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The 7) OF! “Dp z Don't Mrs, Jarr, en she poeRet. “Dont y klye Will! ey ehild fuil of ul night wit sleep.” "\ “She won't epend “If you've Kot -wny money ‘Ther {a Willie's bank abd and they never pul a cént in them, don't w and to give in my Four, pentiios out om the str you and then 3 this for that you “Don't? wanna “amally. “Everything they/ ace they want, and easy to ese that they will never have know the value of {t. ‘Why don't we do ¢ s@culd start an account hat? ingly. “If the Bidsets’"— “The Bidgets!" “Wall, you mentioned them, “Mentioned them?" repeated Mra. bdenk; I save every t that's given to ‘Oh, you musn't do-that; very muoh or tnsiat on poor, we are above such 4 “Ain‘t wou donna div Row stoppet orying. lessty for @ moment, fied the place, cool, clean houses regulated mind, fs far ‘from cool? It {s easy. ‘worried thought. @ cool, weil-vrdered mind; @ mind Lobes a Diborcee. Dear Betty! AM a young man twenty-seven yeats | old, arfd ‘an only child. I have been going. with'« young ledy..for some. time, and am very fond of her. My folles are —rety—bitter—againat_her_be- cause she has been married before and divorced, otherwise she is a good and honest: young lady, making her own Uving: Shalt t remain trus to her or give her up because my folka want mo to? ‘They threaten to break up home it Tgon't. HM, You are old enough to know your own mind and if you are sure you love the girl, stlok to her by all means, Which Man to Choose. Dear Betty: Tus young men have called on me for some time, the first for a year, the others for a shorter time, The first is very quiet and never goe: out unless it {s alone. The others give “me good times, I Mke all threo, and the Ume has comie when I_must decide | which I shall give preterence. I do not know-what to do. M. Z. You don't love any one of the three, therefore it would bo foolish for you to express a choice, I should say the two jatter were to be preferred to the first, vho seems stingy, unless, of course, he tn very poor. When He Loses His Job, x \ girl $a cold and hearts Dear Betty: \, OU BAY: yl less ff she troatn a fellow coolly after he lost his position.” If he thought anything of her he wov!d not be very long idle. I wish yoy! would trite _wome.time saying how oh really @hould treat him. It she acted the same as over toward him he would think he Aldn't need to eocure a position, Thts fa just the way I feel about it, = B. Z. It 4s to the man’s own Interest to se- eure a position, If he has lost it any woman who {= his fripnd shouM b6¢ more considerate and sympathetic than ever toward him, * To Prove His Love. Dear, Betty; J 4% @ youns man deepiy in jove with i a back. from the wh mith their m: ‘put {tin your bank’ ( Hearing fiat, the Uttle ‘girl lay pall not have any apd your spapa shajl not take you to Coney Island! fe to Tony Island, I wanna penny “Were there eyer such children tp all this worldT sald Mrz. Jarr ruefully. Interrupted Mrs. Jarr. plenty of mohey—and It's easy enoush for that sort of people to spare two dol- Jars a week when they have plenty and never waste a cent.” ald Mr, Jarr arr. Gieven't they.those children of theirs trained so tit whenever they have com- pany they morch In the room with their Uttle banks and say, ‘See my little ‘You dear Uttle things, here is ten cents to put in it!’ and sometimes they get a quarter. And Mr. and Mrs. Bidget eay, after the money {s put in the toy banks, really, you musn'tt” ving you back the coins. neap bessing ways as that!" me & penny, poppert”’ asked the Mttle girl, who had “Your mamma doesn't want me to give you a penny. it or buy ohoap candy with it, but I'll put ft in your bank,” sai Mr, Jarr. ‘Whereat the child began to cry afresh, and “Ob, you naughty, naughty child!"* sald Mrs. Jarr. ‘Don't you know mamma has a headache? Here ts a penny, if that will keep you quset, out I don't pee ,fhy you didn’t make your father give it to you!" BET TY<VINCENTS° 2) ADVICE® LOVERS A COOL, SWEET MIND. E BPEND a great deal of\time these summer days Keeping our houses and bodier clean and There le eomething of far inore Importance Do you know Kow to cool your mind when your Stop thinking of unnecessary things and think ‘ely of necessary things. What ore unnecessary thoughts? All thoughts of tre; Hine? past and most thoughts of the future. Eliminate all regretful, anxious and Evening pedse div me s penny,” iieped Mitte Einna you give that a cont! exclafmod aw thefond (ather pat his hand In bie 4 give her any money, and don’t you any more money not? like to have a penny t) buy patis Just iti? sald goodness Snows what it's mad- oft lored pols asig] Mr. Jarr good-naturedly. © ‘All Jarr, Th sand then they ey buy Mt and {t's them end have: to call In the doctor, and before I'm throuxh Jt casts me $10 and several nights | "I won't bury candy, popper,” sald the Uttls girl, “des My mom penny to hol’ in my handies it on candy, she just wants to hold gold Mr. Jarr. St in thely banks. them, jet then: put Emma's bank standing on thelr Dureau for months sald Mrs, Jarr. na put penny in bank," cried the Jittle girl: "I wanna hold it “Yor, and you'll lose tt] sal¢-Mrs. Jarr. ‘You and your brother Wilile take t pnd-the other children take thein away from { e in crying and If I go out and try to get your pen took {t the first thing I know I'm'in a nasty fight No, if your papa ts going to give you any tioney let him down on the floor and beat her hesla, pennies to put in your bank, said walled the Mttle girl whatever they get they break! It is any money in this world, they do not, All they do !s to Jose It or to mtve It to other children! | {The Bidget children have bank accounts tn tho real savings bank, and overy/| ‘penny they get they put in their little toy banks till they have a dollar and! jthen Mrs, Bidget puts It tq their accounts In the savings bonk, and, bealdes | this, Mr. Bidget gives them a doller apiece every week to add to It and when they grow up they will have a lot of money.” I think it's a good scheme,” said Mr. Jarr. n the savings bank for Ittle Emma and Wile end w i@urely could put a doliar a week apiece to it’ “You do tt if you have 90 much money to spare!’ said Mrs, Jarr. “I can @ee you want to start something Uke that and then I'l) he expected to keep it ‘ap. I have all I can do to moet the expenses of this house. on the _@tven, without being robbed of two dollars every week “Oh, I don't think we would mias two dollars a week, oy Uttle I'm said Mr. Jarr sooth “The Bidgets are ricb—they have “Who could help mentioning them? mo! And then, of course, visitors say, But they do not-argue with you Thank goodness, if we are Ghe says you'll lose Mr. Jarr, looking around help- cool, than weil-| and persons. It is-a cool,’ aweet, et sick and [am | | Spanish _ night. World’s_ GHDLI HH Heh Mba Wohh Hed pobo oooh Hood hpoorGMoPo ooo oh hood LHGPOPOS HOS SoPSoooy -The Newlyweds «: Their Baby & NAPOLEON CERTAINLY WAS THE RIGHT NAME FOR HIM . THE GOYS—~ | DOWN AT THE OFFICE ARE SIMPLY CRAZY ) WHY WHAT ! BABY 4 /NOT LIKE PLAY | [WITH NAPOLEON ? DON'T | YOU LooWw UP YOUR PEDIGREE LOVEY ? I'LL BET You ARE SOME RELATION : MAMA'S PRECIOUS SHOULBN'T BREAK GREAT GENERAL BAGBY, NAMED AFTER? BABY HE LikKA DA DIFFERENT (By Permission of George Munro'a Bons.) SYNOPSI8°OF PRECEDING CHAPTER. The Hon. Bertte Cecil. of the Fint Lite Guards, second son of Viscount Royallica. ta @ dashing young man.of fashion, oink the mwhole pace of the most exclisiive pocial set in Breland. Six feet one. and strixinely handsome, be is an \inmense favorite with both men and women. Boending tike a king though practically penntinw, he bes plies us heavy deta, They do not worry him, how ever, and he read/ly gives hia younger brother, Berkeley, fifty pounds to get hin Out of @ scrape. jeaying himself hot enouch to bur a ticket to a racing meet. CHAPTER II. The Day Before the Race. 4 W long before the French cat | come up?" asked Wellington, earing of the pursuit that was thundering close on his rear in the} most_critical houre of the short, sultry “Half an” hour, “at least," was the answer, “Very well, body ague plans. | will meet all demands put upon it, Meve that she loves mé. There fy a| talk going around that I keep company with another girl, whom I have met but-omee.- How, If there ts-any way. ot all, can I convince my, sweetheart that Uile fe HOt true, although she seems to place all confidence in _me and does not Delleye such talk? ARDENT LOVER. If you spend all your time with your sweetheart and do not go near the other girl sho will be very easily convinced. z When Walking with Him. Dear Betty: TLL, you let me «now if ft ts the ‘proper thing to\teke a fdlow’ arm in a crowed wlace or {s it a fellow’s place to do sot Would tt be proper for me to ask @ fellaw to come up to the house some evening and go for a trolley ride with him? Of cpurse this fellow has been to the house eev- eral times and has taften me to placos of amusement, ANXIOUS. Tie man should offer his arm in a crowded place or In the evening. There would be no harm in suge Trolley” Tite. i The Long Walt, ILL NYE when’ a young man once B made an engagement with a lady friend of his to take her driving of A Sunday aftetnoon. The appointed day came, but at the livery stable ail the horses were taken out save one old, shaky, exceedingly bony horse. "says Harper's Weekly, Mr, Nye hired the nag and drove to his {rlehd's residence. The lady let him walt nearly an hour before she was ready, and then, on viewing the di: reputable outfit, fatly ‘refused to ao- company Mr, Nye. “Why, she exclaimed, sneeringly, “that horse may) die of age any mo- ment.” i “Madam,” Mr. Nye roplisd. “when I Ra that horee was @ prancing young colt," 5 foc CAUSE FOR WORRIMENT, “May De Sember is worrying a great Gval lately, It seems that rich old bus- hand of hera is svending his money on her yery recklessly,” & young lady whos ong poor j-tort sii, love en 6¢ cl ior gett fut ts "The {deal Why should that wofry APiiiadalpnts | jgie nalf hour es any dred Urummer- fng the now, and hers, with barely sumMcient planning abead to avoid another Style of heating the brain, caused by the confusion of ro Be Genills, Te economical of Mhought aa you aré of money. Think defnttalyevent—ot «a great contest. to be met) mile you work and stop thinking while you rest Soon your overworked, overheated, disorderly mind will be transformed into) that -@ success{ul mind; a sanitary mind; a cool, eweet mind. | slopt profoundly, on the eve of a Kreat/ See ae eountry, + pettect br then, I will turn in and get some sleep,” wad Commianderinchief, roling | ina cloak. and lying down tn} as soundly for the sin- i @ ditch to rest Serenely as Wellington, another hero) when the day should break—of a orit-| fcal victory, depending on him alone to save the Guards of England from defeat and eame; thelr honor and thetr-hopos reated-on- ils solitary head; by him they would be lost or saved; ‘but, unharassed by the magnitude of the stake at issue, unhaunted by the past, untrotted-by the future, he sitm— dered the slumber of the juat. ‘Not’ Sly Tristram, Sir’ Catedore, sir Liamper, for there are no-eyee that Jumper, a clipper at fencing, taking a great deal of riding, as any one could tell by the set-on of his neck, but docile 4s a child to @ well-known hand—such Was Forest King, with his English and Eastern strains, winner at Chertscy, Croydon, the National, the Granby, the Belvoir Castle, the Curragh, and all the yenUeman-rider steeplechase and mill- lary swoepstakes In the kingdom, and entered now with tremendous bets on him for the Gilt Vase It wos a crisp, oold night outside, etarry and wintry, but open weather, and olear; the ground would be just right on the morrow, neither hard as the slate of a Dilliant table, nor wet as the slush of & quagmire Forest King7stept steadily on in his warm and spacious box; dreaming doubtless of days of vic~ tory, cub-hunting in the reedy Octover woods and pastures, of the rin of the horn and the s1 t music of the PUCK, AIRE THY BIOTIOUS, qUICK burst ups wind, breastitg the icy cold water and showing, the way over fence and bull- 5 zing and dreaming pleasantly; but alert for all. that: for he awoke! suddenly, shook himaelf, had a dilart- ous roll in tlie einaw. and stood: 'at-ate ention."* ing notes | +olothingto. Awako only, could you tell the gener- ous and gallant promise of his persat| gost more truly, none on earth that are so/ beautiful. aa the eyes of a horse. Forest! King’s were dark as o zello’ soft as a—-woman's,-driliiant Yrtiet ‘eters, dreamy and mournful, and as Infinitely] (ver beat yet, or you elther, sir, for! erty. caressing when he looked at what te Launeelot, na, nor Arthur himself, was ever truer knight, was éver gentier, orayer, bolder, more stanch of heart, more loyal of soul, than he to whom the glory of the Brigades was trusted OW; never was there spirit mess daunt- lean and Mery in tho fleld; never temper kindiier and more generous with friends and focs, Miles of the ridge’ and fur- row, stiff fences oftterrible biackthorn, double posts” and “ralls, yawhers” and croppers both, tough as Shire and Btew- ards could make them, wwaited him on the morrow; on his beautiful, lean head capfuls of money were piled by the Servico und the Talent; ard in his stall all the fame of the Household would bo centred on the morrow; but ho took his, réut like the cracker he was—standing as thougu he Were on guard, and steady ms a-rock, a ‘hero overy inch of him, For the wes Forest King, the great steeplechaser, on whom the Guards had Jald all their money for the Grand Mill- tary—the Soldiera’ Blue Ribbon, His quarters were ® loose box, camp’ bed @ litter of straw, fresh shaken down, his clothing @ very hand- }some rug, hood, and quarterplece duckjed on and marked "'B. C."; above the manger and the dvor was lettered his own name In gold. ‘Forest King"; and’ in the panol# of tho, latter were miniatures of his aire and’ ‘of bis dam; Lord of the Isles, ame of the greatest hunters that the grass countries ever saw sent across them; and Bayadere, a wild-pigeonlue mare of Circassla. Not an immensely large, or unusually powerful horse, but with race In every Mne of himj stcel-gray In color, dark- ening well at all-points, shining and soft as satin, with the firm muscles quivering beneath at the frst touch of excitement to the hikh metue and fine- ly strung organization; the head small, lean, racer-like, “blood all over; with the delicnte taper ears. almost trans- parent In full ight; well ribbed-up, fine shoitders, admirable girth apd loin: loge clean, - alehder, firm. peomtaing splendid knee action; asixinen hands high, and up to thirteen stone; clever enpugh for anything, trained 16 ¢loso his] CORRECT HE ‘thletic girl's latest and heat I fad 1s tho punching bag. This form of exercise is choap and can be indulged in one's own hall bed- room. © « it Hang the bag so the upper end is on a Jevel With your head. It can be @ ‘double ender, fastened to top and bottom of dooraill, or hang from the ceiling. ; Stand about a yard off from the bas, and your body must be Just as straight, Just a8 erect as @ young pine troo, One thing to remomber. ts, nover, drop Ysur hands whtho-punching! Binoe the lett hand, and-arm are'spu- With TONE Salis LELT HAND PUNCH wou do the right. unit you fad ft j Daily Magazine, Tuesday, July THERE ! LOOK AT HIM NOW! HAVEN'T. You SEEN PICTURES OF NAPOLEON THAY LOOKED JUST Like THAT! PAPA'S PRECIOUS THINK NAUGHTY: STATUE NOT LOOK LIXE NAPOLEON? 16; ROE TLL TAKE FINE OF NAPOLEON! TS REALLY A WONDERFUL RESEMBLANCE! By George McManus Shy BUSTS OF =) NAPOLEON HAVE YoU ANY WHEN DA. GREATA ey NAPOLEON , DA : GEORGA DA WASH, DA GREATA HOW DIS BUSTA DARLING ,1 JUST WISH IN Rae THAT ARE” 1 Bout WAR WITH DA GREATA JAPAN COULD SEE THA MIKAD ADARY, BABY Now! é R ONES. S OF NAPOLEON DA-DA:, 13 1T MAMA'S. DEAR " LITTLE PEACEMAKER? DA- DE- DA! DA-DE-DA- loved, as they could blaze full of llsht and fire when danger way near and rivalry against him. How loyally such eyes have looked at mo over the pad- dock fence, a6 a wild, hardy gallop way suddenty broken, from a gentle head to be softly pushed yen my hand with the gentlest of welcomes! They sadly but to shasne the million hunian eyes that #0 fast learn the Ife of the world, and utler it ng falsely ax the lips, The stecpiechaser stood alert, every fvre of hia body strung to pleasurable excitation; the door opened, a hand held him some sugar and the voice he Joved best sald fondly, “AU right, old oy 2" 5 Forest King ‘déyoured the heloved Gainty with trie equine unction, rubbed his forehend-ayminat his master’s shoul- der and pushed his nose into »xe near- eC Socket in search for more of hin woetmeat You'd eat a augar loaf, you dear old rascal'-Put the gas up, George,” sald his owner, while he turned up the body £60} the than,--000)--aklay loosened one of the bandages, passed his hand from thigh to fetlock and wlanced round the box to be sure the horse had been Well suppered and lit- tered down, “Think we shall win, Rake?" Rake, with a stable iantern in his hand and a forage cap on one wide of his head, standing @ little.In advance of a_grouo of grooms and bit of straw out of Ma mouth and smiled a smile of sublime scorn and security. "Win, slr? I should he glad to-know-ae-when-wae-that'ere-King that matter Pun tntended), oF, let us say less ready find skillful, a good exercise {x the tat- too for the left hand and arm. This may be also done with the right; Dut start this procedure avith the left, And uso ttl: left twice, for once that t ha easy to use the ane as the other, « Btand about thrée feet—or Just within) any reach—ot the bax: the distance will! aorses your eheat tn dotensp, The tma- | will 1 -£, 100k at -perelatentiy,———— Bertio Cecil lnughed a little languidly, “He's in first-rate form. Rake, and right as a triver.* “In course he is, air; nobody ever laid leg over such cattle as all that White Cockade blood, and he's the yery best of the strain,” said Rake, es he held up his lantern across the stable-yard, that looked doubly dark: in the February iplght after the bright gas glare of the box. all its forms throughout the land, that consecrated a of ev ue be- Hevir in the divinity of the m and “he paradise of the narsil stoking-room. A spacious chamber lin with ‘the laziest of divans, seen now, through a fox of smoke, anted by nearly a score of men i imaginable loose velvet costur T've bean having a g:od-nig the King. He'll stay,” said ¢ ds. { course he will,’ chorused half a "So he need be,” thought Cecil, as a bull terrier, three or four Gordon set- “There are some good mounts, there's fo denying that." said Chesterfeld of the Bhies (who Wax called Tom for no other reason than \that {t was entrely gremt stone yard, with the end of a huge cheroot glimmering through the gloom, “So he need bo to pull me through, The Ducal and the October Jet me in for it enough; I never was closer in my. life. The deuce! if I don't do the distance to- imoirow I shan't have sovereigns enough to play pound inte at nighe, ver wilnd! Thiige will come right Forest King news failed me vet: be ik as full of running as a Derby—winner and he'll @o over the vawners like ao bird,”” thought Cecil, who never con- fronted his troubles with more than sixty seconds” thought-nnd who-wn: that light. impassable, halt-Icvity, languor sort of teniperament that, bot? theown off worry easily and shirks {t he was curied up, almost Invisible ex- cept for the movement of the ‘asmme stick of his chibouque. “That Day Star, wwe spend fencer, wand tor « brook ‘Jumper tt. would be’ hard to beat Wild Geranium, though her shoul- can ride one in Pas do be, Montecute, too, thing. and he's got Charce “Tm not muoh .afraid of Monti—he makes too wild a burst first; he never “yawned Cecil, ves one atom,” a-colts_of his bh: the rosewater. There was not a trace of anxiety on him when he opened a low arched docr In, that fellow from the passed down a corridor, and entered the| a3 licht as a feather and as hard as warm. full light of (hat chamsber of lih-| Mest. 1 watched nim yecverany gong over the water, and the horse he'll rido that sanctuary of the ver: for Trelawney 18 good enough to beat temple of refuge, thrice bl thi ment the blow Is ¢ quickly to your orig peat the blow. Learn to hit lightning rapidity and to regal your position without a second’s lose of time. When you hit the ball a crooked or glancing blow, the ball js then thrown Out of {ts true cayree, and Its rebound ated nal position and re- vary with reach, ao no arbitrary position can be tatd down. your heigit and length of Step forward a trife, and as you do #o lead out with a straight arm blow | or return cannpt , be upon, or punch right at the centre of the bag, | Here is where you mult lenrn to duck. Jfold your head sil«htly to the right] When you know you have delivered lo avoid the return blew, and at the|e wrong blow, stop back quickly~ sd sume instant raise your right, arm | duck Yur head smartly, and the ball harmlessly over your head, Just and ten- every ters, an Alpine mastiff, and two wiry | dozen voices. | Skyes dashed at thelr chains, giving| “With all our pots on him.’ added | tongue In frantic delignt at the mound] the Seraph. "He's too much of « Ken. | of hin step, while the hounds echoed | Ue to put us all up a tree; he} the welcome from their more distant] knows ‘he carries the honor of the} kennels; and he went slowly acroas the| Housenold.”* unlike his real name of Adolphus), where vored spring back | «> Under Two Flags. «<> By Ovida <p brute, | | | ders are not quite what they ought to! Rood | i | | with | } i i \ even the King Uf he's properly piloted.” “You haven't kept yourself in oondl- Uon, Beauty,” growled ‘Tom, with the chibouque tn his mouth, “else nothing could givea-you the go-by. Its tempi= ine Providence to go In for the Gilt h a December and Jan- nt in Paris. Even the been in the Shires you Hed & DIL; you've deen or playing baccarat till & the morning, and taking no end) solas after to bring you ristt for tie wet ac 9 If a man will dra oham- basnes and burgundies as you do and spend bis Unie after women I~ shoul lke to know how he'a to be in hai riding condition unlesa he expacty a miracte,”* t “Beauty don't beileve in tratning, No inore do L Never would train for any said the Seraph, now pulling the ‘ond mustaches’ that were not rin character with his seraph s cognomen. “If a man can ride, let if he's born to te pigakin he'll. nce Bate ei cs “ sald Bertios Piss aa ios ROW Arathing of this luwney's chestrutre ttt Yo TiMe. Tea “Jimmy Ocimar! — On, yes; Ik. ditamy,”” answered Lord Wente Worth, “of the Scots Fustieera, from the far depine Of in arm-chals ‘new him 3 at “Aldersnor. Teer ive vou m mi ¢ ot eat uy food ott, Auty, Hasn't years; trvop been cuttas-Tne FERS Loifering Very treeiy tne village; amd in the chast- Sgvut @ rare nut “Not a doudt-of tt. The White. Lil nlood, out of that rah’ mare D tlermy he ds 109; — ever mind! Tenth won't beat us, Tho Housenold will win sale enough, unless I King goes and brake pis . back over Brixworth—eh. Betuty?" said the Serapa who belle ad deroutie: in —— his comrade, with all the loving loyaity characteristic of the House of Lyon+ fieee tatty monarchs and: to, frend hfed often cost It very dear. ouput our faith in’ the quarter, Rock; I may fall vou, h | will,” said Ceci, with ever ab slight = dash of madness in his worde, W you both of you carry-all our money and ali oun credit, ao tor tae fair fame of the Household do ‘all you know.’ I haven't hedged a shilling, not Jald off « farthing, Bertic: I stand on you and the King. and nothing else— see what a snbdlime faith I bave in you.” “T dont think you're wi the fleld will be ver oll, languldiy, The answer was indifferent’ and corti thankless, but under kis -drooped lds a glance frank and warm, rested for the moment on the Seraph’s leonine strength and Ra phael sque head; {t was not nis way to fay it, or to show {t. or even much to think ut Is heart be loved hie old friend wo: y well Tt was tha old family place of the Royallieu House in whieh be had eon- gregated half the Guardsmen in the service for Whe € tang —cén= quently the bs pambers In it © of the t comsert and spa~ sness, and when Ceol sauntered Into his old quarters, boyhood, he d not have jhaen_bet. own Juxurious: Faunte J Moreover, /the first thing thar caught his eye was a dainty soar- fot. silk ‘riding $ embroidéred In. gold and silver, with! the motto of his house, “Coeur'-Valiant sa fait Roy aume,”* all circled with oak and laurel Jeaved on, the sailas. i Nee eae twas the work of very fair It with a smile, “ah. my lady, my. 1 Bd, halt Stoud, do vo ly love me? Ho T really love you here wha a laugh tt his eyes ae he. asked himself what might be termed an inieresting question} ‘hen something more oarnest came over iris face, anda stood a second, with the pretty, costly embrolt in his haod, with a snalle. that was ost tender, though waa much more amused. was co little near what he dreaded. - resent at least, that the scarlet 8 tossed down & ne of btw fi He looked out, the Iaat some onlnaus olouds drifting. y up before the daiwa, and pinto of tho Weather, and the chance its being rainy, Oiled his thoughts to the r exclusion of the dénor of that nt, Kold-laden, dainty gift. “T Lihat Sef ay there won't be any drenohing | Forest King can ¢tand md | ter off {nh Piccadsiiy he thoa: HK at Jacket w him: no. dri ambroideress. > re jas hard a6 a alate, but 4 there's one he's -weak in it's plush! wae Bertle’s inst conedlots ¢hay; ai he | srretaned Fis. }imbs out ond’ tell sound thin: Hi a ae Sas ey