| Show A QUESTION OF SCANDAL In n it dispatch from Crom Parts Paris It Is la stated that Minn Castellane Is ts anxious not to tu Involve her family In a Thin la is l not Intended for lor sarcasm The Count eel eat mutt must have been be n In Paris larl so eo long that her Ideas have hava become somewhat modified To a render reader of h her r story slur on this thle tide aide It II looks very Cr ery much as n If It the ho WIre were ere In scandals now It If site she had hind been not to Involve her family site she ought newer never to hays bought the Count That was wag tho the be beginning beginning ginning Binning of ot the story According to nil all accounts the tile little nobleman has haM always s been a 11 profligate He lie has ben been known according to a I cor car nt of oC tho New York World to havo havu had II ad numerous adventures but they have been winked at nt as aa eccentricities trinities until an nn unusual amount oC ot attention was WilS paid to a woman of or high rank It If those these the e statements aro are true It Is too late for Cor Mme 1 me Castellane to look out for tho the honor of oC her family As AI far ar as that honor can cnn be bo by her alliance with the French family famIlY family ly the tho Is dona ilono and cannot connot b be undone except by u II complete severance of or tho the marital ties tics Miss 1189 Gould made mado a bad lIall mesa mes of or It iThe got a II title but It Is Buld to hass cost her about and the end anti endIs endIs Is not yet vet It Is U even u n question whether she eho was not goldbricked For some ome of oC tho the old tid families Camille In Franco France claim It Is paid that lion Iloni I has no right to the title of Count that he Is Isn IsA isa A n fraud and OW a pretender I that hi his family ly I was waH never In the nobility She Bhe certainly thinly did not receive social recognition with the title For l or European aristo ariato aristocracies though poor are haughty haught Hh She has been beon laughed la at lit and despIsed tIe In Inthe Inthe the tite high society In which she eho once fancied she uha was to shine European aristocrats never lIever overlook what they regard cut as plebeian birth and the daughter of an nil American merican moneymaker generally bears b ars the Iho stigma of or bour hour No wonder If It the Countess has haa become tired of or her toy to IC If the eho Is U sensible she leaves leaven It and then pub publishes lishes an nn HR as a II warning to Lo other American |