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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-01-21, Page 3For ' the s a c� Girls HOW BETSY WAS LOST. BY LUCY RANDALL COMFORT. "Is our little Betsey here?" said frightened, and. Mr. Hathaway went in -Mr. Hathaway, putting his ` cold- ono direction,, and Peter, the hired' purpled nose into the door of the man, in. another, and Mrs. Locke, of Chase farm house.: the mill,came to stay with the terri F fvas a bitter cold night in De- fied mother until news, either good or cemhtr, with snow Iying deep on the bad, should arrive of the lost child. ground, a frozen wind howling' "The worst of it . all is," said Mr, through the forest and a fire built as Hathaway, "that she may have stray-. high as they could pile the logs on ed off into the wgods and lost her way. the old iron fire -dogs. And she's such a little mite of a thing. And the farmer and his wife were -and the snow so deep, and drifted roasting apples and cracking nuts on all about by the wind -and if she the hearth w it_h the children, while a should drop down anywhere for a pitcher of : cold, sparkling cider and a minute to rest, there's that dreadful plate of home-made .gingerbread was drowsinessthat comes with cold. And on the table. I shall never see my poor little der - Charley and little Bell sat side by ling again!" side on the big settee, in the very deep- "Keep up a brave heart; Neighbor est angle of the chimney, where, by Hathaway,," said Mr. Chase, although looking straight up, they could see there were tears in his own eyes.. the stars shining in the sky overhead, "Never despair. We'll find the little and watch the sparksgo careening Pass yet, God willing." madly up the chimney. "And Hunter' Gabriel was telling, Johnny was on his knees, with the only last week, of a savage bear that hammer, cracking away at the butter was Lurking, somewhere among the nuts and hihkety-nuts; and Rosa was Rattlesnake Rocks!" said Mr: Hath reading by the light of the shaded away, with a troubled voice. "And lamp. every one knows how daring a bear HEAR YE! ONLY WOMAN --TOWN CRIER • - Min. Mary Maker, of Chertsey, the only woruan crier in the British Is+lers, Soho took over the ,position wdsen, her husband joined the army in 1914. Since then eb'o has filled the duties with marked abiilty, leading the variousproeeenedons--asud taking Dart in other funotions. Several times she leas resigned,; bit continues' to carry an. "And suppose little Betsey should lot there, also 1" he exclaimed, gasping for breath. But the gun went off with a pro- digious report,' which echoed among the hil•-1s- and rocks. The trigger had struck against a branch of a tree, thus "Your. little Betsey? said Mr. will become when there is snow on the producing the very signal upon which Chase, the farmer. "No; certainly not! ground." they had agreed in case little Betsey Colne in and warm yourself, Mr. Hath- They tried to comfort the poor, should be found alive and well. And away. Isn't she over at her grand- panic-stricken father as best they before -the echoes had ceased to boom "Yon owe me a shilling, father's?" 'could, but to no avail, back and forth there came the sound Say'the belle of Great Billing."No, she isn't," said Mr, Hathaway, The gountry thereabouts was wild of a shrill, childish cry, inside: When will you pay me? With a perturbed face. "She went" and desolate, with here and there a "Daddyl'Daddy!" Say the bells of Middleton Cheney. away at three o'clock, and her mother farmhouse, or a little 'settlement of And then.. also, there was a low, When I am able, supposed she was only going to the buildings, and wide, wild stretches of muffled sound, like the growling of Say the balls of Duustabie. saw -mill, to play with Minnie Locke. forests around, where foxes and wolves some animal. That will never be, But we've seem 'nor heard nothing of crept about, panthers howled at night, It was only for a short distance that Say he bells of Coventry. her since, and nobody seems to know and bears were shot every little while. it was so narrow, and then it became Oh, yes, it will, • where she is. No, Mr. Chase-thank'ee And if one of these savage area -a rocky chamber of considerable size, Says Northampton Great Bell. kindly all the same -but I couldn't sit tures were to encounter little Betsey, with its uneven floor strewn with dry White bread and sop, down nor rest until I know where my making her bewildered way through bones, and two young cubs crouching Says the bells of Iiiugsthorpe. little gal is this frezing winter night." the woods! Oh, it made Mr. Hath- fn the corner, while, little Betsey was Trundle aiantern, "You don't think she's lost?" said away's blood curdle to think of what coiled up between them, her yellow Say the bells of Narihauipton. Mrs. Chase, involuntarily shuddering would be her fate! curls mingling with the reddish -brown Roast beef and niareluneifows, 'as she clasped little Bell closer in her The neighbors separated into little of the}r fur. Say the bells of All Hallows, axing.. - bands, each taking some particular "Little Betseyl" cried' Mr. Hath. ath Pancakes and e Mr. Chase got up. route, with lanterns and sticks, to away, in a breathless pause. "How on say the bells oPfrittSt.rs, Peter's. "Wife, where's my big, shaggy over- search for the lost child; and Farmer earth came you here?" Roast beef and boiled, coat?" said he. "I'm not going to sit Chase went with Mr. Hathaway into "It was so cold and dark," said little Say the boils of St. Giles, here warming my feet at the ,fire when the "Rattlesnake Woods," so called Betsey, simply; "and I crawled in to The whole alphabet, or a portion of my -neighbor's little one is in danger from the fact that years ago those get warm, and I hugged up against it, is not infrequently met' with lie a of freezing to death. Get me the fan- venomous reptiles made their nests the dear little bearies, and have all bell mscifption form flue fourteenth tern, Johnny." '• '" among the wild masses of rocks which been asleep together. Daddy, can't I 'or SYteenth tb the seventeenth eea- "Father!" cried Johnny, "can't I go were piled together in fantastic shapes take one of 'em home with me?" tury, The letters are often in reversed and look for little Betsey, too?" in these woods. • i, Mr. -Hathaway, as can easily be order or otherwiee misplaced. En - For Mrs. Hathaway's "little Bet- It was . a lonely place, upon the imagined, lost no time' in rescuing his caustic tiles• with the alphabet are also Hey"' was a universal favorite in the side of a mountain, where people sel' little fair-haired darling out of the ".found, and even a christening bowl. neighborhood. dom cared to go, but it could be reach- hideous cavern, with its strange cora- Among other places where alphabet A curly headed, blue•eyed little elf ed by a footpath from the mill, and panionship of wild beasts, who were, belle are found may be mentioned of four years, who was always beg- Mr. Hathaway knew that little Betsey , luckily, too young to harm the confid- Bemerron, wilts; Patrington, York; ging for fairy -stories, ginger -cookie's had always longed to stray into these Ing child who had' invaded. their Leighton-Broomswotlld, Herta, which and flowers, who wandered up and wildernesses and look into the myster-' haunt; and, as they carried her down has three alphabet bells. -Walter Clif down in summer -time, with her sur.- ious caverns among the rocks:, 1 the mountain -side, wrapped in the for bonnet hanging down her back, and "Perhaps there are fairies living 1 shawls which Farmer Chase had rode down hill on the boys' sleds in there," idttl'e Betsey had said, solemn:. brought,. they met Hunter Gabriel winter, with a fur -edged heed tied ly; "or deal• little squirrels or rac- sliding over the snow, with something tight around her blooming face=little coons. I should like a raccoon to thrown over his shoulder. ' Betsey was everybody's pet. ' ' make a pet of." Said he: She had a little difference of opin- Before they had ono very far they' " ve ou found your child?" g Ha y ion with her mother that afternoon, it came td the merles-oftiny footsteps, - "yes: -yes l" they both answered, seemed.: She had been sitting up at obliterated here and there by the drift- joyfully. the table, eating bread and butter and ing snow which had piled itself over T So have I found something," said apple -jelly. :them. With'a cry of joy they follow- her displaying the head and claws o4 "Me want some mord jelly, mother, ed up the clue, which, failing them a huge wi}d, animal. "1 found this, said Betsey, at last. - I ever and anon, was still pretty'steq'dy,• bar on Rocky Peale, and I've klited "You have had enough,l..' said Mrs. curving. its sway here ' and there; n • '. her. Hathaway. ' around the trunks of.huge. trees, end It was the very she -bear in whose "Me will have some more!" said over piles of jagged rocks, until sad- den little Betsey had sought refuge, Betsey. bMack it stopped at the aperture' i of a .den it it' }Cad not been for Hunter "No, rry dear, you will not,"'said• black and yawning aperture in the Gabriel's trusty knife, little Betsey', ti the mother, who sometimes found.it rocks, where a little bit of Betsey', bones would soon have mingled with . necessary to govern the little wilful scarlet hood fluttered on: a 'brambly, the•rest that strewed the cavern floor. creature with a firm yet gentle hand. , Iow-growing bush,' ' "Then me'Il run away!" said'Edson-. The two men: stopped and looked: at defiantly. leach other,.with pale faces. To a ihLsd. Dirs. Hathawaysmiled n little atl "She is, there," said Mr. Hathaway, could staya child my son, Ifyouc ud , the threat.' Betsey often "rat. away,"1 hoarsely. "Give me the lantern. I And grow no more till life le done, i• but she had never yet gone farther will follow her."' Joft wiways be a little lad, than the steam sawmill at the foot'of I "Stop," said F'ariner Chase,• the Should you be sorry or be glad? the hie, where little Minnie Locke, a opening is so low and narrow that you chid of her own age,; had a whole cannot pass." • , : With scorn you toss the thoughtawaY; colony of dolls, made out of corn -cobs ) "Wherever my Little one has gone,".you mean to be a man some day. dressed ug and wooden Monks, with exclaimed the bereaved father, "L will It is so silly to,be small; eyes, mouths. and noses, marked with l go, also." ' you will 11 big and strong and tell: shoe+blacking, on their faces, I But, as he was snatching the Ian- ` She never even looked around when l tern away, Farmer Chase pointed to When 1 was just a bo; like you, Betsey stood on a three-legged stool+comet ng wedged up against the side perhaps -I longed for manhogd, too; to reach down the scarlet hood, with : of thea agged rock -a whitening bone. And you, when yell Become as I, the edging of 'gray fur around thel "Man, are you mad?" he cried. "As For the old childlshnees will sigh, ?. face, and trudged off, with her little' sure as you are aliverthat is the den -A, L. S. . nose stuck up in the air. of the very bear that•Hunter Gabriel - "She will be back' long before sup- saw!" per," the mother said to herself.' "Let me fire into it, first," said No insect: is a parasite on its own But supper -time carne, and no little Farmer Chase. "If the creature should species. I know of no instate:a nut Betsey, and the darkness settled bo. there-" one, 'rrcepting man, of ".parasites who drearily. over -the many' hills and But Mr Hathaway struck the bar- consume the provisions. hoar lel b; :+ frozen woods, and the they became rel of the gun aside, worker if the same species.--Fabre. Bell Language. We all know as children the rhyme oY St. Clements, in which the London eity. churches are enumerated. It le curious as givipg expression to what people thought the bells said, es if living things, that other Planes also had these ini;erpretations of belalang- uage. We find such at Northampton; Osla Nes asyLesons t AUCTION BSI GE New Series byWYNNE FERGUSON author of '' erguson on auction bidoe Copyright 1925 by Hoye, Jr, ARTICLENo. 15 "When should the declarer lead happens that the declarer has been trumps," is a question that is frequent- forced to bid in response to his partner's ly askod. As a general rule, don't lead informatory double and has only a four trumps until you have established your card suit, often without top honors. long suit, unless your trump holding is' Such hands as these offer many difficui- so strong that you can lead trumps and ties, even for the experienced players, still'retain control. Such hands how- so any analysis of such hands should be ever, play themselves and the difficulty interesting and instructive. The hand usually anees when the trump strength published as a problem in the preceding is or may be evenly divided between article was of this type. It is as follows: the declarer and his opponents, It often Answer to Problem No. 8 Hearts- Q, 9, 3 Hearts- A, J, 10,7,2: Clubs --10, 9, 4, 3. Y 4. Clubs -A Diamonds -8, 3 to B : Diamonds- K, Q, 4 Spades - Q, 7,4,3 Z' i Spades- A, 10, 8, 2 Score, YZ 16, AB 10, rubber game. Z dealt and bid one no-trump, A and Y passed and B doubled. Z passed, A bid two spades, Y and B; passed and Z bid two no-trump. A and Y passed, B bid three spades, Z doubled and all passed. IL Y opened the six of clubs, how should .A plan the play of the combined hands? A should figure Z with at least four spades to the king jack. Z would not have been justified in bidding two no- trumpand doubling three spades with any lss holding. He also should hold the king of hearts, the ace of diamonds and the king of clubs. It ,should be apparent, therefore, that A should not lead trumps. Z's trump holding is much stronger than his own and in addition, YZ's club suit Ie established. For those very cogent reasons, A should establish his heart suit before he leads trumps. At trick two, therefore, A should lead a low heart from B's, the dummy's hand. Z will be forced to win this trick and what can he lead. If he leads a club, A should trump in B's hand with the deuce'of spades and lead a low spade through Z's hand. If Z plays a low spade, A should play the queen and then' lead hearts, forcing Z to trump No matter how Z playa the hand, he cannot win more than two spade tricks, one heart trick and one diamond trick. The hands of all 'four players are, as follows; Hearts -6, 4 Clubs- Q, 8, 7, 6, 5, 2 Diamonds -10, 7, 6, 5 Spades -5 The •origin of ancient priesthood, is something that can be irnowu only by an exhaustive fltudy; if all known his tory, but it forms one -of '•the moat in- terecting sequences in huinanity, pees sibiy more interesting than the grid,': ual evolution of gods, In the earliest; historical times the Sun, :Moon and stare were quite naturally worshipped as the gode and after knowledge show- ed that the heavenly bodies: were dust, like ourselves the people, etih in the childhood, of humanity, began to we'. Mill) men who "claimed divine rights. All kings were originally mem who had become heroes and were naturally supposed to have received direct as- sistanoe from some unknown being. • These heroes were at first looked up- on as real gods and, as tliire reseed' their sons and daughters were wor- shipped, the men more and the women less as time passed. These men, holy beoause of birth, began to act' as mediators between the unknown and the common people. Even among what we call Pagan nations the heroes oe conquering tribes' were supposed to stand nearer to divinity than the oong mon mass, of mortals, '' Finally, by the reputati�gn of superb. or ?wisdom and alleged Secret cani- murnication With the gods they were honored' as magicians and 'later ae physicians. ,They were peen who led in all Holy rites end always inspired the common mind with awe, ,As dine passed the priests gradually took care not only of the soul and the body, bat of things temporal, lands, wealth and stock. Finally they found- ed retreats from whenoe they could control the surrounding country. This was done by the Buddhist monks more than ten thousand years• ago and the Hindus claim. monasteries . founded Hearts -Q, 9, 3 Hearts -A, j, 10, 7, 2 thirty thousand years ago. t" Clubs -l0, 9 4, 3 Y . Clubs -A Eventually the priests found them- Diamonds-�, 3 :A B . Diamonds -K, Q,4 selves 'unable to compete' against men S Spades -Q, 7, 4, 3 Z Spades -A, 10, 2 who had .studied medicine and ear- gory and far obvious reasons they gave up general business', and their f;' sole duties became the 'performance _.. of religious rites. r, Anniversary of the Uinbrella. . A short time ago the newspapers' of i' Germany were taking noto'0P, au Eng• r lisit anniversary scarcely_ noted in r. England; but annlversiirles of all ,- kinds are popular with Gerniuns. This c', time It was.. the one hundred and r. seventy-fifth annirersar•y.,et the intro -r duction of the umbrella, intqEngland, Z and long articles appeared ,pmmem-e, orating the life ansLdoings; of the Bid- t tram merchant and •pleilauthropist,,' Jonas .1- the'bald±• personages. • who, despite the jeers of. the rabble(_ and the politely superior smiles of their beters, first ventured linen the streets of rainy Ieendein, prdtected by au'.umbrelia. It 'was not till thirty d Meller, in "Old Times." years later that` the innovation was : • fully accepted ;•.and h!p ; d y'Fi+s-at ex- ..mss_..,, Is much to be preferred foe a longi ample f al,lownd, • M1»g•1ed width the Thawing. . ozen Pipes. What .Music eveeans. piece of pipe. It available; a jet. o2) boats of lire rowdy.gi uxgnktthat;greet- The middle of a frozen pipe should steam can be used instead et the heti ed me. Hanwey'a ;,stout:aglrrarnplo Music, education no' longer menus never be thawed iirst, because caper water; being hotter, it is more rapid. !,prone r.•.mnbeells; hied bean the even. applying something known as system sign of the water'conflrted by ice on Frozen traps and'waste-pipes .1'11:fiercer yells ass 1ahjargations of two or a method to a pupil•;trom the out- both sides may burst the pipe. When sometimes fhaweg by"pouring.in calis,� professionally P B t thawinh* a water-pipe,'wor11 Coward the ivjealous ••olissea -- the side, but it'nienn5' tisyolo lit the;laGy tic`. soda or lye, obtafnahle at gracsr, eat nutsic which is already there, ,It •supply oohing a faucet to chow; ivli . drivers of hackney coached iiud the ass:, ee , for. 8.1,910. 26 Denis a• jpuaa. { bearers of sedan,',cheirs, the feared to means self expressdon, • not a parrot lite clow starts. When thawing the eIng a ghemisls of this aharaoter .shoul t, be lose the brlsltor trade"they a'Iivays eu- like imitation or: a mere technical waste, el sewer-p(p9„ lvgrlr upward- i'wl?aled "poison" and shoulrci be' kept j ped iu ad weather t sebievement. 14lvsie should snASU from ....the lower end, •to permit. else iihere children oanno0.get;them:•.To! Lnnb,s hHanwa , born 11' 712 lived health, joy, growth and selfexpres� I luster to,. drain .sLv, ay, :1 pplying troch, until 1786.. i b K as the ccnteiiiyorary In the late ears'•it prevent iraezlns, the water in ;the) ,ton. 7 00 often, 1 a Y ing rester orhot clotbs to a lacier pipe, .traps of a vacant house should be re- "" has meant for the artist •andteacher.lis simple and effective. Where thereoY,Fanny'BurneyanrsometarJahnsott vlitP9'hi � moved during cold weather, and •the oath egewhom had something to say physical and, inentwl collapse,'} is no darigei' of fire a torch its liu'rntng. ptale should be filled with kerosene, about him in his later ,yeas . Miss the field of ahiidren's music the aver- newepaper run back and forth along crude glycerin, Or a very' Strong brine Burney described; ham as ''very loqua ago boy or girl whodtashad mu'sdo les" the frozen pipe;.gi'es •quick results, Made of common salt and "nater, • sons, rates :them with' a loyal"'hatred, .,IInd'ergrountl or other•wise.inaecess-, - , cions, extra fond-oP talking of what he and takes every chance in the world to 1 ibis •pipes can be :thawed, as' follows:; �° had seen andheard,and would be very and . •n the • Christmas Fall's On. Frida entertaining were tie• Sens addicted to cheat the •clock at1(t•.avofd,9tudy.a ppen the incisal water pipe o rac ice. + end. inseict Dna 'end oP a small' retail,, anecdotes ting! •reports from p t I•house • ,,peel yea¢ Cleris�tmen. Day fell seri a news rs;" No. doubt the' cleVei Music is, happily, becoming more pipe br tube. With the aid bf'a runnel Filt3iip and•,'according to an old poems and more an integral factor of our so at the other snd'of the sural pipe pour 1 ulousovelist was rlghtt`'wliat 5e gar, - i. preseeyed in the Hrltlsh.etuseum, this r;uLous • old'.gautIemr111, hard'j,arsouallY, tial life. A knowledge of what con boiling Water lnto• it and 'Cush it Lor- is. the sant of ttrmg , is a luaus to ex• ) etitutes good music should he as ward as the iris melts, Apiece of rub- seen' and heard; ooiild, lie, hays,-,cely s ssible durin the au, be. sised t. conn the ,Pact' _ fined himself to that, could, &forethe wrms.ti e a po g her tithing e . o•, he „ . + . • have failed .to' be interesting, far the formative Period of eharacte}; " " 'fennel o lire thaw pipe,. Hold, the tun: YP Crystmas Day on the Prydruy:1.0, est erienc s,of his life as a merchant - The value of education, iu music eie, higher than the, frozen. pipe, „ 80 The •fyrete of wynter herde shalbe :.•. 9• inure be estimated by the place it ow that the , het water ' has head and With froste and snow, and with fiode, traveler included' perilous voyages by after, lite. The musical o the cooled water back to •the But the last ende thereof ye geode land: and sea In Russia.•anil the Near espies inp forces East, fighting eff pirates,' having his portunities coincident with ,s'chooi life opening, where- it can be caught in a Agayn, the sourer salhe good also from the kindergarten, where. thepail: , ' 'Folkes in hyr Yere shall 'leave ;Fete caravan plundered by revolutionaries, -, - • and dealing with semibe:rbarie chief - the el harmony are sown, up through The- laced can be increased 'and the • mos," hi clod and.uni- n be more conveniently used There Is more, but too Curdling to • tains and potontatesc His active life the public school, res runnel ca reef el the kiniv and a piece of vertical inflict on the nervaust At any nate,'it aS a trader ceased when he inherited verstty, forecast precisely yd if'an site and degree of interest students will pipe are 'added to the cuter end, of the wo have a, hard winter, with trout a thato sad the rant of his ;career ' nation, . - w pipe. • Add more thaw, pipe at the snow, and floods, but ,good w'eathe'r at I was that of a philanthropist , maintain after glad the Doctor Johnson disapproved„him as --ea-- outer end until a:.passage is made tre' end, then.the poem is true prop, originator of a gtli,rouglt the ice;.,, Withdraw the thaw' hecy. A good summer is to follow. a rnctical and a ubiquitous social busy Next to the 6 goodbody, saying sworatu'lly that he "so• sentence is the first queter cif 11: pipe quickly after ,the Slow starts,. Do qwired some reputation by traveling Ralph Waldo ; merlon, not atop the flow. until the tha.w•.pipe It is always a sign of .poverty of is fully removed •and the: frozen pipe mind when nien aim to appear great; home. abroad, but lost it all. by.traveling at . But how could DoctoreJohne son .consiinier of tea-oup after tea -cup of strong tea to an incredible*total, be expected to approve of the author of , "An 'Essay on Tea, considered, -as per- nicious to Health, obstructing, „Indus try, a 'impoverishing the Nation?" Doctor Johnson, too, roaring -.la Tory, -that he was; eager for the cruehingiof young Arteries, would have had• less tolerance for Jonas Hauway's pomph- •uS AMY w,�vipo�jL66 1st in favor of the colonies, publisliod Po OU IS in 1775 .and gleefully reprinted on this side of the Atlantic, ' , Because of his generous bequeaks and many philanthropies; Jonas Hans way was biirked: in Westminster Ale bey; but it is to be feared that ofthe l__ ='�"_ ` `l jyl✓ . mauy thousandAmericans, who an. J �`� > anally visit aha great abbey, looking � p a for' the., Poets' Corner and the tombs: L� Aro of kings few spare a glance for the tomb of tiro gadlaatt innovator, .under ree pp/ 1 . the shelter of whosq,.gre.atest contrl 0 -a'' /n+`. ,sees'•', v' sj`" :, ` • • . • r 1. b9.1AO,t1 to. eoattu1 comfort lt' is more !,. thanprebable, considering the clfinafe Hearts -K, 8, 5 • Clubs - K, J Diamonds -A, J, 9, 2 Spades --K, J, 9, 6 See what happens if A should lead the Hearts --A, K, Q 9 ace and a low spade after winning the Clubs - K, Q 8, l( first trick. The lesson to learn from this Diamonds - A 10, 9 A, is not to lead trumps until you Spades -11,10 have established your long suit. No score, rubber game. Z dealt and Here's another hand that is an ex- bid One no-trump. A and Y.passed and ample of good play that comes up fre- B bid live spades. Z bid two no-trump, quently enough to make a study of it A and Y passed and B bid three dia- well worth while. Think itover and monde. Z now bid three hearts A compare your results with the analysis passed, Y bid three nn -trump and all that will be given in the next article.' • passed, A opened the six of clubs. How Problem No. 9 should Z figure out the cards held by his :opponents, both frons the bidding_ Hearts - 7, 2 and the opening lead of the six of clubs? Clubs -10, 5, 3 How should he plan the play of the Diamonds - K 8, 7 hand so as to score three odd, game Spades- J, 8, 7, 5, 3 and rubber? Think it over carefully.. •y . sA B: :. Z • REG'LAR FELLERS -By Gene Byrnes. ' MY SI& saOTH1✓a P DDPbEA© WONT H6Gp tnEi COME DN AN' MAKE 'IM! 10-20 • P000iweAD, • )6';CER-oho,(? Gs-r-rIn ClkAS Vl Yi.L t36TCNA dPirt,,C tANz6'i BEHAVE: • Tho quickest way out of a difficulty is cleared of lee.. A small force -pump for they who are truly great never is pretty sure to be the worst way. is often-•sise.il••insdead of a funnel and semi to know it, .The Straw ,That Broke the Cannel's Back NE'S USED t)f' ALL 1'l-fi)NNEL WOLes-cttERE ARE AN HE WONT GNE • (odes 5 ,•E9'r5, elThe C-icu e...,iUi toe.) G�etienr, . ''l�I.jLNW 9 eij,liendan; a they -have proceeded to their;; clestdnakiOn. e Too often; alas, 1s1; ra careless world, the memory oY an ctbnt•benefaoter-s'is forgotten es easily, as [ail•unibzsilti •.