Site swsi $tpMiwm. ' M rUftLlfiUHD ETEUY WEDNESDAY, BY W.R.DrjNN. ofticb is robinsow & Bosm'B building . DJa STRICT, TIOamTA, FA, TJSIUlH, $2.00 A YEAR. Jfo HMbfiorlptioim rocolvod for a shorter period than throo months. Correspond once NolicltoJ from all part of llifl country. No nolle will bo taken of tuionymoiM communicatlona. (JUG Hquaio (l i i : VOL.X NO. 23. TIONESTA, PA., SEPTEMHEH 12, 1877. $2 PEP, ANNUM. BU3INES3 DIRECTORY. TIONESTA LODQE Aro. 2H I. O. of O. TP. MEKT3 voiy Friday evening, Bt 8 o'clock, In the Hall formerly occupied by tuoUaod Tomplarn. H. J. SETLKY, N. O. I."W. CLAUIC, Socv. 27-tf. TIONESTA COUNCIL, NO. 342. O. IT. .A.. lL. ,VT RETS Bt Odd Fellow' Lodtfo Koom, 1X ovory Tuotday eveulnij, at o'clock r. M. CLANK, C. H. A. VAENEK, It. a, 81 W. M. I.ATHT. J. M. iONSW, LATHY &z aVGNlSW, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, TIONE3TA, PA. ATTENTION NOMIKRH! I hare been admitted to practice an an Attorney In the reunion ottioo at Wash inirton. I). C. All ofilccrw, soldiers, or Maiior who were Injured in tho lato war. nan obtain pounlnna to which they may ba ntltlod, bv calling on or addressing mo at Tlouenta, Pa. AIko, rial dm for arrearages ufpy and bounty will roceivo prompt nt tnfion. flaring boon over four yearn a soldier in law lto war, and baring lor a number of years engaged in Ihe prosecution of nol rijant' claims, my experience will assure the collection of claims in the shortest pos- tubla tlaie. J. B. AUNEW. tf. K. L. Davis, A TTOKNEY AT LAW, Tionesta, Pa. J Collections made in this and adjoin Ing eonntiea. 40-ly MILKN "W. XTE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, U rtM, TIONESTA , rA . F. W.Hays, ATTORNEY AT LAW. and Xotauy Pvbi.is, RnvnoldN II ii k 1 1 1 A Co.'s JW-nk, Henaca Kt. Oil City, Th. 3!-ly P. MtLXKin. y. B. BMII.KV KIXXKAlt . SMILEY, Uorneys at Law, ... Franklin, Pa t,)RACTICK in the sevaral Coarts of X anr. Crawford. Forost. and adjoin- VairaaaaUaa. JW-ly. Lawroryca IIoubs, rrrONMTA. PKSN'A. WM, LAW I. Rr.Hi:iC. PnopniKToa. Thin houn ta aentJ-allr l-tited. PWervthing new and wall furMiuhed fiunerior acoommoda- Wnaa nd atrict attention given to giipntn. Vatetabl aad Fruits of all kindK xorved tnkhnir sou-ion. Samplo room for Cin- Mwrckal Agent. CENTRAL HOUSE, n1 lOXXKR . ABNEW ltLOCK. L, Aaiciw, Proprietor. This is a new Menu, and has iut been fitted up for the enimmdrttioii of tko public. A portion f bit pstronaa ot tbu puuuo is solicited 4Y FOIKST HOUSE, s. A. TAUNErt PROPRiw TOR. t)pposjto Court Houfce. Tionesta. Pa. Jnt ir-ied. ' Ererythlnt; new and clean and fr). The best of liquors kept constantly i baud. A liortion or tue publlo patron ac is rMPoeifiilly soli'.-itcd. 4-17-1 v W. a COBURN, M. D., llMTKlOIAX A KUItOEOX offers his .1 servhteit to th people of Forcxt Hhtius had an oxnurinnco of Twelve Ymi'm in eonsUvnt prac.tioo, Lr. Cobiirn aMsruntioH to oive stitihfaetioii. lr. Co bm-n make a specialty of the treatment m! "Xaml. Throat. Lung and all other Okrunie or lingering diseases. Having iavoMtitratcd all Bciontillo metholH of cur Ihu diHon and sel'clod the good from all T-ttif, he will guaranteo relief or a euro in all casoa whore a euro U jKissible. No 'karga fir Consultation. All foes will b ron:tble. .PnifesHlonal visits rimdo at all hours. Pnrliesi ai. a distanco can eon suit him br letter. Offli-a and Kasiidonoo necond building balow the Court House. Tionesta. Pa. f- K days Wednesdays und Satiirdays. 2."tf a. h. mr. jso. r. takk. a. b. mu-r MA Y, PARK ,t CO., 13 J 1T K B B S Corner f Elm .t WalnntSts. Tionesta, Dank of Diseonnt and Deposit. InUret allowed n Time Deposit. f olleiflVlonsmadeonaU thePrineipal points of tho U. S. Colleetionn solicited. 19-ly TVILTIA3XtS CO., MEADY1LLE, . - TENN'A TAXIDERMISTS. TJIItPS and Animals stuffed and mount J i cdtuordar, ArtiUoial lyos Kepi BUek. --ly (1EBRASKAJ5RIST MILL rpHE GRIST MILL at Nebraska (Iaicy X town. i Fori-st county, baa been thor nchlv overhauled and renttod in first clss order, and U now running and doing all kinds of CUNTOSI IS I X I I X l-r.orn. J EED, AND OATS Conbtcntly onhand, and Bold t tho very Kiwc-st Ltrim'S. -dm IT. W. LEDEBUR TTMPLOYMENT, Mule and female, sala rv or rommiHHKiii. n c P.V ageni ur. nlirr of MO a week and ex p- iikcn. Kuro k:i Januf.utnriii2 Co.. Hartford. Conn Vui ticiilars free. 41 "toll WORK neiiJlY e.ornted nt (lie I'F.- prni.HMN oihc HI 118. . ill. HEATH, DRESSMAKER, Tionesta, Pa. Mrtfl. HEATH bar recently movod to thin place for tho purposo of meeting a want wfiich tho ladies of tlio town and county havo for a long time known, that or havlntr a drcHsmaker or experience among them. I am prepared to make all kinds of dreos in the lattwt styles, and guurnntoo Natiafnetlon. (Stamping for braid ing and embroidery done In theboNt man nor, with tlio newest pattern. All I ask i a (air rial. Kenldenco on Elm Street, in tho Acomb Building, tf. Frank IlobbliiH, PHOTOGRAPHER, (KUCf'KSSOR TO DK.M1NO.) Pictures Inovervstvleof the art. Views of tho oil region for sale or taken to or der. CENTRE STREET, near R, R. crossing. HYCAMOU1C STREET near Union T)e- pst, Oil City, Pa. 20-tf PHOTOGRAPI1 GALLERY. KI.5I MTUEET, SOUTH OK ROBINSON A BONNER'S STOKE. Tionosta, Pa., - Proprietor. M. CARPENTER, - - Pictures taken in all the latest styles the art. 20-tf II. G. TINKER & CO. OIL CITY, PA. WHOLESALE & RETAIL Doalora in H ID "W J B , Oil TVoll SuiplieH, . e. biubinff, Cartnff, Ruckr-r Rod, Working Jiarreln, Valves, Ae., Jlrasn C Steam Fitting, ltelt- ing, Lfice Leather, Caning, Cc, Iron, Tall, SiccI, ISopc, Oakum, Vc. Wonmk a SPECIALTY of one-and-a- quarter-inch Tubing and Steel Rods for ttnisll Wous. II. G. TINKER & CO., Oil lUty, Pa THE LARGEST FURNITURE ESTABLISHMENT IN THE OIL REGIONS! MILES smith:, Ieuler in CABINET AND UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE! FRANKLIN, - - - PENN'A Consisting ot Parlor. Office and Common Furniture, Mattresses, lillowH, window fchades, Fixture., Look ing (ilaases, Ac. AIho, nirent for Ycnantro county ioP the Olebrnted Manhuttan Spring lied and Combination Mattresses, manufactured ami for alo at my Furniture Warerooins, 13th street, near Liberty. Call and see Hitiiiplo Boil. 9 ly You Ciin Have Sloney BybnyinR your PIANOS and ORGANS from tho undorsijrned Manufacturers' Aent, foi the best brands In the market. Instruments shipped direct from tho Fac tory. C1IAS. A. KHULTi, Tuner, ly IK'k box 17W. Oil City, Pa Dr. J. L. Acorrb, PI1 YSICI AN AND SURGEON, who has had fifteen years' experience In a larpe nd successful practice, will attend nil Professional Calls. Ollice in his lruij and Grocery Store, located in Tidiouto, near 1'idiouie House. 1 N HIS STORE WILL BE FOUND A lull assortment of Medicines, Liquors Tobacco, Citraix, Stationery, Glass, PainUt lils. Cutlery, all of tho best quality, and will bo sold at reasonable rates. DR. CHAS. O. DAY, an experienced Phvsic.ian and DruiTiist from New York, has charge of the Store. All prescription put up accurately. ADVERTISERS send 25 cents to Geo. P. Rowoll A Co., 41 Park Row, N. Y., for their Eighty-payo Pamphlet, showing cost of advei isfng. 13 4t fl OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE ftl lOITEII'L EXHIBITION It Bolls fas tor than auv otor book. Cue Acoiu bold 31 copies in ono day. This in tho nl y authentic and couoplett) history puiilietibd. tSona f"r our exini terms u ( ii'.'itin, N atioj aj, Vvr.t rsni.vn Co., Phil ia-i.tfr.rii, rn. ?,.t 99 . CUAITER I. "bart, Mattland Dart & Co." So the name stood upon the great brass plate ; and in the.se tinrues had the business of Ihe bank had been pru dently and profitably conducted for as many year as the majority of the inhabitants of Highborough could re call. Trade panics had laid warte many another long-established firm : bank ruptcy had swooped unexpectedly rn many a bouse where wealth seemed as limitless as here; but the bank of Meeers. Dart, Maitland, Dart, & Co., held its head high above all treacher ous waters, and stood unmoved and utterly secure after the heaviest gales had passed. The name of the firm was a passport of trust and reliance, as well as a prompt introduction to tlte first socie ty of the country ; and the present rep resentatives were these : Maurice Dart, the senior partner, a handsome man of fifty years, who imagined the wishes, the weakness, and the hopes peculiar to other men, could not move him now ; and Walter Maitland, both in appearances and manner, a strong con trast to his senior partner. Though but ten years younger, he looked near er thirty than forty, and the frankness of his blue eyes, and the gay words so prompt upon his lips, seemed doubly frank and doubly gay, contrasted with his senior's reticence and gravity. The third partner was one in name alone. His father's death had left him a rich share in the bank, but his ouly inter course with it was the polite periodi cal acknowledgment of its having swept away the debts, which were the worst enemies he had had to fight since he entered the army. About the "Co." there was of course that vague ness inseparable from the cognomen. Iu the outer world it was supposed that an unlimited number of people had invested their savings or their pat rimony on purpose to be considered "of the firm." Jtut among the clerks only one case was kuowu with certain ly.. He was neither the oldest nor the most experienced, though the most cheerful, perhaps, the most industrious. He bad deposited with the find the sum which his father, through a forty years' course of valued and profitable managership, had accumulated to be queath to him; and so, being enabled to draw what doubled his salary as a clerk, Tom Leslie looked upon him self as a partuer"T)f no mean order, and built lofty castles for a time when bis name should stand upon tlio brass plate otherwise than as "Co." Cheer fully and constantly he erected these edifices; but to attempt to lay their foundations on terra firma, either by saving or speculating, never entered Tom's head. With his mother a lit tle old lady as hopeful and cheerful and trustful as he whs himself Tom lived in a pretty white cottage beyond the town ; and here he had ilowwrs all the yeur round, and birds tlmt saug in the gloomiest weather, and a piano on which he was no mean performer. And as regularly as Saturday morn ing came around, Tom taking his hat, i would say, iu tfie most natural rutin- nui't "I think we should like a couple of the yunger fellows out to dinner to-morrow shouldn t we, ( mother r Their salaries are not like mine ; aud I things are dear, you say." True their salaries were not like his, but then he would not have the small, bright house, nor the small, bright mother denied any comfort be could think nt, aud so there was never one penny of Tom's salary left when the year was up. Once or twice Mrs Leslie would in quire ruefully where her soa picked up the dinnerlets clerks whom be de lighted to bring home to supper or as be called it, "to a little music." But her genial hospitality was, after all, as prompt as his, and so, though she kept the accounts, there was, as I said, never a penny of Tom's salary left when the year was up. "He thinks that that 400 of his is a king's reve nue," thought Mrs. Leslie, one Satur day morning, watching her 6on cross the road, diop his gift into the expec tant baud of the crossing sweeper, and turn at the corner to nod to her. "He will soon expect me to adopt a few young men whose salaries are less than his owu. If be had but inherited his father's saving nature !" She tried to regret this dolefully; but, after all, she could nut help the warmth of per feet satisfaction filliug her eyes. Even his practical lather had re joiced that bis nature was his moth er's from the time that nature begun to assert itself iu little Tom "Little Tom" theu to his parents ; "Little Tom Leslie" afterward among his schonlfcl lows; "Little Leslie" uow among his fellow clerks On this particular Saturday muc.ii iug, as he walked to the bank, Tom loitered a little on one street a quiet street of haudsome private house", be- foro ooe of which ftood a con pie of CO. caha piled with boxes. Tom wailed long enough to be sure that the cabs bore nothing but luggage. Then he walked briskly on, and, entered the bank excitedly, told his fellow clerks of the arrival of the Colonel's house hold, and for fully five minutes forgot, in his excitement, to add his genial in vitation for the morrow. M hen the coming of the regiment had been discussed, and Tom's pleas ant invitation accepted, he turned to his desk, not to loiter again through out the day. An hour afterward Mr. Dart drovi up, and with a quiet "Good morning 1" passed through the bank to his own private room. Here pres ently Mr. Maitland joiued, him, and, standing before tbe fire, discussed var ious items of towu news among them, of Course the arrivp.l of the regiment. "Colonel Conyngham has only one daughter. We must help to iutroduce her. Young Dart having once belong ed to the regiment, gives it, as it were, a claim upon ns." "The Colonel's daughter will need but little introduction," remarked Maurice Dart, quietly. CHAPTER II. "Dart, Maitland, Dart & Co."- The names stood unaltered on tho great plate ; yet excepted the sleep ing partner, away in India now each one represented by that sign was per fectly aware that a great alteration had "been growing in himself ever since Colonel Conyngham and his daughter had been living in Highborough. The strong bank walls no longer limited bis hope and ambition. Beyond them stood revealed a home of love, and ease, and sunshine, brightly possible ; and in this future the only mission ot the good old bank was to furnish the home with luxury. It was a winter night. The bank windows were bolted end barred, the great books were locked away in tbe trusty safes, and the manager was asleep up stairs, with the loaded blun derbuss beside his bed. But in his brilliantly-lighted drawing-room at home the senior partner sut alone a striking-looking man in his evening dress, with the hot house flowers fad ing in his coat. The room had boeu filled with guests up to this time, but now Mr. Dart sat alone before the fire, buried in thought "which deepened minute by minute, until tho door was opened, and Walter Maitland re-entered the room he had but lately left. "I could not help coining back," he said, beginning hurriedly to speak, as if the words farced themselves from him in his nervous haste. "There was one thiog about which I must speak trt you to-night about which I have wanted to sj ak to you for a longtime. I feel" ho s leauing ogaiust the chimney piece oj posite his friend, and looking with intense scrutiny into his quiet face "that I have betu dream ing a dream which a .word of yours could at this moment dispel. Tell me if it is so. It will be a greater kind ness than your silence, thong . the kindness :s sure to be the motive ot that. Tell mo at ouce. Dart. It can not be very pleasant to you to see m my fel- anxiety. You are far to good a low to fel pleasure in that." "What am I to tell you ?" inquired r T -v ... . . i. iunurice unri, witnout meeting nis coratiauion's eyes. "Surely you know J I said to my self that when I met Isabel here in your house, to night, I would find out if ray fears were well-grounded ; and if I could not discover, I would ask you for the truth before I left. Dart 1 end this wearing suspense for me. It has been growing through all these months side by side with my love, and has be Cuiue unbearable at last!" Maurice raised his head now, and met his companion's anxious question ing eyes. "I ani glad you have spok ed, Maitland 1" be said. "I have guess ed at your anxiety, while 1 have felt my own ; and I have often wished to break the silence we have hel l on this one point. I fancied you had some thing to tell me. I luncied so but now, when I saw you re-enter the room." "Indeed, no !" exclaimed Walter with his usual fraukuess. "I wish to neaveu I hud. I wish I hud dared to say that Isabel had given me encour agement enough to make me even hope." And I could not a-k her to to love me while I felt that you knew how useless it would be." "I do not know," returned Dart his words sounding very slowly after Walter's eagerness, yet ull his self command failing to hide their uew ring of hope. "Isabel has uever heard a word of love from me. She is gentle and kind and winning always ; but 1 cannot read beyond." "To me, too, she U bright and peas ant always," put in Maitland, restless ly ; "aud 1 can discover nothing more. I fancied yoj could put me out of one phase ol this uucel taiuty." "Aud you are very glad to find I cannot;" said the elder partner. And then their eves met. with a smile which wm strangely urmful for such strong and manly faces. "Dart 1" said Mr. Mattland, "you are tho elder man, the richer the bet ter, too. You shall fpeak first. Do it a? soon as you can. "Seniority has no claim in such a case as this," said the senior partner. "We can wait." "I can wait no longer 1" put in the younger man, impatiently. "Anything will be better than this suspeuse. Why on earth should we wait ? Isabel knows us thoroughly, now. She knows we are both too old for this lovo of ours to bo anything but deeply earn est. She knows enough of us and our position to make her decision easy to her. So let us know the worst, "or best. You have the right to sneak first." "I will not tako it I" said Mr. Dart, sppaking more quickly than he had yet done. "Let us write. Let us write together." A few minutes eilance, while Walter thought this over leaning his head on the arm which rested on the chimney-piece. "Let that be decided," urged Mau rice. "We will write to-morrow. Let her receive the two letters together, that Bhe may think of us together. Froraise me your letter shall bo ready for to-morrow's post." "I promise," said Maitland, raising his head again. "Thank you for this CHAPTER III. The fire roared and crackled cheeri ly in the private room at the bank, but neither of the partners had arrived. "I never ki'ew him bo late," re marked Tom Leslie, as if finishing aloud a puzzliDg conjecture. "Who? Old Dart?" "Mr. Dart? Yes.' "Leslie feels it incumbent on him to uphold the dignity ot his partners," put in another clerk : "His breast swells proudly with a fellow-feeling." "What an-idle set you are this mor ning J" remarked Tom, turning from his desk with the quick, kindly smile, which made his face so pleasant to look upon. "As soon as I amsenior part ner I shall give you all a Bweeping dis missal." Tho listeners laughed, enjoying the absurdity of the idea ; and one or two questioned him, with mock anxiety, as to the occasion. Through all the laughter Tom pursued his work, and Dart noticed this when he entered the bank ; and though it was very curtly that he answered Tom's quiet greeting, yet before he reached the inner door he turned and spoke to him. "Cold outside, Leslie. Keep up good fires. It is hard," ho muttered to himself, "to pass hirn without a word." Then Mr. Dart let the spring door close behind him, nnd, sitting down in his office chair, leaned on one arm only as very calm men do when they are ill at eaee, ns well as tired. He was sitting so, looking moodily down into the fire, when Mr. Maitland entered the room. Tho senior partner did not turn to greet him ; and even when Walter stood upon the rug beside bim, he did not veuture to meet his eyes. "Maurice," began the younger man, "I suppose I may congratulate you. It is rather hard ; yet no one ughttodo it bo heartily as I -I who know what a good fellwv you arc, and what what a wife you have won." A glance of surprise into his friend's face, and theu Mr. Dart spoke in a few words, as was his custom. "She has refused me, Maitland." "Refused you!" Walter repeated the words, though not incredulously. Only truth, he knew could have weighed them so sad ly. "She has refused rue, too 1" he said. "She has never cared for me but as a friend simply aud only as a friend." "In a few kind words to me," said Mr. Dart, without looking up, "she told me she had given her love else where. I was trying, when you came in, to prepare myself to tell you, 'I re joice in your happiness, Maitland.' And now you you como and say t'le same to me." Buried in one long, sad thought, the partners in the good old firm sat in their silent room, while the work and the pleasure of the world went on with out. But the day's duties had to be gone through, and these were not the men to shun them selfishly. "I suppose we had better settle with Leslie about hia holiday," remarked Mr. Maitland that afternoon, sending to summon lorn to tho partners room. "He w ill lose every glimpse of summer if he waits longer." "He should not have postponed his holiday. He had bis choice. Well, Leslie! when do you wish to start?" inquired the seuior partner, when Tom entered the room. "You said about the middle of Octo ber, and this is the 20th." "Thank you, Mr. Dart! but if it would make no difference, 1 woul. rather tnko my holiday frorn the 20tb." Ono Square ' throo m Ono Hanaro " ono year - -Two N'jnarp., ono yoor - . i QufirtorOol. - ' . . z ' Half '-. . fi0 f,, One " ". - - . . loo -I.oltoI notice at rwtibltehod ratw. Marriago and death notloew, gratis. All bills for yearly advcrtmomoiiU ool loctod quarterly. Temporary advortkia'. nieiils must bo paid for in advance. Job woik, Cash on Delivery, "Then it is to bo hoped you are go ing on a visit," remarked Walter Mail laud, pleasantly ; "for November daya are not tho ploasantes-t for a tourist." "I am not going on a tour, sir." Tom hesitated only a moment ; thon both cf his listeners were conscious of anew earnestness in his voice: "'I should like to tell you, gentlemen, why I want my holiday then. The 20th is to be my wedding-day." Mr. Dart returned quietly to his' writing. Mr. Maitland arose from hia seat and moved to the fire, turning his back to Tom. Before the eyes of both the partners there hovered a face which had Jed them, too, to dream of a possi ble wedding-day dreams frorj which they had so lately been awakened. It would bo hard, with these memo ries rising thick, to talk to their favor ite clerk of his good fortune ; yet it was not in Walter Maitland's Datura to lot any selfish feeling prevent him. "Indeed, Leslie !" he said, "I am surprised ; but very glad, of course, to hear it. I prognosticate every happi ness for yur wife. Of course I cau not do bo for jou until I know who she "You know her well, gentlemen' said Tom, flushing. "Her father, Col ouel Conyngham, is my mother's cou sin. We have rarely viaitod them ex cept when they were alone, because at my mothers cottage, of course, we could not entertain their guests. Wo have always been as old friends and relatives should be ; nnd I have al ways loved Isabel. But it was necos sary for us to wait a little. Though it would be difficult for you to realizo tho fact, gentlemen, a marriage is an ex pense, and dobt " "You can go, Leslie," remarked Mr. Dart, without raising his "head. "And the holiday, sir?" "Take your holiday whon you chooe, only don't make such a fuss about it." "And is there nothing more you in tended to say to me, Mr. Maitland ?" inquired Tom. "I should say," remarked Walter, with an nngry gleam in his byes, "it is an irreparable mistake you are mak- ing, to marry on your income, uulees you had chosen a wife in your own po sition and used to such a life as your mothar's." "My mother's life was such a lfe aa Isabel's, at Isabel's age," said Toni,i and for a moment his face was really handsome in its flush of honest prile ; "and Isabel has known w hat my moth er's life is for many a year past. Would 1 marry her under any false pretenses ?" "I presume, then, that Miss Conyng ham knows tho extent of your iu como?" asked Maitland with compres sed lips : "or have you, in your foolery, been representing yourself aa a partner iu the bank ? Her eyes are apeu to tho folly ot what she is doing, eh ?" "She knows everything, sir," rejoin ed Tom, his eyes much puzzled, and a little angry, "and she does not call it folly." "You car. go." The clerk left the room, closing the door quietly behind him. "They must have been harassing let ters," he said to himself, trying to ac- count for tbe, partners' impatience. "They have a good deal f anxietv which we subordinates are spared.1' And thinking this, he took a scat and wrote away more diligently than ever, while his fellow-clerks wondered at his mood. "Leslio ought to go." Those were the words which at latt broke the stillness of the room which Tom had left. "Yes." Then tho day's work went on to e close, and the partners, separating on tho bank steps, went their several ways, each one thinking yery long ingly of one to whom both had been faithful. This was Ue first night for many months which cither bad spec without these bright, vague dreams ot' what his home might be with Isabel at in head ; and their hearts were filk.l with resentment against tho winner ni the prize which they had coveted. "You knew this morning that she wivs to marry some one else why should your thoughts be harder, cow that you know who has won her?" So a voicfi seemed arguiug with them, but below all the angry thoughts surged on. "For him to be the one to gain her he, a paid servant in the bauk 1" CHAPTER IV. When Mr. Dart reached the bat' next morning, worn and harrasscd ' ter a sleepless night, he found Maitland, contrary to his usual cc torn, had arrived bef'oro him. Thou tho two friends greeted each other i usual, a most unusual silence eet'l presently upon them both. Kventu ly the senior partner, making an e0. remarked on the coldness of the Vt ther ; aud hiscompauion, putting 0.-, a letter which he hel;l, answered 1 urely. But his pleasaut blue eyes v restless nnd rather dim, tho uio rONCIVDl'U ON fOCtmi PA'jl'
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