-soft cu.'h ions. lie had no idea of dropping asleep, and yet it is probable that theslunilier which shortly fell upon hint was one iu which exhaustion of the ltody proved deep enough, to overcome cxciteixa-ut of the mind. His sleep must have lasted several i hours, for the wiutry dawn was gleaming spectrally iu the chain Iter, aud making tlie still lighted gas flare thin and sickly when he unclosed his C3'cs. And as ho did mi it seemed to him that he saw thu form of his son standing lieside a heap of ashes on the hearth place. It was anew heap of ashes, not the one his burnt his tory had made. So real and living was the form to JiwreUcVs sight that he ut tered Gerald's name with a horrified cry, as he rose insecurely to his feet. Hut n instnnt Inter the form had melted to nothingness. The shape law mice saw had doubtless been no ghost whatever, but merely the remnant of a dream which had not yet quits floated away with the departing mists of sleep. Ijiwrence went to the hearth where that new heap of ashes lay. It had some how attracted his gaze from the moment that (ierald's form had vanished per haps ltccaitse the supposed apparition had faded into air so very near that especial Hjt. Patches of white gleamed here and there amid the crisp, black debris. Evi dently, h-s in the case of the history, sheets of paper had In-tn burned. A sudden thought flashed through Law rence's mind. He stooped down and ex amiued one of the scorched fragments. It contained writing and in his son's well known hand. But what was the writing? As be asked himseif this question the sweat broke in cold lie.uls from his brow. He peered closer over the frng mciit which he held. Five or six words were plainly legible there. A quivering moan broke from iiis lips. Ho turned and swept his eyes toward the open desk in whicU-"Crtes" had lain. The manu script of the poems was no longer there! He reeled to a scat. He bad understood now, or, rather, in the whirl and turmoil of his f reti.icd miud Le believed th.'il Le understood. "It it is the vengeance of the dead:'' he gasped. "My boy l-.ns risen from his grave to deal n.e puLu.shm-.-r.t!'' And then there, rushed through h'.r. mind tho awful realization that both "Cortes" and his owti history were, irre vocably dest roved. Honor had ts-cn sn . ;!, but that only. It seemed to him as ir t Li ground were rocking beneath his f?..?. He comprehended, as he had never cloi.i before, the magnitude of his own am bition tbe greatness of tho one Lope which he had relinquished to secure t he still larger promise of another. And now both Were forever lost. An old ngt awaited bim of goading despair, of im measurable self-reproach. Three or four hours later he was found seated in the arm chair which he often oc cupied, with head drooped sideways, quite lifeless. He must have died from cere bral paralysis, it was stated, a consider able time before this discovery. If he had been in any sort of mental moid to reflect quietly upon the question of Gerald's poem having met destruction, be might have guessed at the real truth his own recent proven habit of somnam bulism. That would have told him everything would have accounted for everything, lie bad repeated in sleep the momentous act just performed while awake: and be bad repeated it. this sec ond time, with tho manuscript of Lis sou's treasured poem iubtead of his owu history. And yet, explain the occurrence ration ally ns we may, do. not toe vengeance of the wronged dead seem to have spoken, on that fatal midnight, iu the library of Campltell Ijiwrence? Imagination may easily clothe with su jernat urul dress the severe outlines of fact. But even afier science has fully satisfied us with her colder met hods of survey, does there not sometimes remain, as in the preseut tragic instance, a sense of subtler aud more mysterious law work iug steadily to its retributive eud, though wrapped iu deepest shadow? ParasrapUs New ami (tld, A multitude of sparks do not illumin ate. 11. t Ami' I. Woman is a mirror of divine contradic tions. Micltt M. Call me nor. olir. till you see me gath ered. (ui.i I'ii i i rl. lit wishim? to extend her c-mpiro woman destroys it. ' u';u . It vvoiuau lost us Eden, she aloue can restore it. II Ui:ur. Women detest a serpent throu-b. a pro feosional jealousy. I .''' H 'j THE TOWN-LOT RUSTLER. I.if.-Ial.c irespriritloit nt a I'lii'inc V.'entc. iinracter. Tli WostTn town-lot rustier i. a wei known chain ter. A correspondent . tin! New Votii 7'okc, writing from 4 yp sum City, as., has s:-en him on his na tive lic:'t.i atvl describes him thus : "i.enl estat rustlers are, in my opin ion, o:u' of tin; naMiral products of iln West. Tliev resemble wlrat-tl:tnts ia tlieir imp lious demand for vir-:n soil. No rustler ran rustle eCertiveiy vvher liommi;il in by costly buildings. 'Jiiev thrive in small towns wliieli st..iui on th' banks of insignificant streams, or O' sandy deserts, or on sage-brush plain. They rustle most effectively in town which contain from three hundred to six thousand inhabitants. Tb more drear and uninviting the town the more oner grtirally they rustle. I am dcepiy in U-rcsted in these mysterious men. I have studied their habits for many months ami in rn.iny towns, Imt I have le-en iinabl-; to solve the knotiy probleu. if tin; origin of these Strang" beings. '1 he famuli problem of tlie lijlds or ol the biiiominai theorem ari iner. ly ii t'dln ft:l toys wi'li which to amu:; h kin-ii in comparison with this t wi-'t.T. r.' is something uncanny about tin pro ii id iippear.iiiec of a rustier iu a new town. '"If a pilgrim is in doubt about tlie vo ce.', ion ol a gentleman whom l e has met in a frontier t wn, :.n l would apply a t-vt sure to d.-tcet the most artful and deceptive rustier, he must utter the wor I syndicate while talking to him. .nd tlicn listen to him lie. His eyes brighten at tho wor.l. He conjures up immense suks of starke 1 gold. His voice i.uivers with excitement ; he will talk till mid night of syiiilier.tes. Heal estate is never 1 ought by parties or associations ot per sons. Tlie i Vision syndicate bought lots :i to inclusive, in "block liall's addi tion, on wliirli to build an opi ni-ho'irv;. The I ligli.sh s-. ndicjue. or the Wai'. s'reet styndieat , or the I renchsyn lieate bought so icw or so many lots on which to build a 1 ,' k ,oci. i hotel, 'with au elevator and electric lights.' ne young ma, whose hair w. s red and appearance foxy, told m" that 'a Philadelphia syndicate iK.u.ht that corner, jointing a dirty index finger at a ro- ky, siueliill lot in ar.incr. Idho, 'to build" a dance-house on.' And be wondered why I laughed as I conjured up a vioup ol obese Philadelphia i.i.nk ifs building, arid running a dance-hall in a Pocky ..fountain mining camp." shopping. In inquiring for poods nt- a shop oi store, do not say, "I want'' so and so, l t.t say to ti.e i-liop man, "i lea-e siio-.v pie ' such or siii li r.n article, or some othe r po'.ile iorin of a lrets. Jt is ::n insult, which should. 1-e re sented by it:stant departure, fur tie- e'erk or proprn-tor to oilensively suggest that you can do l etter elsew here. You must never take hold of a piece of goods Miolher jn-rson is examining. Wait until it is replaced upon the coun ter, when you are at libeity to tul.o it up. J-'tige aside s or whispering in a stcit are rude. It is rude to interrupt friends yon maj meet in the store, to ask tiieir atter.tiot to your purchases, I eiore they have liu isbed u..king tlieir own. It is rude tc oiler your opinion, unasked, uj'oti thei. judgement or tasto in selection of goo. If Aoi J "jewing, down'' the prio s c nrtich-s in any way. it t;.e pii'-' does not suit, the most you can do is say bo quietly and depart. It is geni ally best to say nothing about it, ho ever. 1-adies are to frequently thoughtless i monopoh.iug the time and attention salesmen in small talk, while oti.er c;; lers on' business are wasting va'ua. - hours waiting lor them to have done. Jt is rude to sneer at and depredn' . goo !s. You owe courtesy to salesir as well as to any ether class. I so deceit, but bo l'S Inuiest With the in you wish them to he with you. l.oud find showy behavior ia stores i exceedingly vulgar. M'liy Women IJuvy eten. There are just three things for w hich f woman envies, a man. 'ih-Mirst is a m crel not to be told, the second is t' ub.iity Mid lower to go out when-. v-r feds like il .it night, and the third is 1 being able to get along without r: to iiicci peltiiuais slapping at his he A man s lcs always louli. so co niort.ii... iu wet weather. He puts on In:? Eho. s, th:i li socUs, turns up his troy--an. 1 strikes out. A woman on her n crable clothed supporters, has thin to: ings, tig,hl 1kki;s, and gon 1 lor-not :: sandals. Many female gets'; event! to while i-Uiils, which a e ,u-t so lie paper m the lain. '1 hen nut she g In ball a block the backs ol her legs .r. heels to i. Dei S are .saturated. Jleiri.i J.ro UlU-idV Klld draggled, end her le per is ru l e i ami cot bias. If th.tnee to step, as oi'teii ebe loes, iup puddle, her thoughts, if not her laug i. . gruw MLUiiy. ii we loul l m wear llie i.ter. 1 us Well us the l'guiati . trousers, especially on rainy days, v might keep as sweet-tempered as the 0 poaite sex are flatteringly suppose i to. large stud Small Mislal.es. "3 Ab a Scottish minister and an Pneli-. lawyer wire riding together, said tl minister t his h ieii l, ".-ir, do you evt make inisMki-s in your pleading '.' ' -I do," sai l the lawyer. "An' what do ye do wi' mistakes.?' w:s the question. "Why, sir, if large ones, I mend their, if small out s, 1 let them go. And, pry sir, do you ever make inistaLcs iu pieac! ing? ' "Ay, sir, I have dune sac.' "And what do you do with vour n, Ukcs?' 't)ii, I dispense with (hem in thea iiunin r as ye do yoursel'. ' 1 ixctiiee th. large, an' let go the sma anes. .No i t; since, as I was preachin' 1 meant to f-i serve Unit the ilevil was the lather t -i liars, but made a mistake, an' said 1 was the lather o' a' layers. P. tit : . mUtal e was ro sma' that 1 let it to." -. l alliu; l:av. i -.liter When shall I call for the a on of i.i ' lull. M i . i.oi u ' I v tii. .ii .,ii,- i.u.e. What day v i;t In M Mill Voiii rouVeila nee i t reii.i.,1 Weil. I l...vc ler to oo . , 1 ioiis l.ti lit. in any oilier day ot the v c: I l'i luui i iy uvll. I lien yuti uiuy .v. ior the .itiliiuul every Tiic.r-J.. j. Take Care of His Do;. Maimr..! ,'to nur-c ) 'What is ail that i ill the uui'sny. M.oic. c" Nor-. -.e levile clog, Madame, hai t .. Z.!i-es I'lusMe's cately." Mamma - 1 11, lake it irom him al Mane. an. I i-ive it Ojck in Miss I'h i'oor litlle l'i I ... he iiiumu t eat so c cjudy; n Who l.uiilis Last. Perkins. And so yo.i 'te gnui; t fancy jie- ball .'..What costatjo die v, iog to wear .' .Snniit Ahe. I thin'.; Ml bonov suunntr tin i aiiJ go as a trauip. W. yt eoii!:; io wear? IVrknis. t guess I 11 put on you! onal l'i:i.i.' A. belt an. I j-o a; 1 1 ... 1 IM. Gerald? '