. The wastrel hoard; a drama of the greater love. pared against the times that try mens souls!Nothing personal, Mr.—Bullock—[Looking at card Bul- 188 THE WASTREL HOARD. LABD had given Mm, and smiling innocently]—Bullard!—Pardon me! BuLLABD. Itll be all right. CULP. Itll be all right, all right! [Gulp goes into the private office leaving Bullardbewildered. Bullaed catches sight of the hand-kerchief which Maey dropped—appears interest-ed—and goes to pick it up. He sniffs the perfume,pauses, examines the initial, thinks, and, suddenlystaggers, between the doubt and dismay of a greatdiscovery.] Cu


. The wastrel hoard; a drama of the greater love. pared against the times that try mens souls!Nothing personal, Mr.—Bullock—[Looking at card Bul- 188 THE WASTREL HOARD. LABD had given Mm, and smiling innocently]—Bullard!—Pardon me! BuLLABD. Itll be all right. CULP. Itll be all right, all right! [Gulp goes into the private office leaving Bullardbewildered. Bullaed catches sight of the hand-kerchief which Maey dropped—appears interest-ed—and goes to pick it up. He sniffs the perfume,pauses, examines the initial, thinks, and, suddenlystaggers, between the doubt and dismay of a greatdiscovery.] Curtain. ACT V. Before the curtain goes up, the Oem3Hbstea plays selectionsfrom Carmen, with emphasis upon and recurrence tothe Mt from the song at The Smugglers Camp, sunghy Maey, and selections from Offenbachs Orpheuswith emphasis upon the theme suggestive of Home,Sweet Home. ^ Allegretto^ f cr p If ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^m CUra. Horu-BftuooD. ilMJifllJi P String. Iviilhljjjlljljj IJ Jlj^ m ^ U ?J y?TM=B^ ^ ^ i J^-~V7i^ij-~j^^^/T^,i1 J~^J^ j^t i. ACT V. Library of the residence of Senator Morse, in New YorkCity, ten minutes after eleven on the morning of thesixth day after the close of Act IV. Books in cases on right and left. Desk at right with elec-tric light upon it. Upright piano against wall at left and right; large hay window at hack, thecurtain of which is drawn to exclude the sun. The win-dow is open. An electric fan, resting upon the piano, isin operation. The sounds of vehicular traffic withoutare more audible than in the first act. At hack of stage,in the hay window, is a cabinet phonograph. On thedesk is a telephone and beside it a small brass left back corner, facing audience, is a chime clock,resting on the floor. Photographs, including that ofVictor, Kussell Turner, Mary, Senator Morse, andMrs. Morse. Victor^s is on piano. Beside it is a large,full figure oil painting, in the style of thirty years be-fore, of a beautiful girl of twenty, in sta


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Keywords: ., bookauth, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidcu31924022471415