I - - " ' 1, .; : ' '." - . ,3 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE THUBSDAT . MOBNITO, DEGOHBES 12, 1895. J f . - I- The Largest General in the Paper "Warehouse State 3 ftvcrl ICpyrlffbt 1896, by Bacheller, Johmoa a&d Bacheller. ftTNOPSia. Rer. Stephen Materston, a circuit preacher of northern California, while conducting a revival at Tasajasa, suc cumbs to the physical and spiritual strain brought on by his religious labors. He la ordered away to e. sleepy old Spanish town In the southern country to recuper ate. There, while gaining health and Strength, he la much shocked by being a coimtant wltneas of the (to Mm) Iniquitous religious exercises qj. the Catholic mis sion adjoining his esiidence. One night, While solacing himself by singing hymns In the garden, he hears the tinkling of a guitar, apparently endeavoring to aucom- ?anvhla voice. ' The same thing happens he next evening, and on the third night, at the conclusion of his psalm, a childish but fascinating voice is mischievously up lifted In a Spanish love song. Impelled by curiosity, he approaches the wall of the garden, and startles the singer, a beautiful young girl, who falls off the wall Into his arms. She talks to him a moment coquettish!. Tells him that she is Pepita Kamlrss, daughter of the mission gard ener. The next day the preacher con vinces himself that he has cause to con vert this girl to true Christianity. He enda her a note privately, appointing a Meeting at the wall that evening, which Pepita, clad In black lace from head to foot, konoar by coming. . ) '.. ;v, part' m. . Totl naven't brought your guitar," he continued, still more awkwardly, at he noticed that she held only a long : black fan In her hand. "For why T Tou would that I play It, ' and when my uncle say: "Where go feptta, she la Is loss,' tome one shall fay: 'Oh! I have hear her tlnk,a-tlnk In the garden of the Americano, who llf alone.' And then It ess finish!" Masterton began to feel exceedingly Uncomfortable.. There was something ' In this situation that he had not dreamed of.' But with the persistency fan awkward man he went on: :, . v j v.-ztdsn In cur- riri cJths skin, . Vc3 llzzL end d- ; 14 rftQ) 59. .1 3 mi - News, Blasting and Wrapping Papers a HEADQUARTERS FOR PAPER BAGS The "But you played on the wall the other night, and tried to accompany me." "But that was lass night and on the wall: - In had not speak to you, you had not' speak to me. Tou had not sent me the leetle note by your peon." She stopped and suddenly opening her fan before her face, sojhat only her mis chievous eyes were visible .added: "You had noli ask me then to come to hear you make lof to me, Don Esteban. That Is tb'e dlTerence." The circuit preacher felt the blood rush to his face. Anger, shame, morti fication, remorse and fear alternately strove with htm, but above all and through all he was connckus of a sharp exquisite pleasure that frightened him still more. Yet . he managed to ex claim: "No! no! You cannot think me ca pable. of such a cowardly trick?" The girl started, more at the unmis takable sincerity of his utterance than at the words, whose full meaning she may have only Imperfectly caught. "A treek? A treek?" she slowly and wonderlngly repeated. Then sudden ly, as If comprehending him, she turned 'V . j- "Ars Yo the Devil." her round black eyes full upon him and dropped her fan from her face. 'And what for you ask me to come here then?" "I wanted to talk with you," he be gan, "on far more serious matters." "I Wished to" but he stopped. He could not address this quaint child-woman, staring at him In black-eyed 'wonder. In either the measured, or the Impetuous term's with which he would have ex horted a maturer responsible being. He made, a step towards her; she drew back, striking at his extended hand half Impatiently, half mischievously with her fan. He flushed and then burst out blunt ly, "I want to talk with you about your oul." Hjr what?" "Your Immortal soul, unhappy girl." "What have you to make with that? Are you a devil?" Her tyes grew round er though the faced him boldly." : "I am a minister of the gospel," he aid, In hurried entreaty. "You must hear hie for a moment. 1 would save your souLi t -, "My Immortal soul llf with the padre at the mission you moost seek her there! My mortal body,' she added, With a mischievous smile, "say to you, 'good a' night,' Don' Esteban." She dropped him a tittle curtesy and ran away. '. ' r, : ,'. - "One moment. Mum Rantlrc,". said l:'"rton,. es-srlyt but. she lad ali r- si'.ppaa t 1 1 men. Ua saw MEGARGEE BROTHERS 130 North Washington Avenue, Scranton Tribune Is Printed MEGARGEE her little black figure passing swiftly beside the moonlit wall, saw it sud denly slide Into a shadowy fissure, and vanish. . In his blank disappointment he could hot bear to reenter- the house he had left so sangulnely a fow moments be fore, but walked moodily In the garden. His discomfiture was the more com plete since he felt that his defeat was owing to some mistake In his methods, and not the Incorrigibility of his sub ject. Was It not spiritual weakness In him to have esented so sharply the girl's Imputation that he wished to make love to her? He should have borne It as Christians had even before now borne slander and false testimony for their faith. He might even have accepted It, and let the triumph of her conversion tn the end prove his innocence. Or was his purpose Incompatible with that sisterly affection he had so often preached to the women of his flock? He might have taken her hand, and called her "Sisters Pepita," even as he had called Deborah "Sister." He recalled the fact that he had for an Instant held her struggling In his arms: he remem bered the thrill that the recollection had caused him, and somehow it now sent a burning blush across his face. He hurried back Into the house. The next day a thousand wild ideao took the place of his former-settled resolution. He would seek the padre, this custodian of the young girl's soul; he would convince him of his error, or beseech him to give him an equal access to her spirit! He would seek the uncle of the girl, and work up his feelings. He would begin his missionary work with Conception,' and then enlist her In the task of saving Peplta's soul. But remembering the old woman's singular conduct by the light of Peplta's rev elation he shrank from her question ing glances. A dreadful suspicion that she might have divined some secret Im pelling power tn his nature, that he had not dreamed of himself, began to haunt him. . .;-'., . . Then for three or four days he re solved to put the young girl from his mind, trusting after the fashion of his kind for some special revelation from a supreme source as' an Indication for his conduct. This revelation presently oc curred, as It Is apt to occur when want ed. One evening his heart leaped at the familiar sound of Peplta's guitar In the distance. Whatever his ultimate intention now, he hurriedly ran Into the garden. The sound came from the former direction"; but as he unhesi tatingly approached the mission wall he could see that she was not upon It, and as the notes of her guitar were struck again,- he knew that they came from the other side. But the chords were a prelude toone of his own.hymns, and he stood entranced as her sweet, child-like tvolce rose- with the very words that he had suns;. The few de fects were .those of purely oral Imita tion, the accents even the slight reitera tion of the "s," were Peplta's own; We are traveling home to God, -- In -the way our farsers trod, " They are nappy now, and we " Soon their happiness shall see. ' "; He was astounded. ' He recollection of the air and the words was the nor wonderful, for he remembered now that he had only sung that Mrtlcuufl&Jrirm, once. But. (o hi attll, greater .dellglt ana surprise ner voice rose again the sec ndx verse, Vita a touch of pi Uvsaedi tiat rjrOd kda throat: A it Choeldren oof the Heavenly King, As ye Journey esswe&tly suing; Enlnff your great Redeemer's praise, Olorlous lu Hues works and ways. The simple, almost childish words so childish that they might have been the fitting creation of her own childish Hps here died away with a sweep and crash of the whole strings. Breathless silence followed. In which Stephen Mas terton culd feel the beatings of his own heart. "Miss Ramlrei," he called In a voice that scarcely seemed his own. There was no reply, "pepita!" he repeated; It was strangely like the accent of a lover, but he no longer cared. Still the singer's voice was llent. Then he ran swiftly beside the wall as he had seen her run, until he came to the fissure, It was overgrown with vines and brambles almost as Impene trable as an abattls, but If she had pierced It In her delicate crave dress, so would he! He brushed roughly through, and found himself in a glim mering aisle of pear trees close by the white wall of the Mission church. For a moment, In that intricate tracery of ebony and Ivory made by the rising moon, he was daxsled, but evidently his Irruption Into the or chard had not been as lithe and silent as her own, for a figure In a parti- col ored dress suddenly started Into activi ty, and running from the wall began to course through the trees until It be came apparently a part of that Involved pattern. Nothing daunted, however, Stephen Masterton pursued, his speed Increasing as he recognised the flounces of Peplta's barred dress, but the young girl had the advantage of knowing the locality, and could evade her (pursuer by unsuspected turns and doubles. For some moments this fanciful syl van chase was kept up In perfect si lence; it might have been a woodlawn nymph pursued by a wandering shep herd. Masterton presently saw that she was making towards a tiled roof that -was now visible as projecting over the presldo wall, and was evidently her goal of refuge. He redoubled his speed; with skillful audacity and sheer strength of his broad shoulders he broke through a dense Ceanothus hedge which Pepita was swiftly skirting, and suddenly appeared between her and her house. With the first cry, the young girl turned and tried to bury herself In the hedge; but In another stride the circuit preacher was at her side and caught ha panting figure In his arms. While he had been running he had swiftly formulated what he should do and what he should say to her. To his simple appeal for her companion ship and willing 'ear ho would add a brotherly - tenderness, that should In vite her trustfulness In him; he would confess his wrong and ask her forgive ness of his abrupt solicitations; he would propose to teach her more hymns; they would practice psalmody together; even this priest, the custodian of her soul, could not object to that; but chiefly he would thank her; he Would tell her how she had pleased him, and this would lead to more serious and thoughtful converse. - All this was In his irilnd while he ran, was upon his Hps when he caught her, and for an Instant she lapsed, exhausted. In his arms. ! lut, alas! even In that moment he sud$ nly drew her towards him and kissed her asonly a lover could. ... The wlro grass was already yellow ing on the Tasajasa plains with dasty decay of the Ions; dry su when Dr. Duchasxt returned to on Paper Furnished by BROTHERS jasa. He came to see the wife of Dea con Sanderson, who, having for the 12th time added to the population of the set tlement was not "doing so well" as everybody except, possibly. Dr. Du chesne expected. After he had made this hollow-eyed, over-burdened, under nourished woman as cumfortable as he could In her rude, neglected surround- lngs, to change the dreary chronicle of suffering he turned to the husband, and said: "After what has become of Mi. Caught. Masterton, who used to be in your vocation?" A long groan came from the deacon. "Hallo! I hope he has not had a relapse,", said the' doctor, earnestly. "I thought I'd knocked all that nonsense out of him I beg your pardon I mean," he added, hurriedly, "he wrote to me only a few weeks ago that he was picking up his strength again and doing well!" "In his weak, gross, sinful flesh yes, no doubt,' returned the deacon, scorn fully, "and, perhaps, even In a worldly sense, for those who value the vanities of lfe; but he is lost to us, for all time, and lost to eternal life for ever. Not," he continued In sanctimonious vindictive ness, "but that I often had my doubts of Brother Masterton's steadfastness. He was too much given to Imagery and song." "But what has he done?" persisted Dr. Duchesne. "Done! He has embraced the Scar let Woman I" - "Dear me!" said the doctor, "so soon? Is It anybody you knew here not any body's wife? Eh?" " "He has entered theChurch of Rome," said the deacon, Indignantly; "he has forsaken the God of his fathers for the tents of the Idolaters; he Is the consort of Papists and the slave of the Pope!" "But are you sure?" said Dr. Du chesne, with perhaps less concern than before. "Sure," returned the deacon, angrily; "didn't Brother Bulkley, on account of warning reports made by a God-fearing and soul-seeking teamster, make a spe cial pilgrimage to this land of Sodom to Inquire and spy out Its wickedness. Didn't 'he And Stephen Masterton steeped In the Iniquity of practicing on an organ he that scorned even a violin or harmonium in the tents of the Lord In an idolatrous chapel, with a for eign . female Papist for .a teacher? Didn't ha And him the guest at the board of a Jesuit priest, vlsltlnr tat schools of the mission where this young Jexebel of a singer teaches the children to chant in unknown tongues? Didn't he find him living with a wrinkled In dian witch who called him 'Padrone,' and speaking her gibberish? Didn't he find him, who left here a man mor tified In flesh and spirit and pale with native wines and flesh pots, and even vain and gaudy tn colored apparel? And last of all, didn't Brother Bulkley hear that a rumor was spread far and wide that this miserable backslider was to take to himself a wife in one of these strange women that very Jezebel who seduced him? What do you call that?" "It looks a good deal like human na ture," said the doctor, musingly, "but I call it a cure!" The End. f fie Best of all Cough Medicines Is Dr. Acker's English Rem edy. It will stop a cough in one night, check a cold in one day, prevent croup, re lieve asthma, and cure con sumption, if taken in time. It is made on honor, from the purest ingredients and con tains neither opium nor mor phine. If the little ones have croup or whooping cough, use it promptly. Thru SUo-25cw, 50c and $1 per bottle. At Druggists. A W- f I lll .'l Y M RTT? Vt 6 and x Chambers Street, Hew York. Mssrofaoturersof the OstobraU ' . PILflEIJEIt LAGER DEER CAPACITY. 100,000 Barrels per Annum DIM BOOKS Of all kltds, iifactarfl it abort .Ins is' LAGER BEER BREWERY. Specialty HOBSBMEN ! 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