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needed out o' Scotty. You smuggled Dugs out o* Missouri because it pleased you to please your wife. I am going to teach a little school from a purely selfish motive."

"Was it selfishness that prompted you to fall in love with your unfaithful Green River hero, Jean?"

She turned deathly pale. "Yes, daddie dear. I thought I was going to be happy; and that was selfishness, of course. But I 'm getting my punishment."

"If selfishness is a natural attribute of humanity, we ought not to decry it, but should seek to control and guide it, Jean."

"That is right, daddie. We have a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. But we also need toughening. I am getting my share of toughening."

"Do you object to my marrying Sally O'Dowd?"

"That is your affair, daddie; but there is no accounting for tastes."

"Do you think your angel-mother would approve the step, my child?"

"Ah!" cried Jean, her face brightening, "there is one love that never dies,—the love of a mother for her child. It is the same sort of unselfish love that prompted the Son of Man to lay down His life for the redemption of the race; it is the same love that prompted my mother to risk and lose her life in the wilderness. You will please yourself by marrying Sally O'Dowd. We children will pay her allegiance as our father's wife, chiefly because we know on which side our bread is buttered. But we will not call her mother; nor do we believe you would ask it."

"I couldn't think of taking the step, my child, unless I thought your mother would approve it, if she could know. But I am very sure she doesn't know."

"You do not want to believe she knows, daddie. It is always easier to believe or disbelieve anything when the wish is father to the thought."