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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1919-8-14, Page 6Fier tiousebreaker. tl By Pion:nee :hlo >, Kiraley. CHAPTER I. � you're nn eeeaped l t Ler? I've 1 In the ;leek of n rz.;t.y autumnal. >c,"tail t to ` evening a tall, ratter heavily -built Tben he relaxed into ,a heel'~ young fellow shoot:crrd le'e way *•heel:ie in v,':Irh lie WSS j0!11-.1 by the through the tth rie., 1.ukne'te wtili rci-raced yeunf" man. the sante sttel;, p'r 1 Ian _ ,:;art he had "Didn't take him so long to l:e',•h m;lintalned einee, early afternoon. Ilia oat --'it, !'Barley?" clothes were smiler with rain. De- Their n lueor. r h pureeed the • casit>ilaily cola trick'.:° er moister° ._1 .m fi;.rue reit iis eeny .1 the :.tr•ect from his drooling hat brim made There were hr'•ehtly 1•;1' 1 supper themeelves felt en h s steeming shot!- toted in soceral of th+ 11:eises he Ors. His ib. e,,. weiatited with ;teal' nal -est, with rather.; and me -hers and • • in • down own the street be tried again, to he again repulsed, this time with a smartly shut door in face of his ha;tini:'; request for food. A third attempt was effeetuallyl v hloc:tea by n big deg hien bounced at! hint, barking vociferous!,, Mei he -i terapled to enter the get°. (]they; toe. s in ditTe ret1t q 1 t r- of the town' l k : s>vrl�leel in a 1 t :1 +reg eltorlus of larks.lie lied never been afraid of; Loi-,-0-eight in the duh I •: and, 1. the rain, ... merry yelpi i filled him with entre terror, lir y r y al','.1 1 .y n,>. like' 1 one I'' 1. her 1 and s It io alike ..for}: lot.`.. 'n the c... ire to c :'ore f.Puml • that t1 , . t, ii - y ' eel Thar was, faint c . irt in the a i L that the rain! had cea 1 11,r the ut e of sone! upper reheat of air the 11>uds pert..! ed, ro•. •ling the cold face of the- moon. he ni on. 11a looked '.,out race more in' search 1f shelter and saw clue° at hand en old-fashioned p+:rlee t fence skirting. the road for some dietanee,: Presently be found tn; :,'ate and stood I ir•resoleto, staring at the house it guarded, It was panted white like the fence; a gr.ivei path bordered with flowers led to a verandah gar-' landed with vines. Late honeysuckle`s were in bloom; their penetrating, freemen floated out to him like a visible presence. There w•as no light in any of the windows. Its occupants. were busy in the flack of the house, he. deeded. He would ask them for a crust and leave to sleep in the bars.; In the morning he would work. Thera. must be work to be done at a place like this. (To be continued.) and water, •cru- `1t hurt his tired . t., ce nifo,•tehly clad ellekh n e the tee1 "If I could fin ] a barn son.y,herc,"; the cheerful glow. He approached he suggested to himself. ; the hail: door of one snt•h house, night before he had siert in a e ulin " on the y,c t-+ that his foot - tumble -down n1 t telle might make no sound. A white - red redirof,+a bed hound near the retard haired old grandmother w i. e.itit, ruin . of a barn, and been aycaicarted by rein dripping through in his face- s,11:pr, and an apple-ehoel ed girl through the broken mei. Why had waited on the foully, whish appeared to he a lai ;•e one. From the shelter hs not stayed there ill the°term was over? There was a rusty stove, he; of a dripping re eheeh he w eh 1 the h might h kindled a l ",:rl baking pancakes at the st. ve. remembered; e ml- t have •.nc ' She turned with a start at sound of fl and at le^ -t kept y e•.n and dry.i re n et - " his timid knock. His empty stomuclt furnished the; „Somethin' t' eat you're wantin'? answer. Sere it's a tramp ye are --an' all wet "If I hadn't lost my money—'• was, all' modals, Go 'way from me kitchen, his second hypothesis, muttered' I Sick at heart, he hurried out of the or I'll set the dove un ye!" through elo c,el teeth. What could have become of the; yard, aware of the sudden commotion ten dollar bill he hrd knotted so care-; in the dining, room, as the apple - fully in the corner of his hantlker-' cheeked girl dihpensed her pancakes chief? IIe had drowsed for an hour; and her information. under a tree by the roadeidc, being' weary with his first dry of steady tramping. When he awoke—if indeed he had alert—the handkerd' of we:s missing from the rocket of his coat. He searched far it vainly, going Leek over utiles of his journey. Reluctant- ly he decided that the money held been stolen while he slept. There was no- thing for it but to go en. Doggedly toiling up the long slope of a hill. he pawed at its ton with an involcnta y exclamation, Below him twinkled the lighte of a tillage. From Rest Rooms For Farm Women. 1 beput up, or two or three empty the steeple of a sof , a bell was a vtwo slices of bread for each person Pieces of paper that the latent tragedy striking the hour. The faint harking !Chat is the volae of a rest room' orange boxes might be put together and broil one slice of bacon. Hove. Iles, fir they tell of ships missing and draped with muslin and made to serve lost, and each telegram has quite it of doors and the distant rattle of in the nearest town or village to the! ready lettuce, tomatoes, and cacunt upwards through- farm women in the neighboring tom- the parpose of holding a library. A here sliced. Put on half the slices a' tragic impe•tunre to sono of the 1iO wagon y ec>'s fleeted t • a n 12 g nice linoleum or congoletlnt on the underwriters who haunt the rump. the mast. ant! es,.e , estimate, It have be the difficult vol large leaf of lettuce, tomatoes, then) r s,•t.0 I'ra; rer?,Ile• fr;>m� °,timate but I have not slightest! floor will add greatly to the attractive- the hae,on and cover with cucumbers; Whenever a ship leaves port she Is The road, deness of the room, and muslin cuttams spoonfulinsured by her owners at Lloyd's the heights, vi brought 'her ^farer into then doubt that cages whoold alt part enjoy and more lettuce. Add a of c evidently i, the i -u fat ,treat, these privileges fee es would rot with on windows should not be omitted. mayonnaise and the second slice of against loss or damage to herself or what was a ,1 . , pThere are womenie organizations in for he passed a erreem.y stere, a drag-'; them for the world. All state they toast and serve at once. ! her cargo; and this risk is' divided gist's window, with its green and have many times been repaid for the every community willing some take care A very goad sweet sandwich le made, among n number of underyvrfters, who lights, d a hotel v: ithdrawn time and mono sent in their stall- of the rest room, though some perms by mashing berries; gooseberries andi insure tier fur certain sums ruining purple e t , ar y p neat organization must stand back of free the street under ai rear of drip-' es cabal!. The country woman, currants should be cooked a bit, sweet-' from £100 to thousand.•. of pounds, in ping trees. Trni_:lining odors of especially the yeoman who has young it to see that it is properly equinned, ening thou and spreading between! return for a premium, freshly baked biscuit and broiling children, knows what it is to get them "ared for, and of continual and de- meat stole feeth into the night. I nicely dressed, all looking spick and 1 ludalrle service to the commclity, f i 027 -pan: f g EXPANDING CANADIAN TRADE Canadian Voyageur under Direction of Canadian National ;Railways, clearing fur tho West 'Indies froin Montreal, July lOtJ, with a cargo of general merchandise. She is scheduled to return with sugar. cut very -thin, and either brown or! y� • .s used A articularly ll�a white bread isp , cum LI dainty and delicious sandwich for a: RETURN refreshment sandwich is made from t tI 1 u0 ltbd 1 cif' cucuntLers. Try to pick there all about the same size. Peel and crisp' r on the ice. Cut smell circles of bread, a little larger than the slices ane! put POSTED AS "MISSING" AND "LOST" , one slice between, covered with a bit AT LLOYD'S. of mayonnaise, If a more substantial sandwich is desired, a supper sandwich for ex- ample, make a potato salad with chop- ped chives, cut large slices of brown bread, spread with butter, put a let- tuce leaf on each slice and fill with the salad. Another sandwich that is popular with the masculine side of t'ie fondly is nn onion sandwich. Cut the onions into very thin slices and let them stand for some time in cold salted water to e::tract some of their strength Spread thin slices of brown "Chamber of Horrors" in London, of Which the World at Large Knows Nothing. In the very heart of the city of Lon- don there Is a "chamber of horror's" which none but the privileged may en- ter, and of which the world at large knows nothing, says u London maga- ! zine. There is nothing at all gruesome in 1 the aspect of this chamber, which is, bread with butter and a thin coating in fact, a small, cheerful room leading of mustard. 'Season with paprika and out of the great hall of Lioyd's, and salt ,1 on the walls of which Is :an array of A vegetable club sandwich mattes a flimsies, yellow and brown. splendid emergency luncheon. Toast; It it: In these innocent -looking slices of white bread when cool. Unusual sandwiches or a garden Party can be made by picking nastur- tium clover or rose blooms and pack - The lad—he seemed scarcely more,: span, ready for a drive of anywhere seen in the light of the big arc -light from six to fifteen miles, to the near - in front of the hotel—°hook his wet est town to do her shopping. The day coat with fingers that trembled slight is hot, the roads are dusty, and when ly, His hat appeared reduced to a' they arrive a reir My Veranda. The old-fashioned house in which I once lived had a long front veranda Huge Gambles. A slip is passed rotund from one un- derwriter to another, and ou the ing them about both the bread and in- formation supplied as to the destina- tion, cargo, and class of the shit, the butter to be used in an air tight tin names of her owners and captain, the h t their destination, the facing the north. But it was little box the night before. Wrap the but- insurance required Ethel its rate, each dripping pulp; after a moment's hesi-, children are all mussed up, and the comfort we derived from it, for eon- ter ,in.e cloth. When the sandwiches underwriter Pitts down on tho slip the ration he thrust At into his pocket,' mother feels tired, blown about and tin ally we had to watch to keep the are made they will have the flavor and rum for which he is prepared to stake glad for onto of his heavy thatch of untidy. How nice it is to know that babies from rolling off of it. odor of the hovers used. Serve on himself responsible in ease of loss or curling hair. I they can go straight to their rest When my third baby came I deter- sandwich plates garnished with the dainnge. "If I only had that money," he. room, have a wash and tidy up gen- mined Co alter that veranda, so that I Hovers. The limit is entirely at the diecre- thought, and pictured himself eating erally, rest a little while, and per would have a safer cool place for the tion of the underwriter, and there have a hot supper at one of the white tablas, haps make a cup of tea, before they little folks to play and a comfortable Oldest Countries Least Advanced. been cases in which a ratan has van - glimpsed through the windows of the! start out to do their shopping and to place for all of us to sit when the brightly lighted dining room. "It wast meet their fn]ends. day's work was done my money, all right," he added de- fiantly. The front door of the hotel, hospi- tably wide, revealed glimpses of e cheerful red -carpeted room. Behind a white railing was a desk, and behind elements for even a comparatively hook high enough on the screen door the desk a ferret -fated young man, no short distance, one appreciates being to keep little fingers from unfasten - older than himself. He glanced up able to get one's hat on straight once ing •]t I could put the three little tots at the sight of the big, sodden figure which confronted him. "Hello!" he said, "what can I do for you?" His tone was doubtful. He had learned not to appraise a would-be patron too hastily. "I --I've been tramping all day in the rain. Somebody stole my money. I want a job and--" "You're a bum," deckled the clerk promptly, "Get out o; Here—quick!" 'Tin no more bum than ,you are," The history of Cecina dates back to thousands .of years before human foot- marks began to appear in Britain. timed X50,000, and even x:100,000 on the safe voyage of a vessel. Even if one is lucky enough to own I had the veranda serest ed in, a When a man thus risks hundreds or an auto, the rest room is none the flower box built at the east end and own about on a end. Clematis 'and honeysuckle climb- Prom Asia civilization spread west- thousands en a stake so full of uncer- less valuable, as even in an auto one a Japanese screen hung at the west wards, travelling right gyrosa d west- Utility as the safety of a ship, which gets pretty well and thence to America. Today Japan, naturally encounters so many dangers, windy (lay, and after battling with the ed up the netting in front. With a instead of absorbing the apathy of her I her voyage is a matter of daily male. nearest neighbor, is touched by the I ty to him until site reaches her dos - westward flow, and is raising her , dilation. ]teat. 1 When elle is overdue the anxiety more and the stray ends of one's hair out there to play with their toys and The majority of domesticated ani- j of the underwriter increases, and each pinned up. It ie also mice to have a know that no harm could tome to mals are Asiatic, in origin, such as' day that sasses without the strip's ar- plaee where one can meet one's friends them. Later I added Along strip of horses, dogs, tattles, donkeys, sheep, I rival at her destination being reported and have a that, instead of having matting, porch pillows, a hammoclt goats, honey bees, chickens, ducks, adds to it. He begins to 500 tho wis- to stand in the street, or in some and a veranda table. this alpha shoes that dunces add of reducing his visit by "hedging;' "Doctor" Deals in Rieks. The '•Doctor" is a men who deals in overdue risks, and for an incretroed premltnr is willing to take the erlgi•aal underwriter's responsibility on his own shoulders, Where the original premium was. say, 25s. per cent., the "dcetnr" demands five guineas- -or, as the risk increases through tate continued non -arrival of the overdue ship, ten, twenty, fifty, or more guineas for eac'n Lill insured. In some oases an underwriter has paid as mucic as seventy and ninety Maims per cent, to reinsure out over- due vessel, which has turned up safe- ly after all, to ]ria cluugin and the "doctor's" great jubilation. It is thus easy to see with what tre- pidation 0 man who has stoked a large sunt on au overdue vessel mast enter the "chamber of horrors," dread- ing day by day to see tho fatal an. nounceure» t. that meet mean a heavy loss, and may mean absolute run to !him. N1tneeg!s Liniment Coxes cearget in Cows store. Undoubtedly women will come The summer that the veranda was etc., and to town much oftener if they know screened in T noticed that our livingtic man had his first kingdom in Asia.. and of this stage the "doctor, as he that when theyhave if they their yet it is strange that the countrh.s I is called at Lloyd's, cem°s on tho room was nearly deserted, I took my vvltit the longest human ltistorles are scene, shopping, they can go to a nice bright sewing out on the front veranda, my today the least advanced. cheery room of their own, where they husband read his paper while he rest -I _ can sit and talk w,ith others or read ed in the hammock; the hired girl! ---e'- r-- a magazine while waiting for the found the screened veranda the cool-, ideal Marriage Age. men to get through with their husi- est place to shell peas and beans .in the I Interesting points regarding matri- contradicted the stranger "I wont ness. This means a long dreary inter- morning and to crochet in the after•-, loony are raised by a clause in the will something to eat and a. place to dry vol spent sitting in tho car or buggy, noon; in the evening guests always! of a Louden mnagnate, Much of his est room, which de- t "Let's the.l ' ',. erty is left in trust for his cthiltt- it" tracts very considerably e Y cool and pleasant here,"`lens life income from their shares to "Oh, you can, eh? Well, all I got Pleasure which the outing has for the When it carne my turn to entertains 1>e paid to their mother until each to say is you got sante nerve. Got a women. Many far women say they the missionary society they voted to child attains the age of twenty-seven, watch? Or a card? Any v'ny to had rather stay at home than stand have the meeting on the big front The maker of the will expressed an identify yourself? Where did p011 around, veranda. When I needed three rooms, eoaruest wish and desire" that no Rest rooms have a variety of uses, for entertaining a large crowd one; child should marry until that age was In moot places they are social centres, summer evening the screened veranda. reached. where the meetings and entertain- made the third and was the most pop -1 ----4— where ments are had, It is very much easier ulm• of the three, Banked with flowers to get a good attendance at a meeting and green branches at both ends, it; 1'tinara'e r.ititm.ent my clothes; I can work to pay for if there is not said: et s art of yelane a, 1 e so l prop �frm an come from?" The door of the dining room opened and a stout man with a red face came out. He wore a white aistcoat, its rotund expanse unduly emphasized by when it is held in a bright comfortable certainly did look inviting. a showy double watch ed to The room where the members are at least My veranda became so popular that odor of hot food appeared to attend sure of warmth in winter. Dishes are his sleek, comfortable person like an the next anomer there was quite an aura. The stranger drew a deep kept on hand, and as a rule there lis epidemic of s'cc•eened-in verandas in breath. He ]tail grown rather white a small stove where a kettle can be our neighborhood. around the mouth. bolted, so that a light touch can he— "What's up, Charley?" demended served with very little trouble, which Sandwiches, Delicious and Dainty, entiTT a„Txee]atecl. the stout man, his sharp eyes begin-- is gr Wing with the wayfarer's muddy Hants The establishment of a rest room is not a very difficult problem. It is and finishing with his shamed face. necessary to secure a room eentralIy "Says he lost his money on the way," drawled the clerk. "He'd like supper and a bed. Guess there's plenty. more where he came from---" "I told you I'd work for what I got," interrupted the stranger, "Why not give me a chance?" "I'll give you just half a minute to get out o' that door," Tho big man emphasized his remark with a violent gesture, "How do 1 know but what W. L, Molrinrton Doan F3, Reetso Victory de roliera of 'Victory Monde vein and coSnits lloco voted on the financial DSO Of the oronto moraine WOWS. W. L. McKINNON & CO. Inger 0 in (fovea moeeat and iiEnalcipal 000iltiaaen )allot,! 1tr 1Caeliit4a St., 'X'oreate 1 r From the Garden. The meet deli: ious of all the sum- mer sandwiches can be. made right located in the town or city. Rent is from the garden, Nothing makes 1a paid fox this, mot by an annual tax, more acceptable lunch 1or a atm mer The next thing to do is to furnish day than a vegetable sandwich, with a the room, This need not be expen- crisp, cool filling and a hit of maysn- sive. For the id-eal rest room let us naise and n glass of iced tea. Cut suggest a couch, sone chairs, inelud-1 smaller 111 fret^;J shuns th's 15 an ing a rocker or two, some benches, a i ideal mrm! I'M' 1h^ porch tea also. few shelves for dishes and a small 1 Lettu-•c :andwithi7ii b t> Inc a long stove. Tho main idea should be to, time been f:.ou,,,c„ 70 rs;,Le them, make the room attractive with the' pick the i"i; feu the night before, wash 1 least possible expenditure, Wonders ,thotou - erel 1 1t, 10 cheeete.inth, can be performed with empty boxes' hag or '. Hi. \,h•r ready to tire 11.' and 50100 pretty inexpensive m05110. will bo •r:' el -p. Vegetable and- For instanoe, an empty apple or wlehes are 1'y 's better made uci; orange box can be transformed into before t r,.: s the drowsing eoftons a washstand, while another would them. If this be out of the g,restion, make a dresser. A looking -glass, they may be opened and the mayor-; needless to say, is a mast essential article, as are also a wash jug and nalse or cooked dressing spread on them. begin. Paper towels cost very little, Another good sandwich Is made and aro nto'q sanitary than tela ord- from ripe tom:itces simply sprinkled lltary kind, Sooty-shdelVta should else with a !alt of salt. The tomatoes are Olives D1 )i tirelea, •r xl AGENTS TO OTT,O Foster OH Burners Was want a else man in every district to demonstrate and sell a proved coal - oil burner. le'IIs any coal -burning ranee. Cheaper than gas or coal, and 11x8.100 pressure tanks or boles In block up, No dirt, no smoke, no orlon A real 5150 0- malrhlk001'LtIYSiOiS MPe, hCo., 110 Balmoral Ave, se }rainiiton, Ont. All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKS Q. J. CLIFF • - TORONTO SEE TRW WS ON BE V• AteIIS A y�44a is 'd teG�l11l EA ,n jellInn 5 A Ury �l9 �FyY1 1 ti L. W,CI,AR1` IMITOSitONT11CR4 i.rwe!f. , ,d,..,., V..;.t TrlP SEtl" v9 O :F D `N CAI!.. °` UD' y':i tR WAR STUDENT WA:;fil'Jns IigailJMlNG • 1.1111:1 1sT a 111: 1], h:: iter of Daniel Collo°, Oxford, elven lie eeecVne Feet,' Regarding Vier end Nluher wdue:Aicn. - !he i l t Iu ir: raitl-5 of England, y , , stud,. t 1,u-1ie 1 and traclliug .tut r:(:c 6r:'atic depleted by ser - rive in thee a 1 % ni 1 t (> ,t er1:!.tent of - 11 nos; dor 111 war, ere grain illlhtg nigh eater _ ,:: and re:minlug normal lit cut'dIng to an e••tiutata node by - the y the haslet of l'illioi ('ollege. Oxford seat approo1ai;etcly 12,000 of its nom to the war or Into the Government ser- vice. Of these 2,194 were hided and 100 are uti.•:inr. 2tott. then 400 won lemers in the war; including sixteen Victoria ('reeees. !ho 115111es'uf Cau1- b^ll:te 1'nivore)ty would 1,'i about trio 51100, the writer e.,tlmates, Effect of War on Attendance. Outlining the eery -lees rendered by Wren of the furry colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, the master writes that owing to the reepurlr•o for war service the student lile:id v. hutted to a thread." !Ile adds that "the i>upot tepee of the response of three two older universi- ties was that 11 filled up the gap be- tween the distraction of the old Re- : gator Army in the lighting of August and September of 1019 and the COM, erg forward of the newly' trained Terrl- torlals 111 the sillang of 1915. This im- mediate rceponee to the call of the rouetry and the preeeet courage and (10V01 1011 01 ten•: o young men were a complete !Old cloclaivc answer to any 'class' jealousy or feeling that the workers were being made to bear the baton. - "\\'e doubted how many of the men would avant to minty b. c lc," continues tho master. "We are finding that Trac- i tiettlly every man who possibly can is applying to ho taken back, at any rate for shortened courses (listing on an average of one and two-thirds years), and already the colleges oro-overfnil:' The general tone and character of these men is described by 11 iloil's master its ron:.rkahly ]belt. There Is quite as notch life and cheerful activi- ty as before the war, and a grecet deal more seriousness of purpose. The master notes not only a marked im- provement in tho strength of cheracter shown by the returning students, but that they even gained intellectually what they had lost to book knowledge, and have more than made up for this loss by the power of coming to the point and by a sense of reality about their work. This Ise concludes, shows that their previous university'. education was far too boyish and abstract in type and "neglected too much the intellectual effect of beginning things at tho prac- tical and concrete end. These return- ed men are not only keener to work but they work with more swiftness and directness than before they went out; for, as one of them said, 'You had to do a lot of thinking in the trenches or else your number was soon un: "" Important Modifications. Oxford has made many concessions to these men which the master re- gards as justified by the showing they now are marring in their studies. Formerly nine terms residence was re- quired to obtain an Oxford degree; now the Wren who served in the army aro excused Train half this roquire- lnent, Those concessions will enable the majority of titer to take' their degree and go into the profession only a year or two later than would have been the case but for the war. "In character and In general intel- lectual development they will be. bet- ter men than they would Have been tender normal conditions, and in intel- lectual equipment of itnowledge hardly If et all inferior," writes the Balliol master. POT Tomorrow' rrow9 s Desert The question of variety in summer desserts never troubles the woman who knows the possibilities of Benson's Corn Starch, the choicest product of the corn. Benson's Corn Starch is equally fine for crisp, delicate•pastries as it is for simple puddings; it is food for cruses and for pie ill Ings to say nothing of Blanc Mango, Custards and Ice Cream. W, l t o Ar '"`'•- CV+lt pry00 The Canada lttercli c,e, Limited - Montrect3 Try one of theeo recipes for r::8 tomorrow's dessert••- ..-=. W T,sr1110nxr.na;�,.1111 c. P1 CC /UAW V iV.VOSZX "Au Revoir, Tommeel" Good -by Tommee Atkins, au revolr MOS cher 11111, Pout -etre you coutme encore a la belle France; Ze'lin 'e finish now ---no more 'e goose- step tt Paris, - N0 more ze kaiser male so granas advance, Wien l0rance apik, "Angleteri•o, be gaeoalc, le jour est arrlveo;' Tefnmee, le beau .sol(lat, costo wiz 'is sn1110, II dit, "Elio, Froggy, woe's tip?" slot Dieu 'o wee sI gal, Il rit toujours, mats vatucus all se w Ile. 70 botlle gay '0 was inepelsablo- 'I'om- mee laugh an' say, It eau a long, long way to Tipperary; An wan 'e was s0 'urtod what zo Fran - (Min say blosso 'Id asst us for a "tag"—lo pauvre chert. An now 'o go to Blighty an 'e say, "Good -by, 1Prancals, It's been a lovely war," 'e moan la f ie•re 11 soaftrit beatmoup---still 'e senile et tons les P'roggies say, "llemer'cloz-cons, Tommie! Vivo l'Angletorre 1 " A Forgetful Urchin, "What is it, sonny?" "I'at tryin" to 'Member what ma wanted me to git in this jug." "What jug?" 'Liao; I forgot the jag,' �1 r,