0 THE SCRANTON TKIJtUNE TUESDAY MOH-NINU, JUNE !i5, 1895. 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. ; TO ";, The Fair FOR BARGAINS. TO The ir FOR BARGAINS. ft I Tiir w IlL If ioo pieces Bleached Twilled Toweling, Holiday ioo pieces heavy cream Shaker Flannel, Mon- 03 -day - ioo pieces Merrimac's Light Triuts, Mon- H3p day - Ah ioo pieces heavy, yard wide, Sheeting, Q3ft Honday - J4b IOO pieces Calico, ind digo blue, best qual- 03ft ity, flonday - 04U ioo pieces Cashmeres, yard wide, (all col ors) 25c. quality, 4Cn Monday - U(j GREAT BARGAINS IN Lawns and Bedspreads. 5oo dozen Gents' Seam less A Hose, worth ioc. a pair, on Mon- OCn day 6 pairs for - UUV 50 dozen Ladies' Seam less Hose, fast black, worth i2c, flonday 4o dozen Ladies' Fan cy Wrappers, worth CQft 98c, Honday - J3b MILLINERY. Ladies' Trimmed and Un trimmed Hats at less than one-half price. 5,000 yards Japanese Wash Silks, for Shirt Waists, worth 0Qft 50c. yd., Monday Jli GREAT BARGAINS IN Books and Laces. 100 dozen Gents' Un laundried Shirts, 50c. each, Monday only 40 dozen Ladies' Black Silk Mitts, extra good, worth 39 cents Monday 25 dozen Ladies' Wrap pers, worth $1.50, flonday FLOWERS. 25c. Quality at 10 Cents. 50c. Quality at 20 Cents. 75c. Quality at 29 Cents. $1.00 Quality at 40 Cents. Lace Curtains, Lace Para sol Covers, Lace Pillow Shams Reduced 25 per cent. GREAT BARGAINS IN Parasols, Etc., on Monday. IOO dozen Gents' Hand kerchiefs worth i2c. Monday 4 for 200 doz. Ladies' Hand kerchiefs, worth .5c. 0,1 ft and Sc.each, Monday 2lJ 8 dozen Ladies' Duck Suits, worth $5.00, nr flonday - U. 10 Boys' 50c. Shirt Waists and 50c. Knee Pants, Q C ft on Monday - JjU ALL DRESS GOODS HEDUCED 35 PER CENT To Close Out. GREAT BARGAINS IN On Monday. 50 dozen Gents' Bal briggan Shirts and Drawers, worth 39c, HCp flonday - hull 90 dozen Ladies' Em broidered Handker chiefs, worth 25c. 4 01 Monday - . fl2C Ladies' Capes. Ladies' Skirts, Ladies' Suits At Less Than Halt Price. FULL LINE OF Children's Dresses At Prices That Will Surprise You. 5,000 yards all-silk Velvet, worth $1.00 a yard, Monday - QUO 10 gross best quality Buttermilk Soap, 4 cakes in box, for c 5o dozen Children's Lace Caps, worth 23c, flonday - iS dozen Children's Lace Hats, all colors, worth 49c, Monday 2 cases Corsets, sizes 18 to 30, drab and white, worth 50c. QC Monday - JjC 25 dozen Ladies' as sorted Night Gowns, worth oSc, flon- Cfl day - OllC 50 doz. Ladies' Chem ise and Drawers, as sorted, worth 50c, QC Monday - JjC m Copyright 186S. by Irvlnj Earhilbr.J CHAPTER II. THE MAX ON THE MUIR. Indeed, It Is no rhame to a man to have fear In his nature. It Is. I well believe, born In a man's blood; and he hath no more to do with It than with who was his father. Yet mark the frreat erylnp; that there has been In nil aires about brave men and valiant nu n, and men that have never known fear. Yet whit credit Is there In such like? They cannot help It more than I can help havlnfr an eye that had a cast In It (If such like I had), or red hair, or nosi turned up at the end like that of a wild Eirlonach. Yet auch men come to honor, and their wins Inherit it. For I this also is the folly of the times. We rode out of Edinburgh, passinK the Kates without question, for Sir James was a man In pood odor with the government. We had a bitter winter's day for our Journeying, and we had trouble ennURh to keep warm; yet with wrappings of forelsn fur and a flask of French brandy we managed to ghut out the cold. Also our hearts were somewhat cheered and our con Terse crew more heartsome. Thus making merry, to the extent even of singing a catch or two which Sir James had learned In the old wars, and which I heard for the first time, though not wholly with approval, yet with tolerance, we came to a place 'called Cockmulr, a wild and solitary place, shut In between hills that have no living thins upon them. No heart Some reek of habited house was to be Been. The place was in the midst of a great wilderness, and It needed the crowing of the black cock and the jilcher of the grouse' to make the silence endurable. But even these were want ing that fcltter day of gray skies and gripping frost. Just as we had gotten fairly to the midst of the moor there rose up before tis a man, or, rather, ns K might be, we came suddenly upon him. He, was standing stock still, as If he had been meditating, looking away toward the hills of Lamiriermuir.' . Hut at the first sound of our horses' feet overtopping the brae, he turned and showed u.i the pallid countenance of a young lad, lilt ten blue with the winter winds, and with his black clothes hanging about him as though Ills limbs had been bo many barren tree-branohes. I knew him at a first glnnce. It was James Renwlck, of Mlnnyhive, whose mother was some kin to mine, being also on the estate of Drumlanrig, where the Douglass Is the father of us all. . It so happened, by mischance, that Sir James was putting back his flask of strong watere Into the breast of his coat at the moment, when Mr. Renwlck Iturned him about. I wished that It had ur hpen nn hut. nverthMeHfl. I eava h!in greeting, for he ha.1 been a child when I was a youn? lad, and our folk wore, as I hava said, some manner of kin. Then T ankfd him how he did and that In 3 plessant way. Hut he stood lowcrins Pt me with ryes m sunken and such a lr.st countenance that I wished we Mil rnme some other way. "F ar not, James," I Mid, "for this Is Sir Jam's Siandsdcld, of New Milns, a good man; and one that, though a nintilstiate, Is no Ill-wlFther to the folk of the hill " "Ah, John Bell," raid young Ren wlck, at larC. hooding my kindly speech no ninre thin the tune of a bird whls tllnp, "!;; th-t Indeed you? Your friends for whim you Irft us have clad and comforted you well! There are no fine forelsn er.ats nn the mulrs, and the hag3 (Until not the brew of French brandy, noubtloss ye have made a fine oxrhanjre. and the wide throat that to',k the Tefi at a gulp will Boon swal low a fat benefice. Rut there are other spirits abroad that jbu will yet hav to reokon with." ' .lames. " I tiald, peaceably, "not thus was your father wont to speak of me, when I tlrave home the kye In the even' from the braes at the town-end of Mln nyhive." "No," said he, "that may be; but since then the kye have been In many a man's corn beside my father's, honest mrtn!" And I knew that he meant to cast up to me that I had Joined the persecuting pi-rty. For the ordinary cry among the hlllfolk, by which they passed on the word of warning' the one to the other Gilmore's Aromatic Wino A tonic for ladies. If you are suffering from weakness, and feel exhausted and ner vous; are getting thin and all ruir down; ' Gilmore's Aro matic Wine will bring roses to your cheeks and restore you to flesh and plumpness. Mothers, use it for your daughters. It is the best regulator and corrector . for ailments peculiar to woman hood. It promotes digestion, enriches the blood and gives lasting strength. Sold by Matthews Bros., Scranton, when the horse soldiers were out, was I "The kye's In the corn!" "Ye prate of honest men," said Sir James, speaking to Mr. Renwlck for the first time; "but take notice that there are other honest men In the realm that are no .rebels, but bide quietly at home, wishing 111 to none, and who grudge, forbye, an orra sheep no more to a hill body than a can of ale to a red soldier." James Renwlck bent his eyes on Sir James, .and for a moment looked through him. "Pulr man," he said, gently, "poor man! I rede ye turn about your brldle reln and ride back the way ye came, or the bed that ye. shall He on shall be darker than the mirk of the night that comes fast upon us, and colder than the linen shet that Janet Johnson has spread for ye at the Wauk-Miln." "Man!" cried Sir James, fiercely, shaking his brldle-relns at the field preacher, "what ken ye of Janet John stone? And why speak ye the name of my ?on's concubine, that Is to me as the name of the enemy of mankind! That evil woman has not crossed the step of imy door for years na, nor shall na while I live!" So cried Sir James at his voice's pitch. ' James Renwlck shook his head wearily. "The message Is not of me nor from me," he said. "I speak as I am bidden. Your llght-o'-loves I reck nought of. But I wish you well; and I warn you from riding further, for the powers of darkness are abroad this night and It Is their hour. Turn your horses about, and never draw rein till ye are safe wlthls the walls of Edinburgh." "Ye speak as a foolish person," said Sir James, severely; "this night I bide In mine own house and sleep In mine own chamber, with this honest man and law-abiding minister of the gospel to keep me company." And with that he rode off and I rode aft him. Yet often and after I looked back, and (here In the fading light of that bleaky and jinklndly afternoon, I saw the fanatic preacher stand as wo had left him, gazing loneiomely up at the hills as though he looked and saw a vision upon them. Sir Jame Standsfleld rode bravely away, as set on his own intent as a man that has taken the bit of his fate be tween his teeth and rides whither he will, against his better knowledge. "The ranting and fanatical knave," he said, over his shoulder, "to speak to me of warnings and concubines. I will e'en apprehend him and have him sent to the scaffold." Of which I knewwell he had no small est Intention. But as we nearer home and the night settled about us, methought that Sir James Standsfleld rode not so hastily nor looked so eagerly for the lights of his house. Ever he found some' new excuse to loiter, and showed me his own various Improvements,'. together with the weav ing mill and the wauk mill, which he said had been Set up by one Spurway, a good enough man from Yorkshire, but very new-fangled and concelty in his own opinions. " Then we came to a little thatch house that had a lamp shining In the window. "Ah," said Sir James, "let us light off here and have a draught for our even ing ordinary. This Is James Marr's, a very decent man and keeps good ale." Yet I wondered that he should ' go buying of ae, well nigh within call of hU nwtt great and well-furnished house. But I could see that the man was ill at ease and like one that strives to put off an evil day. Nevertheless we lighted down at the change-house and tied our horses to the ring of the door post. When we had seated ourselves, Sir James called for ale, and was exceedingly merry, but alW "Ha, I'mphray Spiirwny." not (as I though) In the wisest way, tap ing that he was so close to his own door, and his wife certain to hear of it on the morning. Then he cried for the elder mnld of the two that were James Marr's daugh ters, and declared that he would find a match for her, swearing that she was too well-looking to be golnf about breeding quarrels and making Ill-blood amwiK the lJads. Whereupon came In a great red bearded man, full of pomp and Im portance, with as much shortness of breath as port of presence. "Ha, Umphray Spurway," cried Sir James, as soon as he saw him, "here Is matter for thee. What tntsns It that this bonny lass, Elpple Mnrr, goes about at the door unwed, and ' thou, great English lout,' have neither wife to keep thee warm o' nights, nor wean to hnlr thy goods and go clad In cloth of thy weaving. Go to, man. Bee to It." , The great red Englishman laughed and sat down well content, as all men do when they are Jested upon "concern ing women, "Ah, Sir Jame," he replied, "hnd I an estate of farms and mills I had not so Jon have eaton the bread of an other's bilking. Elsplo Is a bonny lnsi, and on honest, but would never hnve aught to eay to an ancient gray board of an Englishman." "Never yet did I got the chnnco to say yea or nny, Umphray Spurwny. Hut ' 'tis better late than never,' " said tho lass Elsple, speaking from the doorway where Hlr James hnd stayed her. She was a brisk lass, with no 111 In her that ever I saw. "Well, llrten here, Elsple," cried the' Englishman, dafllng with her, "tell us all whether you will have me, or my man Henry Bowman thnt Is a limber lad and likely of his face?" "For a married man or for a lad to court7" asked the lass, looking from one to the other. "For a married man, of course," said Blr James, before the Englishman had time to spook. "Then I choose Umphray Spurway, the Englishman," -said she. "Bonny faces make bare downslttlngs." . "A wise lass," said Hlr James; "ye could na do better, Umphray." Hut even on 'he spoke I aw hfs Jaw drop and he stured at the door at which appewred the face of the young man who had pursued -us the day on tho mtiir of Ivowther. Sir James rose to his feet and sett his hnnd to his sword. The fare of the young man was flushed with wralih or wine.' I know not which "Come In hither. Janet," he cried to some one without; "her b a gallant company at the drink. Ye will nee the whole pack together' thait have dis inherited me 'the canting priest, the lying Englisher, and the old hound him self. The devil rrve them all May their cups choke them!" And with these wicked words rhlllp Ptan;illL'Id strode upon the stone pave ment of the Inn. He was a tall young man, but with a face surfeited with passion and blotched with evil living. Behind him, with a fleering laugh, there entered a young slantern of a woman, buxom of feature Indeed, but with no good ur housewifely look In her eyes. "Koe, there they stand, Janet," cried ho, "and for a groat I would send them nil to hell, and swing for them In the Grass Mercat." "Philip," said Sir James, gripping the table to steady himself, for all his mirth had gone from him and left him gray to the Hps, "Philip, my lad, I have come to forgive you, and to see gin ye will lead a new life. Pinna dlnnu begin by breaking my heart. Rond away that woman, thnt has made ye live like a boast. Think on your wife that greets for you by her lone " What more he would have said I know not, but the woman broke out furiously upon him, asking who he was that he should take her good name, saying that she was an honest man's wife and much else. "Said ye 'an honest man's honest wife?' " said Sir James: And he looked very direct at her as he spoke. The woman turned away as If she could not bear the question and the pyes of all that wore In the house. She made as though she would go to the fireside by which sat James Marrs' wife with her daughter Elsple standing beside her. Hut they gathered the skirts of tholr klntles about them nnd swept off Into nn Inner room. So the woman fains back shame-fucedly to the i1de of her paramour, who stood browbeating ns nil, save the English man, who f Ippod contentedly at his ale and smiling In a way that was a vast admiration to me to behold. It was not, perhaps, the wisest time to give a man advice, but nevertheless, because I knew not whether Indeed I should see him ugain, I rose from my "The Devil Tnko Him and You Doth!" place and exhorted him to reipont and put away his sin; for that his father was ready to forgive him and receive him again, as In the days before his first going from home. "Out upon you, canting hound!" he orled, breaking In on me; "I tell you plainly, gin I had as muckle as sixpence In the day, I would never trouble my father more." "Come to dinner and worship tonight, and we shall see If we cannot make a new thing of It, your father and you and I. We have come from Edinburgh for that purpose."' But the more mention that was made of his father's kindliness, tho fiercer was the eon against him, which mado his sin like the sin against the Holy Ghost, as I have so often expounded. "The devil take him and you both," ho cried. "Thlnke ye I would go to his table to have him grin at me like a sheep's head In a tongs. Ye dog with band-strings, what are ye concerned In the matter? Do yn understand to whom ye speak?" Then Umphray Spurway whipped a pair of pistols out of his pocket, and laid them bended on the table. "There has been enough and to spare of 111 talk," he said; "get out of this house without another uncivil word, Philip Standsflokl, or I will make a hole la you, you debauched man and blas phemer of your father. And you, Janet Johnston, shall be whipped at the cart tail from here to Morham aye, If I have to lay on the lashes myself!" So, snarling and counter-snarling, with changed countenances, more like Pilose of boast than, human kind, Philip Standsfleld and the wench went out .vowing vengeance upon us all. Then there comes Into my tale that night of great fear, which grips me yet in the telling of it. It was a bitter night of frost at the changing of tho moon. A horror of great darkness fell upon the earth. Yet there was also, what Is not so common on a night of cold, a sough ing and wandering wind that whispered by whiles, going nnd coming uncertain ly among the stopped gables of the house of Now Milns. (To He Continued. No matter what the dtaaie ii or ho" many doctors have fuiiad to euro. you, ns! your druprjjlst for a 2S-coiit vial of one o Munyon's Cures, and if you nra not benr filed your money will bo refunded. Till Company puts up A cure for every disease UNEQUALLED AND UNRIVALLED PREPARATIONS FOR THE HAIR AND SCALP. A dlttlllnllon from the Bomb American plm tre. 'ree from mineral 01 rhemlrsl emu- Bound. An Infnllltiln ciirn for BaldnvM, lalr-rnlllng, ItanilrnfR This or Illost flair, IW.MM, Totter, ana all dlnoascii of the llnlr and Hoalp. PjLM-Csstm BHAkmo for boantlfTlnir the Halri a daHchtlhl, cool and rrfrmhlnf Shampoo t exqiilntta odor. All ptirchuier of tuo Palm-Csiuhti PRrA nous arn entitled to free trputmvnt of the Rcalp, Shampooing and HntrDretalng, at any of onr Halr-IreMlDg Parlors. PA LM-CH R I STT C O . , rHILA. l'AKLORSi 04 CHESTNUT ST. P. 8. nr parlors are In eharpe of speclnl. lata on Rtlrctlxnmif the Hair and Scalp. All advice fieu. 49-Wrlte for olrcular. v . v ...... . ( linv n our Hair Dronatrs call uuutt thn can male appointment! by addressing MATTHEWS BFI08., Sole Agents for Soranten. JOHN L HANGI, ENGRAVER, OFFICE AND SHOP 311 Lack. At. and Stewart' Art Store. Photo Engraving for Circulars, Books, Cita lognss, H:W3papaa Klf-Tone nd Line Work. "ssar REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a Well Man 16tbDay.Mf 0f Me. THB QREAT Both Day. PREWOn Xl3TJ3VIBlD"Sr prodnrea tha above rcaults ln30 day. It acti powerfully and quick Ir. CurM whan all othan fall. Voocf man will regain their loit manhood, and old men will reroTer their youthful Titor of uainf KEVIVO. It quickly and eurelyreetorei Norroue neas, Loet VIUIUt. Impole nor. Hut htlr ErolMleaa, Loat Power. Falling Memory, Waatlnc Dieeaare. and all effecta of aelf-aouia or aicaeaaad lndiecrelloa. which unnta one for atudy, buetneaa or marnace. 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(ACTION to our patrons: lav .1 LaeVaU Iwfwl p Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many pat rons thnt they will this year hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT uutil the new crop Is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to the excessively dry weather many millers aro of the opinion that it fa already cured, and in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will tako no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully three months to tnuture before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling hr.a placed WtshburnCrosby Co.'s flour far above other brands. EGARGEL & CONNELL Wholesale Agents.