OCR Text |
Show ... i HIS DEPRAVITY REVEALED. Tba Airful Thraatof a Ar-lon of aa Anelani anil Aristocrat Itioa, InrtlanipolU Journal. "Go!'' No, this is not the story of a bore I race. The monosyllable that heads ! this chapter was hurled by the Muripiia I do 13illete at tho head of his errant son j and heir. "(lo!" repeated t-ia proud father.! "Let me never see your face again. Xever again shall your foot cross this threshold. To think that ptie of your noble name and lineage should wed an obscure salesgirl! Get thee hence! As long as I livi these ancestral halls shall never be darkened by your vile presence. pres-ence. (Jo starve or steal, I care not which. You cau bring no more disgrace dis-grace upon your honored name than you have already done." "Yes, I can, father." said the young I man in a hard, metallic voice, which I harmonized weil with the steely glitter ! in bis eye and his braen" front, j iiither you forgive mo or I go to work. ' You fhail have live miuuti-s in which to ! decide." Ill four minutes the haughty nobleman noble-man had found his mind, and in thirty eeconds more had made it up. "You have won," said ho. "Hut little did I dream of the depths of depravity de-pravity in your nature that you have today revealed." |