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your own board with."

      "And how much would it cost me at a boarding house, in Paris, to pay my board?" asked Rollo.

      "Why, we don't board at boarding houses in Paris," said Mr. George. "We have rooms at a hotel, and then we get breakfast and dinner wherever we please, at coffee rooms and dining rooms all over the city, wherever we happen to be, or wherever we take a fancy to go. You can get a very excellent breakfast for a franc and a half. A beefsteak, or an omelet, and bread and butter and coffee."

      "That's enough for breakfast," said Rollo. "And then, dinner?"

      "You can get a first-rate dinner for two francs, or even less. That makes three francs and a half."

      "And tea?"

      "They never take tea in Paris," said Mr. George. "The French don't take tea."

      "Why not?" asked Rollo.

      "I don't know," replied Mr. George, "unless it is because the English do. Whatever is done in London, you generally find that just the contrary is done in Paris."

      "Don't we have any thing, then, after dinner?" asked Rollo.

      "Yes," said Mr. George. "The French generally go and take a seat at a little round table on the sidewalk, and have a little glass of brandy and a cigar."

      Here Rollo threw his head back, and laughed loud and long. He was greatly amused at the idea of his making an allowance, in calculating how far his five francs would go, for a glass of brandy and a cigar. Mr. George himself, sedate as he was, could not but smile.

      "The fact is," said he, at length, "there are only two meals to calculate for, and they will not cost, upon an average, more than three francs and a half, if we are prudent and economical, and go to plain and not expensive places. But then there is the immense amount that you will be always wishing to spend for cakes, and candy, and oranges, and nuts, and bonbons of all sorts and kinds. There is an endless variety of such things in Paris. You will find half a dozen cake shops in every street, with fifty different kinds of gingerbread and cake in them, all of the richest and most delicious description."

      "Yes," said Rollo, "I shall want some of those things."

      "No doubt," said Mr. George, "you will make yourself sick eating them, I'll venture to say, before you have been in Paris twenty-four hours."

      "No," said Rollo, shaking his head resolutely; "and I think I had better take the five francs and pay my own board."

      "Very well," said Mr. George, "and that provides for every thing except incidentals. Your father said that I might pay you five francs a day for incidentals and pocket money. That is to include all your personal expenses of every kind, except what we have already provided for. There will be excursions, and tickets to concerts and shows, and carriage hire, and toys that you will want to buy, and all such things. The amount of it is, that your father pays all your expenses for transportation, for lodging, and for casualties. You pay every thing else, and are allowed ten francs a day for it. I am to be treasurer, and to have the whole charge of your funds, except so far as I find it prudent and safe to intrust them to you, and you are to buy nothing at all against my consent."

      "Nothing at all?" asked Rollo.

      "No," said Mr. George, "nothing at all. You are not to expend a single centime in any way that I object to."

      "What is a centime?" asked Rollo.

      "It is of the value of less than one fourth of a cent," replied Mr. George.

      "But I should think I might buy such little things as that would come to, of myself," said Rollo. "Suppose I should wish to buy a small piece of gingerbread for a cent."

      "Say for a sou,"1 replied Mr. George. "There are no cents in Paris."

      "Well," rejoined Rollo, "suppose I should wish to spend a sou for gingerbread, and eat it, and you should object to it."

      "Very well," replied Mr. George; "and suppose you were to wish to spend a sou for poison, and drink it."

      "But I should not be likely to buy poison," said Rollo, laughing.

      "Nor should I be likely to object to your buying gingerbread," rejoined Mr. George. "A boy, however, may, it is clear, do mischief with a little money as well as with a great deal; and, therefore, the power in his guardian should be absolute and entire. At any rate, so it is in this case. If I see fit to forbid your expending a single sou for any thing whatever, I can, and you will have no remedy till we see your father again; and then you can ask him to put you under some other person's care. Until he does this, however, the control is absolute and entire in my hands. I would not take charge of a boy on any other terms."

      "Well," said Rollo, "I agree to it."

      "And now," said Mr. George, "I am ready to begin your account."

      Mr. George then took a small account book from his pocket book as he said this, and, opening it at the beginning, he wrote across the top of the two pages which came together the words,

      Rollo Holiday, in Account with his Father.

      On the corner of the left-hand page he wrote Dr., which stands for debtor; and on that of the right-hand page, Cr., which stands for creditor.

      "There," said he, "now I shall enter, from time to time, on the creditor side, all the money that becomes due to you; and on the debtor side, all that I pay to you. Then, by striking a balance, we can always tell how much of your money there is in my hands.

      "Let me see," continued Mr. George. "Your father and mother concluded finally to go by the way of Folkstone. The fare that way is two pound eleven. This way, it is one pound four. I am to pay you the difference. The difference is one pound seven; and one pound seven, in francs, is—let me see how much."

      Mr. George made a calculation with a pencil and paper, and found that it amounted to thirty-three francs seventy-five centimes.

      "I don't understand reckoning by francs and centimes very well," said Rollo.

      "No," replied Mr. George, "that is your misfortune; and you'll have to bear it as well as you can till you get out of it."

      So Mr. George entered the francs—thirty-three seventy-five—in Rollo's book.

      "You have got thirty-three francs to begin with," said he; "that's a pretty good stock.

      "Now, there is your allowance of ten francs per day. I will enter that weekly. There are three days in this week, including to-day and Sunday. That makes thirty francs."

      So Mr. George entered the thirty francs.

      "There," said he, "the whole amount due you up to Monday morning is sixty-three francs seventy-five centimes. That is sixty-three francs and three fourths. A hundred centimes make a franc.

      "And now," continued Mr. George, "I will make you a payment, so as to put you in funds, and that must be put down on the other side. How much would you like?"

      "I don't know," said Rollo; "a few francs, I suppose."

      "Have you got a purse?" asked Mr. George. "Let me see it."

      So Rollo took out a small leather bag which he had bought in London.

      "That's it," said Mr. George. "I'll give you ten francs. When you want more, you can have it—that is, provided it is due to you."

      Here Mr. George rang a bell, and a waiter came in immediately. Mr. George handed the waiter a sovereign, and asked him to get change for it in French money. The waiter took the money, and presently came in with five five-franc pieces. These he presented very respectfully to Mr. George. Mr. George took two of them and gave them to Rollo. The others he put into his own pocket. The five-franc pieces were very bright and new, and they were of about the size of silver dollars. Rollo was very much pleased with his portion, and put them in his purse, quite proud of having so much spending money.

      "And you say that I must not spend any of it without first asking you," said Rollo.

      "O, no," replied Mr. George, "I have not said any such thing. That would be a great deal of trouble, both for you and for me."

      "But

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Pronounced soo.