The evening world. Newspaper, June 28, 1895, Page 5

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BTSFSS MAES o tbaast SEFestt aE TOTS’ DAY ATSYLVAN, Te-Morrow the Babies Have An- other Outing. Fresh Air, Muste and Refreshments for All. Mr. Orandall Has Donated a Dosen Hobby Horses, Seesesssee Harry Calteway, Newark, i. 3 ‘The sich bedtes will have their fifth @uting on the water and in the groves ef the shore to-morrow. will be made at 8 in the merning frem the pier at the foot of West ‘The The day will be spent at Sylvan Beach, delightful, shady green spot on jeresy shore of the Kill Von Kull, othe Dig-hearted owner, Thomas Bawyer, lets the sick babies, their others and their little brothers and sisters “own the place.” There are a @onen big box swings free; good bathing in water about as deep as a bath-tub for wee littl bathers, rowboats, and comfortable settees under the broad horse chestnut trees for the mothers. ‘Thaddeus A. Judson, the bang-up res- 16 and 18 Third the Bick Babtes, will set out a lunch fit for a Fifth avenue table—three or four kinds of sandwiches, white bread and Butter, hard boiled eggs, coffee, tea, cakes and bricks of Neapolitan ice- @feam, with bottled milk for everybody till they can’t see, and cream rises to the top of every buttle three inch everything provided by Caterer Judson in these outings is of fhe very best quality that money can 9 will be three dozen of Crandall’ oradle hammocks swinging from the up- er deck-beams for the very, little, siok bies to slumber in While their wi mothera rest and enjoy the breezes tne scenery and the music Yaulus's East Side Orchestra, led by Prof, Stahlhammer—not for dancing, a8 @ome yor je seem to imagine, but fo begulle the time for the little, and their mothers. tre excursions.’ but outings for the ick bables. ‘Then there will be s new addition to the pleamares "and comforts 10. De ene to-morrow and at future outing: crandall, of the famous Crandall riage and Toy Manufacturing Com- pany, 069 Third avenue, has elven to “phe Bvening World” Sick Babies Fund for these outings a half dozen baby car- ages and a round dozen of the most fluvendously skittish hobby horses in is stock. Hobby horses, big and little, for big and itte boys, who didn't have ‘em tn thelr tenement-house homes to ride on during the voyage of the Sick Habl outings. Moreover, Mr. Crandall fie will ‘send a like supply for each # son's outing in the future. These ‘k Babies’ oulings are grow- ing so popular that unless the rules are lived up to more people will crowd on board the big white barge William vers than Woull he comfortable. and hereafter no mother and no child will Ye admitted unless they have tickets. There must be not only w ticket, fc mamma, but a ticket for each child she brings with her from the baby up: No well child over six years of age will be ‘admitted, so mothers will save trouble by leaving their boys and gi over six years old at home. o men Will be allowed to go under any circum- Btances, and no young women who are Out for'a day's fun need come, for they will not be admitted. These are not picnic excursion parties, but much-needed outings for sick bables and their overworked mothers—a sort of hospital service done for and by charity. The sixth ables’ outing will go. to emild Grove, a in Man- se ey Pong island ‘Bound, next Rustay, aha there will be fifteen more outings after that. Entertainment To-Morrow Night. ‘The Four Friends who Include the Mises Qarah Sable, Julls Kiyber, Florence Fruhaut and Mille Risstedt, will give an entertainment on to-morrow afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock in Bverett GaN, $1 Kast Fourth street, for the benefit of the 924 BEHIND rookiya, i What Two Little Girls Did. adie Krupp, aged five, and Rebecca Krupa aged nine, got $1 for the fund by means of @ Uitte etemd at 9% Mast Broadway. 91.15 from a Little Stand. From 4 ctand in frost of 1 Pike street Jen Rubenstein, aged sight, ie mine, realised $1.15 fer th Sal from a Table. To the Biitor: ‘The eum of $ comes as the proceeds of males from @ table om te street by the following ans, 1218 BAUERNFEIND, ‘A BRLLM! Appia DETOEN. A Little Girl's Mite. ‘Te the Bitter ‘My mother \e writing this for me. She gave me two cents to pend, bet I cond Kt to the poor litte children who are sick. BROWOLD, 14 West One Hi om jock treat, A Welcome Inclosure. ‘Te the Bitter: Inclosed please find postal money order for $3 for the beneit of the Bick Babies, the prosects 2a email tar, MAY voor, 1 : MAY 60! , aged 10, ‘Three Good Helpers. ‘These are the plotures of the three Ifttle ones a concerned in a stand in Second av fesse ferent third and, seventy tourt from witch, ao lately ‘noted, $6 was Teattaed’ Sot fhe fund. The names are Gat twelve: Gertrude Delsoa, aged eight, and ver, aged two years and nine’ months. A Fair im Jersey City. Te the Editor: Inclosed find check for #8, proceeds of a fair eld at howss of Miss Maggie Pearsod, 69 Mom- tleello avenue, Jersey Otty, for the benefit of | It ts Yr Sick Bablew Fund and for Christ, Mogpital tye arson, Wille siti aad ‘Ohare. seat MYRON J. FURST. Tnolosed please find check for $87.62, which was} Fealised at a fair held at 102 West One Hun- red and Thirty-second treet, inet Friday and Saturday, for the benefit of the Sick Babies Fund, which we hope will do much good to the poor Sweet little Rosalte se stand, ry by all, Lucius Brigas w Susie Poggenturg was at Strassburg and Edna the grocery department, while Stern conducted ira Ansorge kept aged! Al TBE WORLD: FRIDAY JUNE 2%, 1895. eine ‘Bina Stern, Committes. Two Whe Helped Nob! ‘The little girs in the picture printed herewith are Lissie Conroy and Lola Mollasser, of East THE DOCTORS WHO CURE. One of the Most Interesting Cases Discharged as Cured This Week by Doctors McCoy and St. John, Showing the Success with Which They Treat Catarrh of Head and Stomach, ‘The case.ot Mra Theresa Huarath, discharged es cured thie week by Dra McCoy and St, Joho, shows that the most serious form of ca- tarrhal trouble yields to proper treatment from ekiiful apectalieta Mra. Theresa Hunrath, 407 West 824 street, am eatimable German indy, has this very simple Ny le Ferty-coomnd etrest, whose eferts for the fund fewalted tm the addition of 96.78 for the good WATER PRESSURE WAS LOW. Some One Forgot to Open the Main Gates. Tt Bag been discovered through the ef- forts of Mayor Strong, Public Works Commissioner Brookfield and Fire Com- missioner Ford, that the cause of the tow water pressure is that a large num- ber, possibly 100, of the main gates are shut down. They were closed while re- pairs were being made, or for other reasons, and in many instances were not opened because of negiect on the part ‘oh ployees of the wets vepal wit id even Chief tengine Bindpall did not. know of thia con questioned at a tion of irs, until conference he had Player Strong 4 Conamiasioner Broo ir. Brookfield gave re orien’ that the od be raised as ly as possible. will be delays in some instances, ‘are rusted and almost use- DINED INTO HARMONY. How J. Pierpont Morgan E Fierce Rate War. On account of the unfavorable weat ed a @r last evening, J. Pierpont Morgan gave ®@ @inner at the Metropolitan Club, In- stead of on the yacht Corsair, to rall- road men in attendance at the meeting of aber Line and Central Tramfc i ts pied | bebe influence, a big freight re aie in railroa: living ui re Agreement for the restoration o Mi pee rate Aooordiig to th terda; ne July the ful hed tariffs, 7%, Ruthorized Bye Font ‘Committ Provided no change will be made without ten days’ wri a Cable Cars Run People Down. ‘Two mere persons were injured by’ the Third evonue cable cam during last night. ‘The victims | Jo} were Michael Murphy, twenty-eight years 411 Kast One Hundred and Twelfth street, whe ‘was struck af Ninety-seventh street and Third ' avenue, aZeceiving contusions about the body | whick hia removal to the Harlem How | pla snd “Michael “Moran, ‘forty-tve. years ol@, Tr Lexington av ‘who recelved @ scalp | Souna ‘by ‘being fu 7 mt Third aveni ‘He ‘was taken to Bellevue Hospital. a Bipronsg hoprmne Sy avy for children teothing isthe Tamiy Denelactor, aoe Pu hard b\ but the end. lillie How weak the soap and water seems when you begin your washing! You don't get any strength out of it till the work is about done. Plenty of work and rubbing and wear and tear, even then— more of it at the begin- ning; when the water is weakest. Now with Pearline, the water just as strong at the beginning as at is This is one of the reasons (only one) why Pearline acts so much better than soap, in all washing and ons Use no soap with it. Oe? PEOTINE - | food would le Mke lead on my stomach, and I and forcible temtimony to bear: “I want to tell the people that Dra MoCoy and ®t John cured me. I would like to tell them how very mach I euffered, how many doo- tore 1 went ta how many medicines I tried. All he ectors told mo tt was catarrhal trouble, that It began in my throat; that I had catarrh of heed; catarrh of bronchial tubes, and that it bed gotten to be catarrh of the stomach, which, as I understood {t, was another name for yepepsia 61 was weak and miserable all ( time, I could not eat. After every meal I would have & epell of nausea and desire to vomit. My 414 net reltsh ft. ‘There was swelling and bicat- {ng im the stomach after eating. There was that tired feeling, and I was depressed ond melancholy, fearing some trouble and danger all the time. “Oh, If T should tell you all I felt and euf- ace book. Wheat I want to tell T am @ well woman, a cured woman, tad boeanes tions doctors cured me when I was eo very wick I am gure they can cure any one lee, I want te tell everybody how skilful, how kind, bow courteous, how painstaking im their forts and how succemtul these doctors are, and I want to recommend every one whe ia sick to go and see them" SUMMER JIS THE TIME CURE TAR. WORK OF THE PAYSICIANS, FREE TEST TREATMENT. fopatation of Doctors McCoy and St. for consultation, examination, om em 1G Mad WEST 14TH sT, “RELIABLE” CARPETS FOR SATURDAY, FINE VELVET CARPET, signs, at 75 cents per yard. 80 RIOH, IT 6HOWS THE FINRNESS OF MA. AS THE BUN FORE MATCHED IN 80 HIGH A GRADE. FURNITURE AT CLONEST PRICES, CASH OR CREDIT. 104, 106 @ 108 WEST 14TH BT, Near 6th Av. BROOKLYN STORES RH NATURE LENDS BER, AID TO tite JHE LIABIL- For the benefit of those who have no definite knowledge of the work or in the treatment of all chronic | ~ are free. There is positively no charge test treatment and medicines for the first ci DOCTORS McCOY AND | ST. JOHN, nye. © THhy-, *> In Parlor, Half and Stair De- SOFT TO THE TOUCH AND WITH A BLOOM COWPERTHWAIT & CO, FLATBUSH AVE., NEAN FULTON ST, EVENING, The Most Extraordinary Sale MEN’S Fine Clothing Furnishings We have ever known. 2,200 Men’s Sack Suits, that have been $13.50, $15, $18, $20, $22.50, now , I 02% A SUIT. 150 doz. Men’s Fancy Shirts, Negligee and Stiff Bosoms, Imported Madras, Woven Patterns, $1.00 manufactured to be sold from $1.50 to $2 cach, 250 doz. Pongee Silk Neckwear, Club Ties, Band Bows, Knots, Reversible Four-in-Hands, 25c. == usually sold from 50c. to $1. See Our Window Display. & Co, CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, HATS AD SHOES, 279, 281 and 283 Chambers & BROADWAY, Reade Sts. 4 or money ree ij For Sale. "| Laid a aie CLOTHING CREDIT ae “CREDIT. _ iimediaie fa Inland, Brookiy EW! ING 4! MACHINES hha Houael $1 Wert mt are | pill tare th - aRNotbea con" PSE WAUTEAN Watches, Di ae, J weekly paymant red ‘Watch Co, itt Broadway. DIAMONDS, ‘e rary, C DIAMONDS, watches, fewelry, Vaprossatative will call’ with” CATE WATCH CO., 11 Bast 1 Interest and Dividend Notices. Tonia nen ine axis. caszuinol METROPOLITAN SAVINGS BANK, HINE—THE PRICE NEVER BE- obikteREPaA™ Waka INTWREST FOR THE HALY TEAR JUNB 20. 1805, at the rate of FOU! CENT, PER ANN depositors en the bank on from Tineet, PAYABLE JULY 1, MONEY DEPOSITED on or bet rr from July 1. 1 WM. BURRLL, Preat. JONATHAN B. CURRY, Bec'y. “To Let” advertisements were printed in The World last week, A NAME. Henry Dornton Won Something Better Than He D nry Dornton sat in his chair cog! perl look of abject melancholy at upon his face, and ever and anon his fingers played nervously on the arms of his chair. It was long past midnigh His table in the middle of the room was littered with sheets of manuscript, and occasionally his eves wandered thither- ward, as if something connected with them formed the keynote of his thoughts, It was even so. That table held the fruits of many months’ labor. Those sheeta had cost him many & Bleepless night, and on them he had centred his fondest. hopes. to the subject of the hieroglyphics upon them. Some years ago he had begun work, belleving himself possessed of every qualification for a successful maker of books, He had set to work with an earnestness and enthusiasm worthy of his adopted profession. But alas, in spite of his effort, in spite of the merit he undoubtedly possessed, in spite of everything, he now had to confront the stern face of his absolute tmpotence ‘Worse, he was in a state boniering upon destitution, Worse still, he had a young delicate wife and child dependent upon him. And both were ill. From the table fie eyes crossed the room bevond, It Gheltered mother and child. Then hi His body, | hie brain, his very soul had contributed | reamed Of. mind reverted to the time when Ger- trude had left all and had followed him. Importuned by @ stern, birth-worship- | ping father to renounce the man she \oved, she had clung the more closely to/ him, Against her parent's wishe she | had Unked her lot with Henry Dorn- ton’s, and, trusting to a future recognt: tion of his merit, had married him. ‘And for five years they had striven| |nobly together, Henry had worked un- ceasingly, and she had encouraged him. No matter how cruel and repeated the rebuffs of fortune, her hopes never for- sook her, and her cheering words and caresses never grew less warm. She was one of those trusting little women who are so full of faith that it actually bubbles over, refusing to be dammed up within the narrow confines of a human body. And again and again, when he, ready to sink and despair, had thrown down his pen and scattered his well-filled sheets on the floor in dis- gust and anger, he had become inocu- lated with her hope, and reseated him- self with the determination to achieve victory for her sake. No one but he knew what she had been to him. But now! She was ill. For weeks she had been unable to fulfil her more active duties at his If he needed her in- piration he had to leave his table and nter that room beyond, where she Jay | an in bed, suffering deeply, but never allow- ing @ sign of her pain to manifest itself. Her face was always radiant—when he came in, Sunshine beamed in her eyes— when he came near, Henry waa en- gaged on an “important work,” and she would have suffered a martyrdom rather than he should realize a distraction in her, This was to be his crowning effort ‘This was to make his name, and this | was to be—their fortune. Yes, It was an important work! And there it lay on the table—finished, Henry was staring at again. And hi the outcome of everything that Is best within me. Up to now, I have written for art alone—and such labor was rest. But now my mind, compelled by physl- cal claims, hankers after a sordid, mer- cenary reward Perhaps he was more than ordinarily gloomy to-night. He realized now more than he had ever done, how much he needed money—he, the artist, the poet, would make shipwreck of his art, of himself, for lucre. Mechanically he arose from his chatr, crossed the floor and stole on tip-toe into his wife's room, here she lay, a hectic flush on her cheek, thin, sinuous creases across her brow, but the shadow of a smile yet tenanting her fac amile for Henry, she fell asleep had been of him, hard at work in the adjoining room, and, as she closed her cy look of intermingled faith lest he should look in upon her and tind acid expressionless, Tenderly r her, touched her Ups light and then passed to the little ide of her bed, and remained ttle one sleep- ‘Tears, unbidden ‘and hope, thoughts were something like this: “I | ¥ and his even pro | concentrated every atom of mind! soul had susta | substance upon these py They are a Her last thought ere} she conjured that |r his emotion threatened to choke him. With a suppresses the room, sank Into hi his manu; was Anished But of what use.w he asked himself. it. And if they did, t That subject, attuck tive unknown, Was of itself sufficient ondemn the book. ait? ies y work T way for a terrible temptation, in his chair as 1 4s dropped pedi urged the to do Was tu write the 1 on his manuseript, and put that ture at the foot of a le studiously co had that he euuties, wit defects, of hie He 2 the style ide And h ) a His hands Belt agains Springing hurrie to the table manuscript, “the important W before [twas de spatched eaiiae vent Aircon fond Her os though it d been a favorite entid tc whom she was bidding farewell, she returned It, she 1 which seemed to employ Of its success, As he passed out of th n, her eyes followed him. bi # ps parted in a fod Would speed hus Then the doctor came accompanied him to the sick room, neither oke much there. were again outs! however, door sonursly unburdened himseif, “it's no use, ‘Dornton,” and said he. groan he stole from s chair and bur- orto Pre No One would Took at would reject tt, 4 by @ compara: 9 No one would care to saddle bimaelt with the rixk involved {un its publication Whereai he had ou not pos thought ner- ned feebled to resist—too unni 1H he not @ last look at How she ish hands clasped it And, 49 sta look at Henry then closed, prayer But When they the sed behind, the doctor All House, Room and “Apartment: “Advts. in The World this week e. woRDS: repeated in The Evening World. Over 500,000 circulation secured. 4 las much an your wife’ ite oun the Continent at any cost. Vinter here means her death.” ript was there, and i) ‘And see that she gets good support, 1 plenty of it.” fenry could not reply—he could scar ly suppress his feelings, Great rose in his throat to swim before bi head as if to speak, Once but the doctor Inter- urgent case in the jood morning, G A strange Jook came into Henry Dorn ton's face t temptation was again upon him but’ he was. tow, tooen 4 to com bat it. His wife nended support: necessary Unat she shoul She might have abrou y head throbbed and. uathng. the give a with @ ner his manuseript, with It. Ther he called 4 » | structed him t Then a sort nh }took possession of him, and jiclosed hi hurrying into the st ssonaire and ¢ pub Bila tie her certainty to. discover was the Tt was all @ hoarse "Money, money absorbed him jhe laugied | ras inant ord which would s] nis lap, ang: his ears listen hours t's | wande: CLOTHING FoR MEN, YOUTHS, BOYS, LADIES’ SUITS, BLAZER AND ETON SUITS,SILK vaters, DRESS GOODS, SILKS, BATIN, PARASOLS AND wun uM. BRELLAB ON CREDIT Popular Prices. Open Raturday evenings until @ 90, FURNITURE & CARPETS Cash prices, Reliable goods, Terms to suit everybody, T. KELLY, 263 Oth Ave., 104 AND 106 W. 177H sT., 466, 468 and 470 Fulton St., BROOKL Our Sale oF Broken Lots Of Men's Fine Suite will end To-Morrow Night at 9 O'Clock. Serge, Worsted and Cheviot suits that sold for $12, $15 and $18 wo offer RoyalSerge $12.50 The fact that other stores following our lead goes bar that there is no serge as Alizarine dyed serge. dealers are the best judges value in cloth. The_ best place. to buy Serge Suit is where you’re get the best kind. The best ki is Royal Serge,”’ Alizarine dy —that fact everybody agrees At the beginning of the ses one of the best mills in Engt supplied us with 18,000 yards 4 Alizarine dyed serge; since the we have duplicated the o * We have none of the old ed serges to: work off. We sat constderable on the cloth by large direct cash purchases, sell only for cash and have no debts to rei sider the best place: ‘3 We couldn't have sold a tenth a many of these suits if it Our Merchant Tailoring is:4 the very best, but we charge as much as others bec (ALL BIZES), AT $9.50 a Suit. An extraordinary sacrifice of values. HAMMERSLOUGH BROS, Bleecker St., cor. Greene, ‘Bet. I way & Mtb Ave. L; also Broadway, cor. Rector St. es RUPTURECURED Fhe Improved Flastio Truss is the only truss te so jend for arte Dentistry. ay, cor, 1% et, DR. DIMMOC He, he well-known phygician of 176 Dutield Screntise end abtifat’ methods ot practice Fechmmend from Sew Tort, ‘Summer Resorts. _ es on Long Tein or nd. ie Mis extrac- wut di 2 Island,” 9 new iti “Summer Homes” a book boarding: Hundreds of other teatimoniaix at office, Extraction Free When Teeth Are Order. ease Amusements. ready made and te order, with- machines from 311 4 3 machines 3 1 Bam 14 a and 902 Urand aa Th Waren & Jewelry w a abit te cit a | A ae 1 ry, wold on immediately, eeny terme; repre. th samples, JOHONOT easy payments; amplee. BYNDI- ENDING R PER M, will be credited to the by of to, $3,000, IN- July 10 will worth to | while ever and anon his face broke inte gold onto the bed beste her, get her ja distorted An- lumps ‘and the room seemed raised his | the doc next “he said, and was WP it was hs ‘purned and. te we have better facilities. “MANHATTAN BEACH Swept by Ocean Breezes, Manhattan's Midsummer Merry Making, Su Ca Ba Pain’s Fireworks, Rice's Circas Carnival, tie SPseore ant eres Seats mint "Gat Bley Tract, kagg dlragorarpr icdaproel ye eng Getertay, June Soh, Anoea! Most Kings Orenty H aerate “Ga ( Gold Crowns and Bridge Work a Specialty Prices Reasei le fer First-Class Werk. Warranted [0 Years. DR. O. W. HALL, Graduate Peansyivania Dental College, 053 BRvADWay, Cor, 384 #,., NEW YORK. 499 FULTON ST., Cor, Bridge, BROOKLYN, HOURS-8 A. M. to7 A, M, Sundays-10to2, NEW YORK DENTAL PARLORS. ERED ESEMP ho More Dread ef the Dental Chair, athe gue ehlorotay ma. Poe Ky i Methou, ves Amusement Time Table: the oven eeestully with (16 Sunday 10° toe Pariore, be Wo. 130 ee. opponite. Spectal trains leave the beach after all ances, See Excursion Column for RR. time table. EXSIN & LSBE VO cRERRE, | ofan Fit nee tony | more ihe | AMBRIGAN oh HTH ym equare, cor. éth ‘Oped nights aad Sundaye TEETH Pe} eee AEs, eer NEW UNION SQUARE. Oniglnal Contingous Performance Noon tol P.M. iba Me | ee ude pal pele] » Lands evenings. _ Coney RR chat |SABRIER, | TARILBY | 3D EDITION, KOSTER & ie tll oaths ST. a Or: Sees JUNE 16 TO JULY 4. . FRIDAY gs Monday, July 1, Tueseday & and ACK. CONCERT BY LANDER. Ent A aincere | But I thi bab! “Thank God!” broke from her lips | 00 much Importance to ct ees {le ghastly to behold. ure But fantion of wh hen he Hing his foome a full reals | tears of gratitude rolled. down ‘her | fame Anyw: the had done burst upon |cheeks, Then she praised Henry, kissed | eps no’ yourself, and him. 1 fell inty his chair, clasped him, and was go overcome wi Leave me your ‘eddreen, 4 [Pe neat in his hands and burst into |she nearly fainted. But ie | upen you tamercaw hae ftears. Tut he eould not rest. He rose up |ly oblivious of her exquisite delight ei In | returned home Ine Fant pacid the Noor in extreme perturba | fingers, nervously Lifted the colne trom | is great man who thon,’ the pe spiration streaming from the bed, and suffered them to fail again | SS arieesuaise sri every pore. he attempted to open et the coverlet like golden grain, jin kindn loating to his wife's chamber, 4 sober enough now, the Maen | with ntention of tell.ng her all, But|eteadied him, and now that what he He shrank |had longed for was in his grasp the | f teat 1 Baas by which It had been procured made it Nauseous to him, He could not face the ex why eho He had wnat 4) over with Joy now net atonement deen begun. And the next Than Chane true his promise, the great introduced to Gert Ungly to her, manifested | great | He was much | out of the room, | husband. | “And t Whom he pera. | sald hi ang | na ted and render a full explanation to hun And Henry somethiiug was poor “fatigue, y soul, she am and the 1 ling thls erring. y which she was and erdeavered to fed y We shall’ as she c ‘fully into his face yes, he we shall went, Disguising nothing, simply an) rfully threw himself at r, and humbly sued eat Wrong he had com- ye great man ned to this strange recital In silence. When Henry had finished, there was a look of deep sympathy in the author's face, and his eyes Were no: altogether devoid of a sig- ant moisture our error {sa serious one, certain- A ‘ suid he, Kindly, “and to a’ mind so |e rep: aired tothe hotel, A letter from | exceedingly sensitive as yours, the pun-| after a iittle necessary hers awaited him, He 1 | shim already endured has, no doubt, | if it doe how do you think tt re. His hands refused to|been severe. But calm yourself, Mr. /fit you? My name—is- attacl ¢ 1 Thornton; It may be that pardon is not. so | and hence tt canner help yours, luzely impossible as you imagine.” But Henry was too © nx his hand tn | reply. "He could only gaze In gratitude. J only knows what I] ment before hi however, alo. revise, el, porHon of them, and’ Forgive me"-—— began Henry. “I do not know that [ bas forgive. If I mistake not, can be put right very simply ‘and’ and iffered the «Khim, and ha general t does not Sisgrage my I am far from ned muimual niin: aah Intend that it shall ge chrouagh ghost former nelf, oundes offer whose max e was mad epted, The check. for wh might be forwarded to have passed thr ugh. ‘To see promise, larling, lying there, perhaps dying for ofs, as T have said, want of sustena: endered me In nd,’ but-—yours must be collaborateur,” I have tries the prefudi publish Knowing the power of a’ grea: name, . Henry forward, sealed “na pat tron's vored to ti Pos endea "oY donot thes! ene gantai ae ia oe succeed.” — tel. the following day It was there, ‘ou were assailed by temptation, and luccumbed—yes, yes, Don't distress yours self by recounting your actions f\ ‘Then he went hom room, and emptied gt

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