a i Oje Younger Set SYNOPSIS OK PKECEDINf) CHAPTERS" Chap. l-Rctumlns from Mnnlla. Captain Selwyn. foimcrly of the army. Is welcomed home by his sister. Nina Gerard, her wealthy husband Austin, and their numerous child ren. Klleen Krroll. ward of Nina and Austin, is part of their household. Sclwin has been divorced, without euilt on hi? part, by his wife. Alixe. who Is now the wife of Jack Huthveu, with whom she run away from Selwyn. II Klleen, who Is very fond or her brother, Cicrald. despite the young man's neglect of her. makes friends with Selwyn III-Geraldls worried about young hrroll's mingling In the fast set (Jcrald Is employ iil by Julius Necrgard. a reale state operator m a large way. Selwyn promises Eileen he will look after her brother. He tells her about Hoots Lansing, bis army chum In Manila, who is coming to New York. In the park Eileen and Selwyn ride past Alixe. 1 Eileen's deceased father was un archaeol ogist, and she has inherited some of bis scholarly qualities. Selwyn helps Herald to settle a gambling debt and determines to undertake his reformation. V Alixe and Selwyn meet and discuss their altered rela tions. He is Introduced to Mrs. Rosamund Fane, leader of the fast set and Alixe's clos est friend He appeals toAllxc to help hint keep Gerald from gambling. VI The friend ship of Eileen and Selwyn progresses. VII Gerald promises Selwyn be will stop gambl ing. Neereard discloses to Selwyn. who Is Interested In his ottlce. a plan to control the Slowltha Country club by buying up farms essential to the club's existence. The plan docs not appeal to Selwyn, and be consults Austin, who denounces Neereard and his methods. VII-At night In his room Selwyn answers a knock at his door. IX The caller Is Alixe.. who Is very unhappy with Rutbren and wants to talk with Selwpn. hor a mo ment their old lore Hashes up, but at the mention of Eileen be knows that it Is past resurrection. X Rosamund distresses Ei leen by telling her society Is gossiping about Alixe and Selwyn. Alixe gets from Gerald, who has again lost heavily, a promise not to play again at her house. XI Alixe and Kuthven quarrel over the gaming by which be lives, and he reveals his knowledge of her visit at night to her cx-husband's room. XII Gerald's Increasing Intimacy with Necr gard displeases Selwyn, who breaks with the real estate man over the Slowltha matter. Keegard Is trying to break into society. XIII Lansing Invites Selwyn to make his home with him in the modest bouse he has bought. Selwyn declares be will no longer let the past mar his chance of happiness, and Nina declares bcr belief that Klleen has fallen In love with him, Nina fears that Alixe, restless and disgusted with Ruthven, will make mischief. Selwyn is experimenting with chaositc. his discovery Is explosive. XIV Eifeen asks Selwyn to remove Gerald from Neergard's Influence. XV Through Ruthven and the Fanes, Neereard forces himself a little way into society and tries to compel the Siowitha to elect him, Gerald loses more and more at cards, sinking Eileen money as well as his own. Trying to save him. Selwyn quarrels with him and then ap peals In vain to Necrgard, Rosamund and Ruthven. He almost kills Ruthven, whose heart is weak, when the latter hints at a pos sible divorce suit, with Selwynascorrespond ent. kINA had rtm up to town for a day from Silver side and had telephoned Selwyn to take her some where for luncheon. She urged him to return -with her, Insisting that a week end at Sllrerslde was what he seeded to avert physical dlslntegra Hon. "What la there to keep you in town?" she demanded. "The children have been clamoring for you day and night, and Eileen has been expecting a let fcr. You promised ' to write her, iPhll." "I'm going to write to her," he said "impatiently. "Walt a moment, Nina. Don't speak of anything pleasant or er Intimate just now, because because Tve got to bring up another matter something not very pleasant to me or to you. It is about Alixe. You knew her in school years ago. You have al ways known her." "Yes." "You did you ever visit her stay at the Varlans' house?" "Yes." "In iu her own home in Westches ter?" "Yes." There was a silence. His eyes shifted to Ills plate; remained fixed as ho said: "Then you knew her father?" "Yes, Phil," she said quietly, "I knew Mr. Varian." "Was there anything anything un usualabout him in those days?" "Have you heard that for the first time?" nsked his sister. Ho looked up. "Yes. What was it, Nina?" She became busy with her plate for awhile. He sat rigid, patient, one band resting on his claret glass. And pres ently she said without meeting his eyes: "It was even farther back her grand parentsone of them" She lifted her head slowly. "That Is why It so deeply concerned us, Phil, when we heard of your marriage." "What concerned you?" "The chance of Inheritance the risk of the taint of transmitting It. Her father's erratic brilliancy became more than eccentricity before I knew him. I would have told you that had I dreamed that you ever could hare thought of marrying Alixe Varian. But bow could I know you would meet her out there In the orient? It was your cabio to us was like a thunder bolt And when she she left you se suddenly Phil, dear I feared the true reason the only possible reason that could be responsible for such an Insane act." "What was the truth about her fa ther?" be said doggedly. "He was ec centric. Was be ever worse than that?" "The truth was that he became men tally lrreapoMlblo before his death." ' "You knew tator "Alixe told me when we were'echoob girts. And for days she was haunted with the fear of what might ose day 'It her Inheritance. That Is all I knew, Phil." 1 1 ,h Ckctptei 16 ' AS mr m By ROBERT W. CHAMBERS, Author of "THE FIOHTINO CHANCE," Etc Copyrighted, 1907, by Robert W. Chambers. He nodded and for awhile mado some pretense of eating, but presently lean ed back and looked at his sister out of dazed eyes. "Do you suppose," he said heavily, "that' she was not entirely responsible when when she went away?" "I have wondered," said Nina simply. "Austin believes It" "I can't believe It" ho Bald, staring at vacancy. "I refuse to." And, think ing of her last frightened and excited letter imploring an Interview with him and giving the startling reason, "What a scoundrel that fellow Ruthven Is," he said, with a shudder. That night he wrote to Alixe: If Ruthven threatens you with divorce on such a ground he himself Is likely to be adjudged mentally unsound. It was a brutal, stupid threat, nothing more, and his Insult to your father's memory waa more brutal still. Don't bo stampeded by such threats. Disprove them by your calm self control under provocation. Dis prove them by your discretion and aelf confidence. Give nobody a single possi ble reason for gossip. And, above all, Alixe, don't become worried and morbid over anything you might dread as In herltance, for you are as sound today as you were when I first met you. and yon hall not doubt that you could ever be anything else. Be the woman you can be. Show the pluok and courage to make the very best out of life. I have slowly learned to attempt it, and It Is not diffi cult If yov convince yourself that It can be done. To this she answered the next day: I will do my best There is danger, treachery, everywhere, and if It becomes unendurable I shall put an end to it In one way or another. As for his threat Incident on my admitting that I did go to your room and defying him to dare be lieve evil of me for doing It I can laugh at It now, though when I wrote you I waa terrified, remembering how mentally broken my father was when he died. But as you say, I am sound, body and mind. I know It. I don't doubt It for one moment except, at long Intervals, when, apropos of nothing, a faint sensation of dread comes creeping. But I am sound! I know it so absolute ly that I sometimes wonder at my own perfect sanity and understanding, and so clearly, so faultlessly, so precisely does my mind work that and this I never told you I am often and often able to detect mental inadequacy In many people around me, the slightest deviation from the nor mal, the least degreo of mental Instabil ity. And It would amaze you, too. If I should toll you how many, many people you know are In some degree more or loss Insane. He's only serenely disagreeable to me now, and we see almost nothing of one another except over the card tables. Ger ald has been winning rather heavily, I am glad to say glad as long as I cannot prevent him from playing. And yet I may be able to accomplish that yet In a roundabout way, because the apple vis aged and hawk beaked Mr. Necrgard has apparently become my slavish creature quite Infatuated. And as soon as I've fastened on his collar and made sure that Rosamund can't unhook It I'll try to make him shut down on Gerald's play ing. This for your sake, Phil because you ask me and because you must al ways stand for all that Is upright and good and manly in my eyes. Ah, Phil, what a fool I was! And all, all my own fault too' ALIXE. This ended the sudden eruption of correspondence, for lie did not reply to this letter, though iu it lie read enough to make him gravely uneasy, and ha fell once more into the habit of brood ing, from which both Boots Lansing and Eileen had almost weaned him. Also he began to take long, solitary walks in the park when not occupied In conferences with the representatives of the Lawn Nitro Fowder works, a company which had recently approach ed him In behalf of bis unperfected ex plosive, chaosite. Lying back there in his desk chair one evening, Selwyn suddenly remem bered that Gerald had come in. They had scarcely seen one another since that unhapy meeting in the Stuyvc sant club, and now, remembering what he had written to Eileen, he emerged with a start from his contented dream ing, sobered by the prospect of seeking Gerald. For a moment or two he hesitated, but he had said In his letter that he was going to do it, and now he rose, looked around for his pipe, found It, filled and lighted it and, throwing on his dressing gown, went out Into the corridor, tying the tasseled cords around his waist as he walked. His first knock remaining unanswer ed, ho knocked more sharply. Then he heard from within the muffled creak of n bed, heavy steps across the floor. The door opened with a jerk. Gerald Gerald tat on tfte edge of the bed. stood there, eyes swollen, hair In dis order and collar crushed and the white evening tie unknotted and dangling over his soiled short front "Hello," said Selwyn simply. "May I come In?" The' boy passed bis hand across his eyes as though confused by the Hft-ht. Then he tamed and walked back toward the bed, stJU rabbtes Us CEfijsd sat down oa tba Belwyn closed the door and seate himself, apparently not noticing Get aid's dlshevclmcnt "Thought I'd drop in for a good nighi pipe," he said quietly. "Byithe way, Gerald, I'm going down to Sllrerslde next week. Nina has asked Boots too. Couldnt you fix It to com- along with r "I don't know," said the boy la a low voice. "I'd like to." "Good business! That will be fine! What you and I need is a good still tramp across the moors or a gallop If you like. It's great for mental cob webs, and my brain is disgracefully unswept By the way, somebody said' that you'd Joined the Siowitha club." "Yes," said the boy listlessly. "Well, you'll get some lively trout fishing there now. It's only thirty miles from Silverslde, you know. You can run over in the motor very easily." Gerald nodded, sitting silent, his handsome head supported In both bands, his eyes on the floor. That something was very wrong with him appeared plainly enough, but Selwyn, touched to the heart and mis erably apprehensive, dared not ques tion him unasked. And so they sat there for awhile, Selwyn making what conversation he could, and at length Gerald turned and dragged himself across the bed, drop ping bis head back on tho disordered pillows. "Go on," bo said; "I'm listening." So Selwyn continued his pleasant. Inconsequential observations, and Ger ald lay with closed eyes quite motion less until, watching him, Selwyn saw his hand was trembling where it lay clinched beside him. And 'presently the boy turned bis face to tho wall. Toward midnight Selwyn rose quiet ly, removed his unllghted pipe from between his teeth, knocked the ashes from It and pocketed it Then he walked to the bed and seated himself on the edge. "What's the trouble, old man?" he asked coolly. There was no answer. He placed his hand over Gerald's. The boy's hand lay inert, then quivered and closed on Selwyn's convulsively. "That's right" said the elder man; "that's what I'm here for to stand by when you hoist signals. Go on." The boy shook his head and burled it deeper in the pillow. "Bad as that?" commented Selwyn quietly. "Well, what of It? I'm stand ing by, I tell you. That's right" as Gerald broke down, his body quivering under the spasm of soundless grief "that" s the safety valve working. Good business. Take your time." It took a long- time, and Selwyn sat 1 sncnt ana motionless, his whole arm numb from its position and Gerald's crushing grasp. And at last, seeing that was the moment to speak, he said: "Now let's fix up this matter, Gerald. Come on!" "Good heavens! H-how can It be f-ilxed?" "I'll tell you when you tell me. Ifs a money difficulty, I suppose, isn't It?" "Yes." "Cards?" "P-partly." "Oh, a note? Case of honor? Where Is this I. O. TJ. that you gave?" "It's worse than that. The the note is paid. Good God I can't tell your "You must. That's why I'm here, Gerald." "Well, then, I I drew a check ' knowing that I had no funds, they return it marked" If it-if "I see. What are the figures?" The boy stammered them out. Sel wyn's grave face grew graver still. "That la bad," he said slowly, "very bad. Have you but of course you couldn't have seen Austin." "I'd kill myself first!" said Gerald fiercely. "No, you wouldn't do that. You're not that kind. Keep perfectly cool, Gerald, because it is going to be fixed, The method only remains to be de- ' elded upon." "I can't take your money!" stammer- I ed the boy. "I can't take a cent from you after what I've said tho beastly things I've 6aid." "It isn't the things you sa to me, t Gerald, that matter. Let mo think a bit, and don't worry. Just He quietly i and understand that I'll do tho worry- j lng. And while I'm amusing myself with a little quiet reflection as to ways I and means just take your own bearings . from this reef and set a true course ! once more, Gerald. That is all the re- ' proach, all the criticism, you arc going J to get from me. Deal with yourself and your God in silence." I And in silence and heavy dismay , Selwyn confronted the sacrifice he must make to save the honor of the : house of Erroll. It meant more than temporary incon- ' venlence to himself. It meant that he must go into the market and sell se curities which were partly his capital and from which came the modest in come that enabled bim to live as be did. There was no other way unless be went to Austin. But be dared not do that dared not think what Austin's action in the matter might be. And bo knew that If Gerald were ever driven into hopeless exile, with Austin's knowledgo of his disgrace rankling, tho boy's utter ruin must result Inevita bly. Yet yet how could he afford to do this unoccupied, earning nothing, be reft of bis profession, with only the chance In view that his chaosite might turn out stable enough to be market able? How could be dare so strip him self? Yet there was no other way. It had to be done, and done at once the very first thing In the morning, before It became too late. And at first, In the bitter resentment of the necessity, his Impulse was to tarn on Gerald and bind bi to food conduct by every pledge the boy cottld give. At least thsre would be compen sation. Tet with the theafht earn the clear" conviction of Its futility. The boy had brushed too close to dishonor not to recognize it And If this wero not a lifelong lesson to him no prom ises forced from him In his dire need and distress, no oaths, no pledges, could bind him. No blame, no admoni tion, no scorn, no contempt no re proach, could help him to see more clearly the pit of destruction than ho could seo now. "You need sleep, Gerald," he said quietly. "Don't worry. I'll see that your check Is not dishonored. All you have to see to Is yourself. Good night my boy." But Gerald could not speak, and so Selwyn left him and walked slowly back to his own room, where he seat ed himself at bis desk, grave, absent eyed, his unfilled pipe between his teeth. And he sat there nntll he had bitten clean through the amber mouthpiece, so that the brier bowl fell clattering to the floor. By that time it was full daylight, but Gerald was still asleep. He slept late into the afternoon, but that evening, when Selwyn and Lan sing came In to persuade him to go with them to Silverslde, Gerald was gone. They waited another day for him. He did not appear. And that night they left for Silverslde without him. Chapter 17cj URING that week end nt Silverslde Boots behaved like a school lad run wild. With Drina's hand In his, the other children and half a dozen dogs as ad vanced guard and heavily flanked by the Gerard battalion, he scoured the moorlands from Surf point to the Hith er woods, from Wonder head to Sky pond. Nina, Eileen and Selwyn formed a lagging and leisurely rear guard, though always within signaling dis tance of Boots and the main body, and when necessary the two ex-army men wigwagged to each other across tho uplands to the endless excitement and gratification of the children. Eileen and Selwyn were standing on one of the treeless hills, a riotous tan gle of grasses and wild flowers, look ing out to sea across Sky pond. He had a rod, and as he stood he, idly switched tho gayly colored files back ward and forward. Standing there, fairly swimming iu the delicious upper air currents, she looked blissfully across the roll ing moors. "After all," she said, "what more Is there than this earth and sea and sky and, sun and a friend to show them to? Because, as 1 wrote you, the friend is quite I necessary in the scheme of things to round out the symmetry of it all. I suppose ' you're dying to I dangle those files I Looked blissfully across the rolling moors. In Brier Water to see whether there are any-trout there. Well, thore nre. Austin stocked It years ago, and be ' never fishes, so no doubt it's full of j fish." ' The Brier Water, a cold, deep, lei surely stream, deserved Its name. If anybody ever haunted it with hostile designs upon Its fishy denizens, Austin at least never did. Belted kingfisher, heron, mink and perhaps a furtive small boy with pole and sinker and barnyard worm these wero the only foes the trout might dread. As for a man and a fly rod,' they knew him not, nor was there much chance for cast ing a line, because the water every where flowed under weeds, arched thickets of brier and grass and leafy branches crisscrossed above. "This place is impossible," said Sel wyn scornfully, about to let it all wild" wuai is Austin grow up and run He reeled in his line until only six inches of the gossamer leader remained free. From this dangled a single sli ver bodied fly, "glittering In the wind. "There's a likely pool bidden under those briers," ho said. "I'm going to poke the top of my rod under this way Hah!" as a heavy splash i sounded from depths unseen and the I reel screamed as he struck. Up and down, under banks and over shallows, rushed the invisible fish, and Selwyn could do nothing for awhile but let him go when he Insisted and check and recover when the fish per mitted. Eileen, a spray of green mint be tween her vivid lips, watched tho per formance with growing interest, but when nt length a big, fat, struggling speckled trout was cautiously but suc cessfully lifted out Into the grass she turned her back until the gallant fight er had departed this life under a mer ciful whack from a stick. "That," she said faintly, "is the part I don't care for. Is he out of all pain? What? Didn't feel any? Oh, are you quite sure?" She walked over to him and looked down at the beautiful victim of craft "Oh, well," she sighed, "you are very clever, of course, and I suppose I'll eat htm, but I wish he were alive again down there In those cool, sweet depths r "Killing frogs and tawects and his smaller brother fishY" "Did he do thatr "No doubt of It Aad It I hsda't landed him a herea er a Mlak would have m It seeaer t later, tttatt 7 W what a trout Is Tor to kill and be killed." Sho smiled, then sighed. The taking f life and the giving of It were mys teries to her. Sho had never wittingly killed anything. "Do you say that It doesn't hurt the trout?" she asked. "There are no nerves In the Jaw muscles of a trout Hah!" as bis rod twitched and swerved under water and 'bis reel sang again. And agata she watched the perform ance and once more turned her back. "Let me try," sho said when tho coup de grace had been administered to a lusty, brilliant tinted bull trout And, rod in hand, she bent breathless and Intent over tbe bushes, cautiously thrusting tho tip through a thicket of mint She lost two fish, then hooked a third, a small one, but when she lifted It gasping Into the sunlight she shiv ered and called to Selwyn: "Unhook it and throw It back! I I simply can't stand that!" Splash! went the astonished trout, and sho sighed her relief, i "There's no doubt about It," sho said, "you and I certainly do belong to dif ferent species of the same genus. Men and women are separate species. Do you deny it?" "I should hate to loso you that way," be returned teasingly. "Well, you can't avoid It I gladly ad mit that woman is not too closely re lated to man. We don't like to kill things. It's an Ingrained distaste, not merely a matter of ethical philosophy. Yon like to kill, and Ifs a trait common also to children and other predatory animals, which fact," she added airily, "convinces me of woman's higher civ ilization." "It would convince me, too," he said, "If woman didn't eat the things that man kills for her." "I know. Isn't it horrid? Oh, dear, we're neither of us very high In the scale yet particularly you." "Well, I've advanced some since the good old days when a man went woo ing with a club," he suggested. . "You may have. But anyway, you don't go wooing. As for man collec tively, be has not progressed so very Aft ti iAA mA Jamnmilv "la on AW. " omnia vhnf 1rnrifiil nnvmnrw man nr. tnally hurt my wrist" Krt-mrm llr1 n nnlnVlv . Rhartn of a i . M M vision of the fat sybarite before his eyes. He turned again to his fishing, but his shrug was more of a shudder than nppeared to be complimentary to Fercy Draymore. She had divined somehow that It an- .a.a Cnlwvn Ifntm that mnn rl . ' - i, sT uZm hh, f importuned her. She had told him of her experience as innocently as she had told Nina, and with even less em barrassment. But that had been long ago, and now, without any specific rea- ' son, she was not certain that sho had acted wisely, although it always amused her to see Selwyn's undisguised Impatience whenever mention was ' made of such incidents. So, to torment him, she said, "Of course it Is somewhat exciting to be asked to marry people rather agree able than otherwise." "What."' Waist deep In bay bushes he turned toward her where she sat on the trunk of an oak which had fallen across tho stream. Her arms balanced her body; her ankles were interlocked. Sho swung her slim, russet shod feet above the brook and looked at him with a touch of coquetry new to her and to him. "Of course it's amusing to be told , you are the only woman in the world," , she said, "particularly when a girl has a secret fear that men don't consider her quite grown up." "You once said," he began impatient ly, "that the idiotic importunities of . those men annoyed you." I "Why do you call them idiotic?" with pretense of hurt surprise. "A girl is ' honored" I "Oh, bosh!" "Captain Selwyu!" "I beg your pardon," be said sulkily and fumbled with his reel. Sho surveyed him, head a trifle on one side, the very incarnation of youth ful malice in process of satisfying r. desire for tormenting. "When I pretended I was annoyed by what men said to me I was only a yearling," she observed. "Now I'm a i lie reeled in his line. nf. qi, wi,n .n., tell what may happen iu my second ! mr IJ- cui. VUIIIW.U fxjvs II j us v "You said that vou were not the the marrying sort," he Insisted, "Nonsense. All girls are. There are men," she said dreamily, "who might hope for a kinder reception next win ter." "Oh, no," ho said coolly, "there are no such gentlemen. If there were you wouldn't say so." "Yes, I would. And there are!" "How many?" Jeerlngly and now quite reassured. "One!" "You can't frighten me," with a shade less confidence. "You wouldn't tell If there was." "rd tell yon." "Me?" with a sadden slump In bis remaining stock of reassurance. "Certainly. I tell you and Nina things of that sort. And when X have Mly decided to marry I shall, of coarse, ten rev both before X tafera ether people." How the blood la her yoang vems waa raetas aad stealag wtth tasghter! ew tfcwwahty wm MJwtN. something to which she could give aelther reason nor name I But how satisfying It all was whatever It wa that amused her In this man's uncer tainty and in the faint traces of an Ir ritation as unreasoning as the source fit! "Really, Captain Selwyn," she said, "you are not one of those old fashion ed literary landmarks who objects through several chapters to a girl' marrying, are you?" "Yes," he said, "I am." "You are quito serious?" I i "Quite." "You won't let me?" "No; I won't" "Why?" "I want you myself," he said, smD lng at last "That Is flattering, but horridly self. Ish. In other words, you won't marry mo and you won't let anybody els do It" Glancing around at her, he caught her eyes, bright with mischief. "You're capable of anything today," he said. "Were you considering the $b&i DrUia. flilvleiTi HUv Af irfaW n AVAfkA.iwII i - """ v?w..ti AnJ. h.e. nod,dod toward tto ter nCath theIr feCt- I ua w uu DU T 1.1441 1. UU V IJll a. IT: wyn. "I mean it, too," he returned. ever?" I "Me," ne suggested, "if you're I ntzL . ; - oughly demoralized to marry you?" 1 (1UI1 L HUI1IIUSR KUU (1 ll 1L 1L HU wasn't," he admitted, laughing. side. concluded. Mnfinr imin inn winter lit ihmihtcl i "will you have me?" mend you except your fatal beauty?" rnnciiinrnn vnrv iirpi 11 ni'ii in iiit- tally perplexed." "It's clipped too close. I have tol vrii nrniin nnn nfmin rnnr linn L it:i for it clipped like that. Your min would be a perfect blank if yo couldn't get hold of it." "I'vo only to shave It." clear laughter thrilled the silence. laughed, too, and sat with elbows o er to and fro in the pool below. "So you won't have me?" he said. "Yon hnven't nsked. mc nave vou "Well, I do now." on Hps and eyes. Nina?" she said. She laughed to herFolf, clasped h bent her eyes on the pool below. "Marriage." she said, pursuing h kipv ill n:irimniSK- I iikr fiiir iim?iin in each other, for example. It h from the beginning been perfectly fr from silliness and sentiment" to be safe." "vmi nrn linn" slio roTnrrpfl. "W a ridiculous thing to say!" ly unsafe, but yet you've managed I escape. Is that it?" I men! I've heard that often enough 1 be convinced. Why, even I can " j i I acacia mem- -sne turned 1 look at him "the way your head a 1 cnmilrlrvna ontn nrl tt-oi1 ftoi-AQ(' I ' . sentiment, don't you think so? ' where many meet to worship at ecu is quo to my mustachios. Tang hearts complain in sighs In fact, situation vies with moments In do." Her running comment was her lau ter, ringing delldously amid the ventured a long, sweet response the tangled green above them. nwpnnn ierc innni niinnr rm aw Jkue n.H irnu Mini wiu MUK. uiuu an til In his melody she found tbe to her dreamy thoughts. "Because," she said, "you are so eMscMsa of year own valae I yoB bssh. i ibibk. i Bever ueterv realised Juct what it was la yea." temakeK." . ittaiUHtsa on pan 7.