MIDDLEBUEG POST. WILLIAM AND MARY. : r ' mitlam fsieil on Wary Jane; Longrd to toll her that her vyea 6hon ltk nunllt drotm of rain Falling from enchanted titles. But pour William. oant of nerva, Sought In vain these thins to say; ilrrfly managed to observe: It la rather warm to-day." M-iry Jane will ne'er unect Whnt a wealth of rentiinent iTlciurlt-hlns. tlisi.ite neglect. In that trite remark was pent. JTows ns mi,dfa.-t as the pole, Thmish as timli r the May, He 1st utterlnff from his soul. When he says "It's warm to-day." Villinm trie nnJ tries nc.iln; liatlli'd In his I'liHiuenee; Weary unite Is Mary Jane Of ridiculous usieiise. But men time. Just as of yore. All his wits Krow dark atul dim. William foela that he's a bore; Mary quite ucrccs with him. Washington Star. His Lady of Dreams I ""e ; .',. .r- : 5 v.- & it Vi -.i v'i- ;V- .r 3fc By Susan Saycr Yarmouth. the name of "My Lady of th Realm of you, or saw you, that day at Dick of Dreams," and which would hae Thurston's?" , The pirl drew .back. done credit to a much more ambitious ( "I don't understand you," she poet than umy Atrne. .tn mm- sahi, a mtie naugnmy, ana then she self thought rather well of them; he smiled at his crestfallen face. felt that it in some way compensated "It can't be poKxlble!" insisted for the nasty knock on the head lAthe. "The , rrincess Constantia that the lady had been the means of Cregorius and I wan as enough to giving1 htm, nnd that he hud turned ask of what! Don't you know. Miss most perplexifig dream to very good account. It was better than taking it to the Society of Psychical Research, which he had thought of do. Vhea the butter won't come put a penny in the churn,' is an old time dairy proverb. It Cucn seems to j work though no one has ever toia v.'iiy. When mothers arc worried FURNITURE.. ... SHE rami' suddenly into his sight, dispelling his brown study and in terrupting his pipe. She stood be yond tin- table, beside the door, tall and slight, in a white gown that clung to her nrins anil shoulders and rounded waist, and swept about her feet in heavy folds. A cross swung from her neck by n long silver chain, and she wore u broad-brimmed hat with a gauzy while veil, so her face was in shallow. She leaned slightly toward Ashe ns he clutched the arms 'of his big chair and sat forward in ;aniaement. "I am the 1'rincess Constantia Cregorius," she said gently. "Of of IJussin?" he asked stupidly, trying to fan away the haze of to bacco smoke. "There are oilier lands," she said indifferently. "And not so far awny." "Great Caesar!" he breathed, be wildered, and his pipe dropped from 'his astonished fin ire rs. With the .feeling that it was the only bond be tween him and rationality, he stooped 'to pick it up, and ns he rose he struck his head sharply against the, corner of the library table. Dizzy from the blow, he staggered to his feet and looked toward the door. She was gone, as mysteriously as she lad come. He rushed blindly around .the table and across the room, stum Ibling over easy chairs and footstools, nnd sending a revolving bookcase spinning round. The hall was bril liant after the sinolcy library, and it was also empty. ' trailing gown nafl turned tip the edges of the rugs nor could he hear any hurrying steps on .iftie polished stairs, Ho blinked tit the gtin pouring red nnd purple through the pninted window for moment, and then turned back and sat down on the nearest chair. Good heavens! what a dream! Who was she? What was her motive in np. rearing and announcing herself in that royal way? And he hadn't seen her face! Well, if it was as pretty as her figure oh, confound his head! and he was still feeling of it gingerly too dazed to think of more than one thing at a time, when he heard his friends cheerful whistle in the hall. "Well, old chap," said Thurston, coming in. "I'hew! but that pipe of yotir's is a fright! If we don't air this room before the mater gets into it, your goose is cooked!" "Why, what will she do?" cried the other, uncertainly. "You'll never get another bid for Sunday," said the first, throwing open one of the windows, "(ice! I didn't realize bow rank Cissie is get ting, lletire her, Hilly, and get an other. l!ut say, what's the matter old man? I left you composing a sonnet nnd going to sleep over it. What's wrong?" Ashe looked down at his maligned pipe, and then up at his friend. "Say, do you suppose she thought it was rank?" he asked. "The mater?" said Thurston, puz zled. "She hasn't been here already, has she? If so, we'd better go back to-ni'lit. Did t-he wake you up?" "No, I just dreamed it," said the owner fpf the pipe, ami began to feel of his bump with a frown of pain. His friend looked at hitn for a mo ment curiously, and then aimed a hea'.y leather cushion from the near eft Morris chair at him. "Wake up, voti idiot!" he said. "This is no bleeping car." Hie idiot parried the cushion. "Dick, has your sister a friend visiting her?" he inquired. "No," taid the other. "Well, there was one here, any way," pursued Ashe. "On': what?" demanded Thurston. "One princess," said the other. His hoht Miruycd him In silence for a ltioi:. nt ".;,l.e, you're, crazy!" he mid at last, "('(line out and take a walk." Mr. Wiliiicrdiu Aslie was making for liiin-elf u rather neat reputation with readers of current magazines ns a v. tiler of clever little occasion al v-r.-i-s. Among l.is friends at his clu'j In: v.un considered a good fel low, :u.d they chose to nshuuii that coii.ev. 1,'Te he kept hidden away the J;:r-.ri ho wrote, his verses for Lini. His mother's friend approved cf lii'ii beca'iM: he paid his calls, end he v.a:i chiefly famous rith the you r;g !adi" of hi rather general tic'p.i.iit.-iiice, as a mauler f arts of We!i!i rarebitry oud badinage. Hut no oir; win prepared for tie almost orici.tal beauty of his latent vemes, wLi'h appeared in one of the best fit ti.C month'. periodicals under Gregory didn't you realize that you are my 'Lady of Dreams ? "I? said Miss Gregory "I your J.ndy of oh, Mr. Ashe! Remember ing in the vividness of his first Im- ihat I'm not a resident not to the pression. but six months without manor born, ns it were. I'm just a any further developments, waking or i country cousin from Binghamton. sleeping, had dulled bis keen con- Do you think its nice to make f mi fiction of Its psychic value. Mean-, of me? Constantia Gregorius, in- j (J0C3USC the children GO not while a comfortable cheek from the ! deed!" She laughed out, a merrv i . . , . magazine had seemed to take the , little laugh. g--1 Strength and flesh e thing out of the province of psychic! "'She comes from a land nor near g-j,f rrjyc thcill ScottS ERlul rescarch. nor far,'" said Ashe, guilty f ; . ' Ashe was a 'modest man, but not j the banality of quoting his own ; i ion. too much to find a little lionizing j verses. Miss. Gregory surveyed him! t i-i .1 ,1(lnnv tL quite to his taste, nnd he went to I with amusement. 11 13 ul I'-llIly " C afternoon teas nnd cotillions with a "This is too fine a frenzy for me," . milk because it WOl'liS and feeling that to-morrow would be ; she announced. "Aren't you hungry, 1 , .1 rmo,i; someone else's day. and he must' Mr. Ashe? Shan't we go and hae bOCaUSC there IS Something gather his roses wiiile he might. So 1 loniething to eat?" Ashe followed astonishing about it. he entered Mrs. Foster's long draw- her mechanically. , ' C tf' F" 1 " ' ' 1 lug-room prepared to smile as he lis- J "Don't you sometimes wear i JCOltS lniUlSlOIl IS Simply tened to his verses misquoted by cross on that chain," he asked. mU nf nnrY rrfl ;,.- n:i 41.. 1... ....4 .. 1 .....l 41,.,, I "K.itii.itiitinc " fell. iiiiuwrc(t with. I fene attitude of mind while he shook 1 lifted eyebrows. I Wltll hands with Mrs. Foster, nnd not one Tlnirstrinn1 last Kenteiiiher? he nur- I stomachs. "Ves, I was in Morristown but QhMren to U naturaUy only occasionally at the lhurstons, , she' returned. because " thev like the taste If yon are iu ned of Furniture, Carpet , Mattings, Rugs, Oilcloth, Linoleum, w Curtains, Wiuttuw SltaJ, Pit'turt'x, ami Tl? 1. ' IV tl le i iciu re i ra nits, give us a can. He suit ynu in can some hypophosphites minute longer. For beyond Mrs, Foster, nnd standing just outside the ring of light from 11 tall lamp, was the lady of his dreams, with her white gown that clung to her shoulders and rounded waist, and ilared with heavy folds nt her feet. This time she wore a fan on the long silver chain around her neck, and she had 110 hat nor veil, so Ashe could see that she was regarding him with the frankest interest from a pair of most attractive brown eyes. He flushed with surprise, and his remarks to Mrs. Foster died on his lips. She was not n dream, then, his princess! A sudden recollection of the check from the "Hundred Years" made him warm, and as a corollary came the realization of his narrow escape from the Society of l'sychic l!e scarch good heavens! Meanwhile Mrs. Foster was saying graciously, "So good of you to come, Mr. Ashe, and not forget your old friends, now you are such a celebrity. And to reward you, I am going to in troduce you to a very tlear young friend of mine. Miss Gregory, who ad mires your poems so much." And Ashe found himself before his prin cess, while Mrs. Foster went on fluently, "Constance, my dear, this is Mr, Ashe," and turned to greet an other guest. All remnants of his self-possession vanished nt tlm sound of the names, and interrupt ing Miss Gregory's polite expres sions of delight at making his ac quaintance, Ashe risked abruptly: "Are you a princess?" She opened her brown eyes wider and looked at him in surprise, - "Do do you believe in telepathy nnd astral bodies?" he went on after a moment's pause. "Or are you only a dream?" "Dear me!" ald the girl. "Mrs. Foster said you were so nice, and not stajfling that no one would know that you were a poet or any thing else awe-inspiring, and here you have called mo three alarming names in as many minutes. Is tl)is poetic license. Mr. Ashe?'" "Did you really mind Cissy I.oftus?" lie asueil anxiously. lou see she s my favorite pipe, but she's rather old, and I'm afraid she's a little' too strong to he pleasant to strangers. Hut 1 didn't expect you, you know, when you came In so suddenly." The girl's face was gravely puz zled, but her eyes looked amused. "I'm afraid Mrs. Foster has a mis taken idea of you," she said with a shake of her head. "Where do you live?" Inquired Ashe. "When you are not in dreams, you know when you are not in Thurston's library." "Well," said Miss Gregory. "I'm re lieved. I am glad to find that I can at last take an Intelligent in terest in the conversation. The Thurston's library isn't it a fasci nating place?" "You wern't in it long enough to find out," objected Ashe. "And do you think it was quite kind of yon to make me bump my head?" "Long enough! I've spent hours in Thurstons' library," said the girl in mock indignation. "And I never made you bump your head." "Well, perhaps not consciously," "Werent you in Morristown at the ocr,0:0H,, r, Jj;..fa "Then you did walk into the library , rcmff1v one Sunday afternoon nnd tell me,ana lnC remedy lakCS JUSt as you were the 1'rincess Constantia' naturally tO the children bc Gregorius," he said, positively. ... .1 1 . 1 "Mr. Ashe!" she said, reprovingly. ! CaUSC it IS SO perfectly adapted "Have you n twin sister?" asked Jq their Wants. Ashe, desperately. I TT 11 1 11 1 "I am all the daughters of my( 'or ail Weak and pale and father's house," she said lightly, but t'nn children Scott's Emulsion her eves were dancing ns she gave . ,. , him his chocolate. I is the most satisfactory treat- "Don't you remember the painful mcnt, taking ott or Supphiru. he inquired, sternly. Miss Gregory counted on her fin gers. "A princess, Constantia Gregorius, an astral body let 111c see! a dream, and now a liar!" she aid. "Oh, fie, Mr. Ashe!" ,"I have $30 that belongs to you,'' said Ashe, irrelevantly. t "I beg your pardon?" said the girl, blaikly. "15y rights," asservated Ashe, with a nod. "Half of what I got for that poem, you know. I calculate that my thought and labor are good fot half, but you furnished the idea, you see." Miss Gregory sat down on the nearest chair and laughed aloud. Ashe sipped his chocolate meditatively nnd watched her. "For n poet," she said nt last, "you are most unexpectedly practical." "When I've offered to share my in come with a comparative stranger a chimerical, elusive dream-lady nt that?" he asked, raising his eye brows. "I'm not sure about chimeras, but I think they were monsters of some kind," said the girl. "And your in come is too small to be alluring, Mr. Ashe. If you don't wish any more of that chocolate, won't you have something cold? Xo. Well, then come back to Mrs. Foster. Fin afraid you'll be borrowing money of me next, to say nothing of the way in which you are straining your poetic fancy to find flattering names for me." She took his cup and turned away. Iteforb he could follow he was seized upon nnd carried off in triumph by some fair admirers, nnd a quick glance buck showed him that a fortunate elderly gentleman had taken possession of her, so he re signed himself to the inevitable, and did not see her again until just as he was leaving. lie had looked for her to say good-by, but in vain, nnd Mrs. Foster did not know where she had hidden herself, so he was starting off, disappointed, but resolved not to let the thing drop, when her voice stopped him with his hand on the door. "An revoir, Mr. Ashe," she said, leaning toward him from the lowest step of the stairway. "An revoir." "Thank you," he responded, heartily. "And very soon, most fair lady of the realm of my dreams." "That Is really a loving thing, Mr. Ashe," she said, "and I am very proud to think that you think thut ? I had any part in it." "But didn't you?" he demanded. Do I believe in telepathy?" she 1 n We will send you the penny, . e., a sample free. Be sure tint tlm picture In the form of a label it un the wrapper of every bottle ot KuiuUion ynu buy. SCOTT BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c end f 1. 00; all druggists. Style and in Prices.......' 18 Our stock is new and up-to-date. It no trouble to bIiow goods and quote prices. REPAIRING neatly and promptly done. Lewistown Furniture Co,, ru. 41 Yuuey at. rciix uiod' SPECIAL NOTICE. IMPORTANT!! SOW SHE KJOVYS WHY. llave you heard of the New Dry (Goi-ds and Notion StJ Sunbury. , , We wish to inform you that we have opened a first class i with an entire new line of BARGAINS to beat anything you j ever heard of in Sunbury. We cordially invite you all to to town and look through our large Dry Goods Stock, will be glad to show you around whether you buy or not. Here are a few of the many bargains we are offering : 1000 yds. muslin to go at. 3c yd. 1000 yds. muslin to go at 5e yd. Ginghams special value 5c yd. Calico 5c yd. Double bed blankets 49c to $8.00. Elegant line of Men's Children's aud Ladies' Hose 10 and 12c. The best aud heaviest Ladies' ribbed underwear in town for 2i Linens and comfortables at prices. Dress Goods. If you want a a good black or colored See our large stock bed buy elsewhere, from lft 83.50 a vard. COATS AND CAPES. If you want to save big money this Fall ou Coats, Capes ui sre our stock. Come in and be convinced. No trouble to shot H, F. CLEMMER, 44b MARKET ST.. ." " -7 gUNKC Three doors eaFt of the Market House, tf ft Dolly Dense, Miss Pharp, iiiamnm eays, 'have you really left your songs nt home? Miss Sharp Ves, denr. Why? Dolly Well, jinpa nays "it Roumla too good to be true!" I'lun-h. She Couldn't Stand That. All pnlltd In her shroud she lay; A woman nully nild: "How wretchedly her robe lg made" The lndy In the coffin laldi Woke rltfht up trom the dead. Chicago Record-Herald. admitted Ashe, "but It was under f nskerf, mockingly. "Am I an nstral your spell." Miss (irepnry looked nt him with a imile lieiiinin to show at the corners of her mouth. "You are certainly cnHtin a spell over me," she said. "Really, Mr. Ashe, I don't know what you mean I'm sure I never had anything to do with your bumping your head, but I'm not sure that it wouldn't do it good." "Cruel:" mid Ashe. "Well, sinee you won't admit it, let's begin again. I am very glad to meet you, Mis Gregory. Mrs. Foster Is too good to me. Do you know your faee is very f.'iiniiiiir haven't I met you before?" "Mrs. Foster hns been kind to me, too," returned Miss Orcgory pret tily. "No, Mf. Ashe, I'm sure that I should not have forgotten it if wo hail met before. My lome is not in New York, and I'm not here very much. liut I have heard of you often, from Mrs. Foster, and the Thurstons in Moriistou ti, and, of course, I have read your verses." "How time must clamor at your doors to be killed!" said Ashe. "Ah, now you are unkind to your little brain-children!" reproached the girl. "You hi've been hiillieiently over kind to even up accounts in mention ing them at all," returned Ashe. "There, you see J can do the proper; now, for heaven'' ake, Mil Gregory , tell 1110 if I dreamed body, or a bud dream?" lie shook his high hat threateningly nt her. "The truth is not In you, Mad emoiselle Snpphira," he announced. "Hear the lion growl!" she retort ed, with a saucy nod. and turned to go upstairs. He took a step toward her. "Miss Cregory!" 'he said, implor ingly. "Seriously, now?" she looked at him oer her shoulder with danc ing eyes. 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