NEW YORKCHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONSCOPYRIGHT, 1918, BYCHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONSTOMARY BULLIONS GRAY ANDERSONCONTENTS [CHAPTER I] [CHAPTER II] [CHAPTER III] [CHAPTER IV] [CHAPTER V] [CHAPTER VI] [CHAPTER VII] [CHAPTER VIII] [CHAPTER IX] [CHAPTER X] [CHAPTER XI] [CHAPTER XII] [CHAPTER XIII] [CHAPTER XIV] [CHAPTER XV] [CHAPTER XVI] [CHAPTER XVII] [CHAPTER XVIII] [CHAPTER XIX] [CHAPTER XX] [CHAPTER XXI] [CHAPTER XXII] [CHAPTER XXIII] [CHAPTER XXIV] [CHAPTER XXV] [CHAPTER XXVI] [CHAPTER XXVII] [CHAPTER XXVIII] [CHAPTER XXIX] [CHAPTER XXX] [CHAPTER XXXI] [CHAPTER XXXII] [CHAPTER XXXIII] ILLUSTRATIONS[ Elsie . . . repeated the performance in a manner that was only the morecaptivating . . . . . . Frontispiece ][ "Well, I mustn't stay here and keep you from 'redding' up your kitchen,as you call it" ][ "You and I will do better with checks, Elsie, though Aunt Milly will have noneof them," he remarked ][ "Well, Elsie, we know the whole story now" ]