HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-06-03, Page 6Its super
fialrour satisfies.
Choices.
No Bign can do all there is to do,
Goethe tells us that the master mind
reveals itself In the liMitation of the
scope of its endeavors,: and many per
sons liave.been less successful human
beings because they diffused =their
talents anddid not concentrate on db-
ing one thing, or a rew'things, well.
Fortunate are they who early in life
discern a marked bent which they can
follow toward a clearly visualized goal.
For many,,the choice of a career is, a
perplexity, . and they may not find
themselves in a congenial calling till
they lave tried several things, and per.
haps been dislreartened by failure in
them alh Bet even if we come; latter
many experiments and vicissitudes,: to
ile lice work that'fulfillgour purpose
and engagesour capacities to full ad-
vantage,' the satisfaction is not the,
less keen because It 'was deferred.
Of any calling, men wonder why
others should engage in it. Some
slight circumstance at the beginning
determined the ohuice. Admiral Peary
•- turning over the leaves • of a volume
at a bookstall, found his inspiration to
spend his life iu'the quest of the North
Pole, Robert Browning, from an ex-
abtly similar incident, derived the In-
spiration for his greatest poem. 'flan
men and two careers could not have
been more widely. different. As one
listens to a symphony orchestra et a.
hundred players, one is inclined to ask
why one':virtuoso elected the double
bass for his medium of expression,
another took the oboe and a third the
trornboue or the French horn. - Some -
nines n Clilnese baby"is surrounded
with sword and pen and abacus; he
puts out his band to take -one, of these
things and thereby manifests his In-
clination, it is thought, for the profes-
sion of soldier, scholar or merchant. vestee,of plain color with round cm -
But why did the infant hand take one lar to match, and two plaits either
T = ,;
CA LOA -
in chans and in Jegg tign, Men with
megaplioncl and ' -a queer a oriuneiit
of screen and instruments tint 'coked
• w to hisstartled eyes Mtn gating guns..
I As his horse ,rearm and Miniied•
to a stop, he saiV the wagon that
•♦
PE
6
�.
he hada been so madly chasing,' i<,lyyu
�� o n down end over end over a steep bank
o M J-'� leaciitig to a 'swift 'flowing !)rook
hundred feat is:otr - a.eaping, fall
ing, sliding and rolling, ha fetched ,
up at the bottom on his 'head beside
what .had been: a wason a moment
ago. Beside it was the`.r>ti11 form of
Burgess,
As he rigt'fted himself and sat: up
rubbing his eyes to get the sand out
of them, a'voice ordered;
"Hold it. Steady now. Look over
at your man. That's fine, Cut."
For an instant Dan thought he had
gone out of his head. He had'heard
those words before somewhere,or
words like then And. euro enough
there was a camera pointed squarely
at him and a anan in puttees corning
over to assist him.
"Gee, that's the greatest flap I ever
.saw in my life, and every bit of it
right in the camera.Worth a mil-
lion dollars •,of. this firm's money:
Sammy couldn't have = made it as
onto the track both to see and coil realistic in a million years. How did
gratulate Malloy, and also to see what you,two happen to fall into the plc -
the policemen' were 'doing with him, tore so opportunely anyway, and who
she expressed the futility: of making are you? There's a job waiting in
then understand from the' bottom of Hollywoodre Sora guy like you. Hope
luckto lava to acres the well of humanity where she stood, you.'ie- not- hurt," he rattled on. as
inch. byby an !eloquent gesture. Regan saw Dan sat there stupefied. '
bled for victory` Gradually, ne at once; what 'she wanted. Picking . "1 used to be an• actor once, but
inch he had cut down the lend of tree her up bodily,' he placed' her on the
bays. He had run the heads off. theI wasn't acting this time. I was after
railing 'of the fence about.the track, a murderer and I got him. His horse
where she could look down, not up at must have got scared of the refiec-
the audience W which .. she was to tors." '
make a very momentous statement. Then he realized that his own busi-
By RAYMOND L. SCHBOCK and PAUL GUL-ICK.
_
Chap. XVIII, -(Continued):' suis! Dan, with the wisp 'of a smile:
"`Damnation, how' that boy can ride," Marie La Farge had not seen this
exclaimed- IIariress. "Hopp he wins •atlecting scene. Otherwise she might
this race. It will;be a feather in 1110 have had, spine misgiving as to the
cap airier the start lie got. - And, By 'status of Dan's feeling for her. But
Jiiiriny, 1, think he is going to win, now she came up intent ,on te'.ling
too. There's a lot of speed"•stili hi Malloy, the glad news that Neenah
that team ant Malloy ainit lectin' it had given her. She, too, was sur -
all out, yeti" '" • .prised . at, seeing' the constables ' in
"Too bad we got to arrest hinr, of-, charge of her sweetheart, surprised
ter what' he is doing for Regan and but undismayed. She had the. little
what Miss La Paige ,aid, for hint, T maid by the hand. '.
can't hardly think he's guilty.'* "Neenah, tell' them what foal told
"We ain't got no right to think about tne," she ordered.
•
that. -Gee, did you; see that? Passed As Neenah, scarcely five feet tall,
that secontl team on the back stretch looked up at the tall officers, and
like they teas ` staudin' still. Guess hemmed in as she was on every 'side
they are all run out, And I mind what by tho crowd that had conic tushing
he did for me. ,Saved my life Inc• buf-
falo stampede and brought me back.
to the ranch at the Halt of his lite and
-liberty. 'I ain't thanked him far that
yet. But Orders is orders and its.just
myt him."
And now Dan was making Ills great
second Leant- and they were : atilt floun-
dering in £he straight away. They
would have to fight it out with the
other team for third place,,, Dan was
right on the heels of -the flying bays.
LITTLE GIRLS WILL WEAR THE
CAPE `:COAT
Nowadays, tate well-dressed child's
costume is. apt. to be a miniature
edition of her mother's. For it is
considered chic for mother and,small
daughter to present the same silhou-
ette. Of course the cape coat, so im-
portant for grown-up's, is a charming
fashion for childhood too. The small
model pictured here is fashioned on -
plain straight lines, its single -breast -
.ed,
.ed, with a collar that can be but-
toned close up to:. the neck, and' a,
cape that is finished Separately and
tacked to the coat under :the collar.
By no means lacking in style tend-
encies is the little pantie'dress worn
beneath, this coat, and developed in
printed challis.- There is a set-in
direction rather than another?
The best thing education can accom-
plieh for the young, or for their elders
curb are not willing to cease learning,
is to guide the principles of choide.
By these the at'ni and. the value"of a
lifetime are determined.
Random. Remarks.
Moat husbands and wives -are hap.
pier with each other than they suspect.
-Mr. A. (3. Gardiner.
The man who render, the greatest
service to his day and generation is
the man who makes people laugh.-
Mr, Philip Snowden, .P.
One woman is worth five men, and
it le slglt time that men knew in-
ner. W. Younger,
I have only been to a beauty parlor
once, and their they told Inc they could
do nothing with me unless they skin-
ned the. I fled. -Priscilla Countess
Anttesley. - ---
Do not' let your 'pleasure spoil an-
other's health -and leisure.-The
of York.
We don't fear when we emigrate.
We look upon the fresh conditions be-
fore us with interest and not with ap-
prehension, That is. haw I" wooed urge
you to look forward , to death. --Sir
Oliver Lodge. •
Love at first sight is really a die -
ease. -Dr., J. R. Rees.
Life la the only thing that matters.
- And the only real crime is not to live it
to the full. -Mr. W= B. Maxwell, '
Snobbishness is a fertile cause ,of•
class hatred, ---Sir Robert Baden-
Powell.
A great many women are apt to for-
get that housekeeping means husband--Na11, M.P. •
Solite of the. hest things in life begin
as privileges and become necessities.
--Dr.-J. B. Bailie,. •
A man's morality can only be judged
in' relation to his conduct towards his
neighbor. -Lord Mayor of Leeds.
'rho only'difference between rates
- and taxes is alt that rates are•pald im
sorrow and all taxes are pale in anger'.
,Lord Eustace Percy,
is not the length of lite that le
important. What does matter is that
it should.be bappy and useful, - Sir
Edward Clarke, 1-(.0,
Would the Palominos !rave' -the stam-
ina;
to stick? : They had been respon-
sive to every demand So_far. But they
hall made up forty extra. yards and
Dan had been forced to make most of
his race in the -middle of the track 1n -
stead of on the pole where Moutons
team had lieeu all the way. into custody, and impelled by the de -
Dan had passed the seeoftd team hi sire of Nellie to see the fun, had
tiosi to take advantage of the tail post- comm dowro to the track with- about
tion ashe rounded the back turn, _Now a thousand other curiosity seekers..
Iii: Into the into the bath. stretch again But he had_made the worst. mistake
out into middle of the track sof his life. The sight of the wrath
as he �traigotened au far the dash to
wrath -
the wire. Gathering up the lines full little Neenah, perched up there
tighter he -crowded still farther for- on the fence, filled him with misgiv-
ward over ,the wither of his flying
team. The splendid team caught his
excitement Far down the stretch
hate were waving and men and women
were jumping up anti down on their
seats or their neighbors seats In their
excitement. The. .Palominos. -were.
Creeping up, they were surely creeping
up. Now their --noses were at the flanks
of the bays.:•No-the shoulders. ' Hur• gess. ' The policemen• jumped up to
ray, they were on even terms fcr-the get a better took, and as they let go skirt such as-" negro washerwomen
first time in the race.. But the bays of him, Dan made a break in the wear to do laundry In aired a irandker-
had pltenty of grit and they were not same direction as Neenah had taken, chief such as no Roman ever wore to
ail in yet.- By` a last mad. spurt they He cleared. the fence at a. bound. a bear baiting, was occupying all of
forged' ahead again. Following Neenah closely he: saw a her attention: 'Harkieess, seeing the urtes. How, then. were the children.,heads: But the dunce was, a hundred
The din. was terrific. Regan was figure that he recognized by.his futility of odicial announcement just
Al..the one at whom he at that time, turned away with a quiet taught their letters 'or initiated Into �1 years ago; a feature of every school.
pounding Morton with tuts i gaud peculiar run a the oreh smile, Not so the ubiquitous movie
Berta was •alternmtely jumping on the had shot at back there' on p
rail and -hugging her father, Seventy of the La ,Fargo ranch- -director. He tapped. the young 'man.
thousand people were acting like tuna. • Burgess stood not on the order of 011 the elioultier. ,teed "I'd like from a "Horn Boole" What was this
tics in their excitement. Never so his going. Neither did he tape the "Say,,Kid, he annou
all the histo- of the 1 ' r trouble to saygood-bye to' to take you back to Hollywood with me now -forgotten thing? Is there to -day
cross a.:rSce in Y time .
Stampede., poli 'the Palo- I r ' ' e just went. Tearing to play 1n \Vegteius. Cast youact?" anyone, familiar with: the appearance
Calgary Stamped W lhrou e ) „hot -n -book?-- None; ColIectora
memos be able to make up the hall through the crowd he passed out of'Can he act?" said Regaif with scorn of a
u • •.- had ained?.I dock on the dead In his voice, "San', that chap just prize tlieni, for tbeyare extremely rare
length that, the bays. gained?, the gate of the pad
be aT a to maintain 'a Wagon he hurl- closed a run o[ three hundred and though ghee they".:.were very common:
Would the hays- >} run. Jumping into g
the gallant spurt to the wire?
side of :the front and back. The
sleeves inay be: long or short, .and
the -Bloomers are gathered into bands
at the knees. The coat, No. 1227, is
in sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. Size
8 requires 21 yards 54 -inch ma-
teriel;lining 81 yards 36 -inch. The
dress, No. 123l, is in sizes 2, 4, 6
and 8 years. Size 8 requites '39
yards 36 -inch material for dress with
bloomers. Price. 20 cents each pat-
tern.
Our Fashion Book, illustrating the
newest and most practical styles, will
be of interest to every hone dress-
maker. Price of the book 10 cents
the copy.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. .
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving'number and sizo of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in
tramps or coin (coin preferred; 'wrap
it. carefully). for each number, and
address your order to Pattern )epte
Wilson Publishing Co,, 73 West Ade
!aide St., Toronto. Patterns sent -by
return mail.
His Neighbors.
As she caught. her balance ahs looked mess was not finished. Turning to
for a moment over. the treads of the the figure that had preceded 'hers
crowd, Her beady black eyes grew down the step incline he straightened
wide with astonishment. Then they out the figure of Burgess. As he did
snapped with sudden anger. so a'shmit rang out from the road
She was looking directly into the above.
face of Fred Burgess• ovIave you got him, Dan? I'm coin-
Burgess, immensely relieved by the ing down."
And ,these on the bank of the little
sight of the constables taldng Malloy
brook, in the presence of the two
policemen and Dan Malloy, who had
hunted him a year, and the interested
company of actors, camera men and
movie directors, Burgess tirade his
Confession. -
Leaving him there in the care of
ing, and before Callahan, Harkness and Dan Malley
°limbed the bank to the road above.
Neenah had shouted:just as tin auto with Regan and Marie
Le targe rolled up and stopped.
"Malloy is all clear, Miss La Purge..
Burgess confessed everything"
But Marie -wasn't even Listening to
hien. A young man in striped trous-
ers such as one wears with a Prince
Albert suit,, white sneaks such as one
wears at tennis, a' yellow poker dot
Shakespeare's contemporaries and
immediate successors lookedupon him
aa• an unlearned poet with remarkable
natural gifts. Ben Jonson was set
over against him as the. pest' of art,
preferred before Shakespeare by men
of learning and Judgment. This point-
will
oin
will be treated more fully farther on.
John Munro thinks that the first clear
reference to Shakespeare as an un-
tutored natural gonius.1s the passage
in Milton's L'Ailegro, probably written
about 1682; :
Then 'to the well -trod stage anon,
it Jonson'a'learned sock, be on,
Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's
child,
Warble his native wood -notes wild.
A soft answer turned away wrath;
but�grlevotis words stir up anger; The
tongue of the'wise useth •,knowledge
aright; but the'mouth of too:s poureth
oat foolishness. -Proverbs of; Solomon:
•
It ixtakes
them smile--
it's
miley
it's -surer
worth while.
After
every meal
ISSUE Nr 22 '2
he could move,
"Ther he is, the man wet keel La
Farge. Fred Burgess. 1 see heem
on porch. Nowrl tell, I, Neenah!
Malloy no keel nobody."
• The- accusation was dramatic.
Neenah, like an avenging fury, hurl-
ed herself from the fence toward Bur-
Housewife:
ur-
Housewi fer ,s.The clothes are : '1ovel3 dais' week
Laundress: -
"Yes Ma'ant,
aundress:-"Yes•Ma'an2,5 P-tn using Sunlight Soaps*
G��yl"
-
XPER.T' laundresses-
Ld delight in using Sun-
light li ht Soa . "
�a
They know it is all -pure ../Wer. Experience
sats
soap that it worts sat'
I began using. Sun-
light urally, therefore safely. Soap .because of
the $5,600 Guarantee
of Purity. .I continue
to
use it because it
d
Des such wonderful
work."
Thismeans gloriously
clothes that - stay
cleanY
new much `longer.
Mads by.
/Lever Brothers Limited
Toronto
Sold Everywhere
• 552 a
uslanssmssznossualialmassava
_....-.-
imiconlllll 11 IIIIIII@11111111I:l1il
SCHOOLS WITHOUT BOOKS
it.. no longer sufficient, In the Bora-hooka"are now ' so rare that
of to -day, to have acquired the "three high prices are. given by collectors for
R's" -reading, writing aud:'rlthmetic- genuine 'specimens- 'When, in 1877,
I -
The simple old'dsine's school of a hun- [the Caxton- Exhibition of printing an
died years ago seems never 'to have tiquities was held, only four specimens
Veen possible. of horn -books were'sltown, and at an-
4 n
1
Another.' great difference is in the other exhibition hall in 183,. only
school equipment. In the old days pen, eight.
boards and chalk were unheardnT2teare
nodunces to -day ay
put luteto!nk and paper were 'scarce Ulack
even slates and elatepencl1e were lux -
et, eeti :corners
ux•trtces of the school rooms, with tall
'paper caps, talcs sugar leavae an their
tIre mysteries of even the. slinplestf Always there was the dullard, , the
snots? stupid one, who could not receive in -
At the earifest psorlool they learnt stivetlon.
But why "dwbce?" How did the
word originate? It was originaily tits
naive of a man; one John Scot, or
"Scotus," known in his day no "Dune
Scottie," because he came from the lit
tie town of Duns, in the• sourer. of Seel-
land..
cotlead,. He flourJshed about 1206-1303,
stxty'flve n1 lit playing the• role of ,A horn -book consisted' of a fiat piece
Calling on all his horseurauisliip, urg-
ing leis team with voice, and reit, Dan
fairly 'lifted the clay benks :over the
!lne-a I -
le
ahead of the bays. e
had won.
As he slower! up at the far turn, and
jumped down into the arms of the
oheering Bar 0 cowboys,. Dan saw
Marie, her face. wreathed in smiles and
love, trying to force her way tlirbngbw,
the crowd to bim. to also satwo
red -coated figures eoniitg from the
il ndifficult'
other direction. They had difficul
In 'making piagreae in tete -crowd. ft the coreering wagon. But this horse Great aged pine 'trees, which .for
opened up tot em; As UO stunk into was no mad house. lie could -not gain years have. formed the parks around
that bed of upraised hands and, faces, on the desperate Burgess. Mile after, the Imperial tombs of the 11Ianchu'ent-
Dan felt a hand ou Itis shoulder.
t- "Dan Malloy, yon ale under arrest."
CHAPTER XVIX.
The Aftermath•
ed the occupants out on to the ground,
gathered up ge floes andth
struck the Chuck Jones in. a play that .nobody in of wood of about one-eighth of an inch and was by no mems a stupid follow:
with the whip. Calgary Will ever forget to his dying talfinche and x some three .anti 'a Chiefly he wits a theological disputant
horse i savage blow P day." !tall inches to, six melees in length, and at tin cut, wito a andtheological
entirely apposed
tion P t out Of the gate of ie wasa Whitaker" exclaimed the di- about two-thirds of these measure- the then new ways of opposed
aft Panic as thoughdeN as.. was "Gee,
asindeed d !L was. blase startled for once out of his with In breadth, It was provided wheel were the beginnings of the nal,/
oiler him, t ec Dan bias's mariner', ":That was some per- with asllandlo, by which the child" held
Seeing his man escaping,learning.
careless! left by
forma:ace• And I though Calgary was it. On this fiat pisco of wood, cpm His followers were known as "rho
jumped on'a"horse y tha one-week stand at moat. 'What play monly oak, was placed a printed piece .
his rider Reside the gate and cutDuus men," and as the . new ways•
that' he took the gate was that, Mister?" of paper, generally bearing the alpha• gained ground and the old lost favor
corner so fine "Spuds," pet and -ills Lord's Prayer, apd some•
with him, hurli-- three men who had Dims Scotus and those of its way of
t 's •a observation post ('Che End)._ t h 1 well g
b The kept to position and
.•-�— and were regarded as gra
Down itis road he flew. after Sacred Trees Felled. thin transparent of horn That is . the pedigree Legs. Dowt under a p
rotes the numerals as thinking were treated with contempt
been
using r a n ie Paper was ignoramuses.
into a struggling pile of arms and • gtiarded from tnjusry by being placed i res' of the word
Mango is undoubtedly right in think-
ing it "probable that almost all of
Shakespeare'si contemporaries failed
to appreciate .the high character. of
his art, and to value him, for it."
Professor Schncking suggests two
reasons whieh ma'' partly explain the
failutee of 'Shakespeare's contempor-
aries tri appreciate his greatness: The
that of .these Is the fact that many: df
his finest plays were based upon pre.
viotisly existing'piSces. These dramas
Wete thonflht of as adaptations, not as
eriginal.produetions, "Ham-
let"`was certainly basedupontele-pre-
Shalses'pearean "Hammlet," .which. has
beet lost; and the case of "Romeo and.
Juliet". is"prohably similar. _ 'It may
well -be that Shakespeare's own age
looked upon other of his dramas In the
same way; for example, we'kriow'that
mi:e he covered holding his own, bill perors, are -now being cut down and
unable to close the gap between them, sold as lumber to enrich the Chinese
on the road into the hills., militarists near Peking. _.. To ensure
Suddenly, as he dashed around a the safe delivery of the logs, the carte
slurp turn in •the road, he plunged bearing' them into Peking have been
„dunce.' .
Secured by a brass edging', Hence >
"born book." In the older kind, the The :donees of the sehoole a century
type used was of the Gothic. "black- ago would have spoiled Innen paper
letter" Old hnglish sort.. The earliest and spilled much inks, but for the fact
a children then were taught to
known born -book dates bath to about
1450.
that
the letters of the alphabet on the
wish the growling use of paper and sand -table.
!Print, chap -books and small printers, Sand -tables are now also very rare,
lata banginto as motley a crew as guarded by soldiers, The lumber is to the vogue of the horn -book declined; They were simple contrtvatioes, con-
st. close ryas the finish, that many s r on the Canadian great demand, and shop after shop is
in the stands were undecided who - ever were .et loose and it went entirely out of use at the elating of a long, plain board, with a
Overdressed cowboys with. displaying barge legs from the former- opening of the nineteenth century. The raised edge. • This was su-ppo:rLed,
had won, until the 'uncer announce- highway.
.shirts and too deep:•y fringed ly sacred trees, cool- a century or two last order for a stock of these. articles table -high, by trestles. Tho board was
meet, make thatd orso announcer unable- chaps, ,in short skirts, hien old,
that for some moments ow-' chaps, Ladieswas given by a' firm of s•tatloners in covered with fine sand, on which, with
to .
ing to the cheering o' tose w i
f h 1
1799; and AS the then old-fashioned their fin:gers, the children formed the
o
thought then team had won. But • ,�• - �, ..,, things proved unsalable, the unwanted letters. 'Phe sand -was then prepare
d
.�r�- ,i• � '
,:. stook was destroyed some years Taker: � far the"next lesson with a
"smoother,"
:Regan. was almost opposite- the: --��' "� >�s(in,.a � : '�� �y'��� �• � f _„ ;
,�•,a s _' � a�w '` "� `ail
several plays !upon Julius Caetiar had
preceded that of. Shalcospea re.
The first -notice of.the-adnit Shake-
speare that has 'come, crown to . us is
the complaint of ]rim nude by Robert
Greene '10-•soms fellow -Writers as "an
upstart crow . beautified, with our
feathers." It 'is asserted that Shrike
epeare in his own ray. 'was never
spoken of tis an. origlt-al :writer; John-
son and Beanmon.1 anti ZeletCL+e't'were
praised for their originality. -Albert
kl. •'pelmas, in "Falstaff" and Other
Shakespearean Topics,
Sentence Sermons,
•Tbs. !honey ,a'Mass Saves --13y sept
helping tllose-iri'dlstress "aver.inalcee•
hini really happy,
---At the ,expense of his` help -never
builds 0 prosperous besiness. s
-At the cost of horror never erects no crowd°'parted: to let e. slight
u truthful monnmesst; figure 'clad in flowered' t ]-through.'
-By staying out of school is always Alberta made a flying !sale and threw"
a poor investment. her terms around -bait's neck.
- - By starving his soul `is never en- ing herself up to Isis bent load; She' DUTCH BRINCESS• STUDIES LAW
joyed, : gave hale a rysounding kiss. >rineeu5 Jnlfanti• of I-Ioaatid, itho-receutty: co Lehratecl•blot Pith liul,i�i
•. ) t.r isles ol`ehartieter tlrt "Ch AIZ Ley, arid to th'riic. we e is stlitd iiPo' law 11.. ,.
- Is,tl.f e a)
the inonef he suras. i.: } ': l:.• Under rite diracl.ian of mother; Qite<ni \Nilhc.lmma, elle Y
t 3 Y
Sometimes costs too onus,.
jildga's stand. He and Morton knew
wlio-had won. With a last bang on
the head, Regan turned to the man
who had urged him into this heart-
breaking giunble. It was the first
time he had addressed him since the
angry speech he had made in answer
to the charge of welcher.'
Morton was facing him and as he
stood, one step below Regan, Tie had
nowordsto say, no congtuttiliitiens,
only black looks, Taking a cigar from
his pocket, Regan reached out and to
.Morton's astonishment he grasped his
jaw and thrust the cigar deep into
"Here, this ,is what you won,'' Mor-
ton. It's a jiui•ning shame; too."
Tii:'fury, Moi!gan grabbed the cigar.'
and .hur:'ecl" it to the floor. Then he
ground it -savagely under his heel.
But Regan ,had hurried, away to: the`
traolt tb `congratulate; and thank Mal-
ley.
To his astonishment her found him
between the two policemen. ",'Unde-
terred, he pushed and pulled his way
through the crust- tohis side. 'Grasp-
ing Isis ,handl, he shook it again and
again.
"Malloy, I.ori+e everything to you.
I just don't know lsdw to thank you-
That„was a. wonderful tide. 1':l say
you know something , about horses.
No `one in the world-eoultl have done
what you did today with those Polo
winos. Now what can.I do lor'you?”
"Nothin'; I guess," said 'Malloy slid-
'"lint
d-' l'nr Dan Malloy all right and
t in admittiti' it. But I, didn't do what
they say I done."
Phrases That Puzzle Us.
Many whb sea Hamlet played, and
heard.,Opliella say to the Queen, Ham-
let's mother, "You may wear ma( with
tt difference," must have been myeti
Sled as to ]ler meaning, although the
poignancy of the mad act causes the
inlncl•:to pass it by al .one of Shake••
speau'e`s-inexplicable problems. ,
Yet it is not inexplicable. :In herald-
ry "dii'fenencos," ` Or "merits, of cad:-
ency," indicate the various branches°of
a family_ During the Lifetime of. lien
fattier, the oldest son bears' a label,
the second a crescent, the third a mitt.
let, the fourth a• cuat'tlet the fifth an
annulet, tlo. sixh'.n' fleut•-i1e-l15, -the
Seventh a. rose the;eighth a' cross -mo -
line, the ninth a. double [iutitre-foil. -,•
-
Opltelia says both she and the Qiteeh
are to wear. rue, herself as ' the at.
danced bride ofahe"oldest son of the
late Icing,: but the Queen hwith a "d,if
fereitce," indicative at the fact that,
although she was Hamlet's, mother,
her status was that of her present hus-
band Clauditisi, the cadet.. branch of
the family,
There' . is. all that in the simple
phrase, and as much In lsundt•eds of'
similar ,phrases scattered through
Shakespeare's plays.
,e7• S 5'le , Setl , e crie(.
these gen.:c sn s still do," ilocording to reports, she is not sure ti sit she will reign as geeet>
•
First 'Arbutus.
Pink, meal!, and •punctual.
Aromatic, low,
Covert iu Amil,
(Sandhi in allay,,,
Dear to the mass,
Keown by: the tarot!,
Next to th,e'robin
eves0hnMEI n soul..
Bpld little beauty,
• 13etleelce(1 with (.tree,
\ail0 0 foroilea rs
An thin•
A Ly.,;.:.,,
Amenities. -
I Imre .the little valley lights that tease
The sombre night and- blithely signal
me
From. Jicmee of noigilbror.folk. Assur-
ingly'
They tell of friends rnd warm luarts'
sympathies,
Of happy,younglings, gathered by the
Eire,
And simple joys that meet the heart's
desire.
Brightly,, as spoken words upon the
breeze,
Their message gleams across .t -he
spaces free
Or, through the dark tines' ',moving
tapestry:
"Lo, here are sweet amenities,
Home -shelter dear, and pleasant
peace!"'
--Altar Booth Dunn,
•
The "Blues' 'a Habit.
if you have fits of depression, some-
times called "blues," you are to blame.
Feoiing'blue is a habit, a psychological
sharp tells its, Blues: are caused by
deinking the wrong way.. Nearly al -
Wags they, `are due 16 hi•oodtng over
'remote possibilities Ifow persons are
lithe in the Pace of an lmmedilato def•
acuity' 'Ono way of thinking ie, "It
will' soon be all right " The Mae way
s 'ill's bound to get worse." 11 is al-
most. impossible For a busy person to. i
hi.bltie, Posib1y' that suggeetss the
-FLEE
•i-A'bnttoir Co.,.itraited
1-t$r.n
r 5i;ncallant Are., Toft'sntn