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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1913. @ The Saturday Evening World’s Short Story Page THE EASTER OF THESOULINN AE MARING ’ Vn "e iY FRAN ‘ COPYRIGHT BY DOUBLEDAY BAG CO. 19/1 BY... F. ‘Sia WK. CG IND ay, tiolan, and he id not know that Lentythe characteristic suddenness and IN THE first place, we shall not,and put it in a frame over his iron i ag was breaking up physiologically in hie|Merceness that had gained for him the be curious about Cassopolis, | bed. ayatom, endearing sobriquet of “Tiger.” The and nowhere in this-chronicle | In the course of time and when Mes, MoQuirk hed spoken of epring. | defense of Mr. Conover was so prompt will you find an extended des- | #ector had come to a sophistication that Boeptically “Tiger” looked about him for] and admirable that the conflict was cription of tte Main atreet, ite | ePabled him to toll Third avenue from igne. Few they were. The organ grind-| protracted until the onlookers unseif- Muieeinn Chiro, of the hoose, Fourth by the smell, Fifth from Sixth by ora were at work; but they were alwaya| ishiy gave the warning cry of “Cheese ai 4 ‘it the noise and Broadway by the way the precocious harbingers, It waa near|it—the cop!" The principals escaped | Surrounded by @ wooden railing, tO! Women carried thelr akirts, he met @ enough spring for them to go penny| easily by running through the nearest | Which tho folk of the countryside teth-| 1.1. hurting when the skating ball dropped| open doors into the communicating | ered their horses on market-day. ‘The hour was eight of a summer eve- et the park. In ¢he miliinera’ windows | back yards at the rear of the houses. Caseopolis is a smal! town a8 these! ning. The purault of folly, joy and Faster hate, grave, gay and jubilant, eesti ree tee kee 6 tet & lines are being written. triviality had just begun, The atreets blossomed. ‘There were green patches | Pere ne ee tad te trcught, ana |_ it W88 @ email town when Abraham | were crowded with men and women tn among the sidewalk debrie of the then he turned and plunged tate ‘a | Linooin greed the elaves, and Cassopolis} evening dress. Motor cars deposited — small notion and news shop. A red- | Will be @ emall town the day they are| their prosperous loads every twenty On & third story windowsill the Arst) i ired young woman, eating gum rops, | celebrating the two hundredth anni-| feet along the curbs Steady ines elbow cushion of the senson—old Bold) came and looked ftreezingly at him | versary of the opening of the Panama| formed and crowded the theatre en- stripes on a erimson graund—supporto’d | Tross the ice-bound steppes of the| Canal. Wier ‘the kimonoed arms of @ pensive brunette. | counter, Cassopolis ies in the middle of a} Standing on the corner with a rapt The wind blew cold from the Bast River,| “say, Indy,” he eald, “have you got | fertile State, crias croseed by railways, | 100K in hie eyes, Hector observed the but the sparrows were flying to the) song book with this in it? Let's see! some of which lead to New York City,|tranmer. Loneliness had made him eaves with stra’ A second hand] now it leads off— the home of art, arrogance and alimony. somewhat mellow, and he was glad store, combining foresight with faith, | When the springtime comes we'll wander im the] 336 came to the city on the Cannonball | When the strange man evinced an tn- had set out an ice chest and baseball ae: a ime tnd Accommodation, leaving Cassopolis | terest in him. Ah a whisger of these rere dally, except Sundays, Hie name wa! “This is surely @ wonderful city,” the > ore Gaeta m having @ friend,” explained Mr, | dally, unknown began, nodding toward the And then “Tiger’ McQuirk, “Iaid up with @ broken leg,| Hector Moe, and in appearante he was | on We : these signs, fell upon one that Bore 8) ang he sent mo after it. He's a devil for| exactly the sort of man who would look | orowded etrects, “tt is an old, story bud gt promise. From a bright, new) oe ana poetry when he can't get out | like a person named Heotor Moe. me, but it never falls to ‘85 me. Uthograph the head of Capricormus con} 4 Geinye,+* In his hand was a yellow sultcasd, | YoU are a stranger here?” * "I have been here tf time,” fronted ie Betokening the forward) iv. hay, not,” replied the young|Durchased at the general store. He was | stector aauaesd ta a dunibaa bone ang heady brew. woman, with unconceaied contempt, | tall and gangling, lean of body, lantern | ian ines.” continued the stranger, Mr. MoQuirk entered the saloon end) wiut chor is @ new song out that be-|Of jaw, and hie eyes protruded an cated for his glass of book. He threw) sing this way: eighth of an inch further than is oom- hia nickel on the dar, raised the @1a88,| ro: us att together tm the old armchatr; mon, wet it down without tasting @& and! and while the fireligt flickers we'll be comfort-| Over his person was draped a suit of ee strolled toward the door. able there. Cassopolis store clothes, black in color, arraeees and unable to make | “Wot's the matter, Lord Bolinbroke?'| There will oe no profit in fouowing Mr.| but shaded here and there with green. | Choice. Don't you find it that way? the sareustic wartender;| “Tiger” McQuirk through his further! tn the smoking ar of the accommo-| Hector smiled and nodded. “want a chiny vase or @ gold-lined| Vasaries of that day until he comes to} dation an underwear salesman gazed| ‘To-nisht,” said the man, becoming epergne to drink !t out of—hey?" qand knocking at the door of Annie! interestedly upon Hector Moe and en- |More confidential, “I have felt tho stir- Bay,” onld Mr, McQuirk, wheeling| Maria Doyle. Tho goddess Eastre, tt| gaged him in conversation. ring of an old spirit In my veins. There and shooting out @ horizontal hand and/ seems, had guided his footsteps aright to New York to make | "8s @ time when I might have been @ forty-five-degree chin, “you know fast. Hector admitted. “I hi described as a gay young dlade, tee your place only when it comes for| “Is that you now, Jimmy McQuirk?” aye lived in Cassopolis, but my tal-| Many the night flirted with the go: - givin’ titles. I've changed me mind She cried, smiling through the opened] ents ft me gor an enlarged sphere. 1|0f luck. For some strange reason, shout drinkin’—see? You got your| oor (Annie Maria had never accepted| will admit that my appearance is that |€¢! impelled to-night to dally with the money, ain't you? Wait till you get|/the “Tiger”). “Well, whatever!" of a Jay. Iam conscious of the air of | little whe ball. Do you happen to stung bafore you get the droop to your] “Come out tn the hall,” said Mr. Mo-| ruratism that surrounds me. My fotks| now any pince that js open? The Po- lp, will yout” ; Quirk. “I want to ask yer opinion of] have tried to dissuade me from going| !!°@ have become very atrict of late, Thus Mr. McQuirk edéed mutability of| the weather—on the lev. to the great metropolis, but in vaia, | Understand. ; desires to the strange humors that| “Are you crasy, sure?” ead Annie| And I have in my pocketbook the sum) | “No.” Heotor answered, feeling #0™® /xnown nim for years. Champagne,! ment windows; doors were blown in and an Seoeen ‘pemension os tins, 5 of $300." Soe sen 9ae coe ne on cigars and dainty salads were served | Windows out. Leaving the saloon, he walked away| ‘I am,” sald the “Tiger.” ‘They've! “You want to be careful when you| is a a bhi ene es ie n't tree from ttle tables on wheels that] But from the door below the spot was when I couldn't Wop me feet atili| tWenty stepe and leaned in the open been telling me all day there was spring get to New York,” the underwear aales- bibads you. T know very little Of 6aM-) wore pushed by colored servants among| where Hector Moe sat mourning a thin Ror me head cool when the earthworms | eorway of Luts, the barber. He and/ in the air, Were they liars? Or am I?";man advised. “Some of those olty) 07h taevigiea dha eoorh nat rary Me, barere stream of highly excited citixens poured began to crawl out in the dew of the| Ltts were friends, masking thelr senti-| “Dear me!" said Annie Maria— sharpers may grab your roll.” P phd : oh hi a thoughtfully, ].72® Toms were gorgeous in velvets| into the hal. and ran madly up the mornin’, ‘Tis a bit of tea will de ye|™ments behind abuse and biudgeons of ‘haven't you noticed it? I can almost | “I shall take care of myself, never; from he @ Man sal houg' «| and silks, and Hector stepped upon car: | stairway, a bates Wa he “I find it diMeult to select amusements, There are #0 many interesting things to be done in this great town that one 19 Doard from pop-corn to the elephant houdahs.” “It'e the apring in yer bones,” eald Mrs. MeQuirk. “It's the sap rising. Time repartee. emell the viol And the green grass. fear,” replied Hector confidently. “I wonder if It might be open to-night: | pots and rugs two inches deep. He gazed | young man could remove himself from Ss sasbads'e5-tb6 orias ths fini and geatian | irrigh toater,” roared Luts, “how Go| Of course, there ain't any yet—it's just| Willed with the epirit of adventure| Do you aver do anything in that Hne?" lupon roulette wheels for the first timo | thelr path « fat, hard-breathing person | in Chitkoott Pass discards| “tack up!" eld Mr. MeQuirk, im.|%6U 40? So, not yet haf der bolicemans | ® Kind of feeling, you know.” and trembling at the marvelious things| Hector reflects had provided him|!? Bs life, drank of the champagne and | had dropped on his knees before him. patiently, “There's no spring in eight. | Ot der catcher of dogs done deir duty!”| “That's what I'm getting at” eaid/about him, Hector left the train at| Truly New York had pro smoked excellent cigars—free. ‘Lemme out of this!" he whimpered. q fi | with continual amusement. He had] some time during the evening Mr. | “Lemme out, pardenr; it my firm heard a ee Duteh,” sald Mr. McQuirk.| Mr. McQuirk. “I've had it. I didn’t) Forty-second street. hurried away, There'e snow yet on the shed in Den-| alle. your ming off of frankturt-|Fecounise it at first. I thought maybe| reading difections on a sheet of paper, ere, can yout” {t was er-wee, contracted the other day'and an hour later he was the undis- seen, but, on the other hand, no one|more, and one hour after Hector en-| gone!" 2 ibe in cl street— lines, and the janitors have quit oréer-| ‘BAh!" exolatmed the German, coming} When I stepped above Fourteenth puted tenant of @ hall bedroom in a| had come to him personally and offered | tered the palace of chance the retraced| The fat one thrust a handful “eh ir” McQuirk arose with @ling coal. And that meane atx weeke|@"4 leaning in the door. “I haf a| street. But the katsenjammer I've got lodging-house on Lexington avenue,| ‘© Provide definite entertainment. The/ his steps down the long stairway with| bills toward Hector. Surprised Giequiet that he did not un-| more of winter, by all the signs that|SUl above frankfurtere to-day, Dere| don't spell violets. It spells yer own! just off Thirtieth street, thought was gratifying. ® numb feeling at his heart and &/ measure, Hector took the bile, The With @ practined foot hel pe \ 1s apringtime in der air, I can feel it; Name, Annie Maria, and it's you I| Mr. Moe was young. In a week he| “I might do a little in that line, Pocketbook distinguished by complete| fat citizen ran lightly up the from led- ‘After breakfast Mr. MeQuire epent | Coming in ofer der mud of der streets) Want. I go to work next Monday, and had cast aside many of the rural gar-| answered, using the stranger's words} and utter emptiness. der, pushed open the souttle } jay as they lay! n%een minutes before the corrugated |*%4 das ice in der river, Boon will)! make four dollars a day. Spiel up, ments, He bought himself a knitted! for safety’s sake. “Provided the stakes! His two hundred dollars was gone! _| crawled to the roof. iy Before @ foot-| - eubjugating his hair and arrang- | @¢@ de dienica in der islands, mit kegs | ld sirl—do we make a team?” cravat, low ehoes, and a speckled walst-| were not high, I might risk a dollar or The gambling house men now pos-| Instantly another man patated Mr, Jooking glass hung by the win.| mirror, eubumating t with ita | Of Deer under der tree: “Jimmy,” sighed Annie Maria, sud- coat. He choked his throat in a collar] two.’ sessed the two hundred that had coms! Moe, ¢ @tood and shuved himself, 1f |!" his green and purple asco of bis| “Say.” anid Mr, MeQuirk, setting nis| “erly disappearing in his overcoat, that permitted no tle-room, and brushed) “Let us go down the street and see/triumphantly from Cassopolis, They| “Omicer,” he said, speaking quickly," seem to you a task too slight |*Methyat tombstone pin—sloquent "| nat on one olde, “ia everybody kiddin’ | “don't you aeo that spring is all over/his hair straight back, instead of giv-| !f we can break into this place,” said|could have taken Hector's roll away| “1 am not gullty of any crime, but I be thus impressively chronicled, 1) *hosen calling. me about gentle spring? There ain't | the World right this minute?" ing it the James A. Garfield part. the man jovially. “I feel lucky to-|from him in the first fifteen minutes | wouldn't be caught here for the world. with you; you do not know of the| Since the strike had been called i was! 411 more spring in the alr than there | But you yourself remember how that) He began to look upon the twenty- t, and maybe I can share somelof play had haste been necessary, for| i'm a church deacon, and—you know! this partioular atriker's habit to Bie Bim 115 ing horsehair aofa in a Second ave-|4@y ended. Beginning with #o fine a|two years he had lived in Cassopolis as| 600d luck with you.” the wheel was acutely crooked, He slipped Mr, Moe a wad of money self cach morning to the corner ealoe8| nue furnished room. For me the win-| Promise of vernal things, Inte in the|a misepent youth, Now and then he| They departed together. The unknoWn| @tunned, and with his brein totaly and followed the obese man up the hed of Flaherty Brothers, and there estab- derwear yet and the buckwheat | #{ternoon the air chilled and an inch|sent back to Cassopolis picture post-| Offered Hector a larg ck cigar.| paralyzed by the calamity, Hector | Iadder and through the acuttle. before. The big eon of the house | lish himself upon the sidewalk, with one snow fell—even go late in March. On|cards of large and ornate apartment| which he accepted like # man of the| stumbled from the brightly lighted room.| Hector stood etock-still, stupefied Sy Ha was @ marbie-cutter, and | foot resting on the bootblagk's stand, ob-| ‘you haf Doetry,” sald Guts. | Fifth avenue the ladies drew their furs' houses, with the words written under] world. He leaned against @ friendly banister) the rapidity of passing events and the the marble-cutters ¢ out. on @jserving the panorams of the street until) “True, it is yet cold, und in der city | close about them. Only In the florisis'|them: “Here's where I live.” Fortunately enough, the distant gamb-|@nd realized the awful truth—that he! queer crinkle of the bills in his hand. oes ails yer the pace of time brought 18 o'clock and | we haf not many of der s: but dere | windows could ‘be perceived any signs]! Every time he foot upon the| ling house door opened at the name of pee rr hepsi bah ae aaiinpad Lan another canes Garand Grtena Sie: yor" ask od hin mother, |¢he dinner hour, And Me. “Tiger” Mo-|are dree kinds of beoble dot should |of the morning smile of the coming|broad walks of the metropolis he ex-| the stranger. Bolts rattled, an inquir-| boozled—stung—burne & or ing| placed money in his hands, and @& been interested in everything he haa) Briggs disappeared and was seen no|I'm pinched in a gamblin' raid my ff ovan's backyard. And yesterday they drag to his skull-strewn flat.| puts open care on the Sixth avenue s E i i ahs { i EE E s i St him curiously; “are ye not Quirk, with hin athletic seventy inches, | alw: - | cinder! cended to safety. There was no need . a jaye fee! der approach of apring first | Soddess Eastre, Perlenced tingling sensation: ‘The| ing head appeared in the square port: 7 wa te morning, maybe now?" | weit trained in sport and battle; his)—dey are beets, lovers and poor] At 6 o'clock Herr Luts began to close|rushing taxicabs filled him with joy,| hole, and @ voice sald: The ee ie anon ce line for conversation now. ; ng along of Annie Maria! smooth, pale, eolld, amiable face—blue | vidows.”* his shop. He heard a well known shout:|although he had never ridden in one.| ‘Mr. Briggs? Certainly you can come] At, mine . ‘Those who were not yet out of the " impudently explained younger Tim, ten years old. The tall buildings brought the tears of| in. And anybody with you is also|ctip. There was mo one to pay him raid observed the actions of thowe who Mr. McQuirk w c! where the rasor had travelled; his care- eQi ent on his way, atill | “Hello, Dutch: welcome here, because we know that] Sttention now that his money had ®0N6 | were escaping. Hector placed the money "Tiger" fully considered clothes and air of cape- | possessed by the strange perturbation | ‘Tiger McQuirk, in his shirt sleeves,|Dride to his eyes. He loved to mingle : b 1 pelleg CR pp pnd Dility, was himself a apectacie not dis-| that he did not understand. Something | with his hat on the beck of his héad,|in the home-going Jams in the sub-| you are a gentleman and @ scholar.” hbase aad he aioe alone on the in ale varios faeenn ot id nothing: ‘ohawr. pleasing to the eye. lacking to his comfort, and {t made | stood outside in the whirling snow, way. and to paw over the thought that] Mr. Briggy smiled quietly at Hector, | *\Q"ny @ Rolls “What abil thie ihet rae ict ikke wee white him half angry because he did not | sum e Was one of them. and that young man was inwardly { ‘eal he, “beyond a touch| But on this morning Mr. MeQuirk did puffing at a black cigar. I do? I am ruined! I will never dare | outright. lon't-know-what-you-call-ita, 1|not hasten immediately to hle post of KNOW what It w “Donnerwetter!” shouted Luts, ‘“der| The Cassopolia Weekly Breeze had] pleased at the thought of being in com-| ie ‘my head. I shall never be able to| “one feel lke there was going to be earth-| leisure and observation. Something un-|_TW° blocks away he came upon al vinter, he has gome back again yet!"|A little article about “Hector Moe, now] pany of a man who was recelved £0) -otarn to Cassopolis and face the jeers. he ‘Then Hector looked at §im closely and 14. “Oh! OMcer—please!” foe, one Conover, whom. he was bound | +: ident of York City, but form-| graciously. _ cl Nd ‘Yer a iar, Dutch,” called back Mr, |® F' ent o! lew 'y, but thi ht that [I learned the ways pond Pp, \- Quakes or music or & trifle of chills and repaee epaer ie! eo Aged areed “hin! honor to engage In comba MoQuirk, with friendly geniality, “It's|erly one of Cassopolis’ primlsing young| The gambling house proprietor took|+.4 wis et thie great sity, Sut 1 om ter casts trosaer ef rest gir 1 fel fhe ‘knoohing tre | tmongnta, Fuel Nia cence wade tan | MF McQuirk made the attack with apringtime, by the watch. men.” Hector cut out the paragraph! Hector by the arm tke one who hadlan innocent sheep. My fife is blasted |owner of the fourcand re ee at one blow, and my future is gone!” | second assistant vestryman in the Ad- He turned and stared about him | vanced Churo! dumbly. Mechanically, end scarcely} ‘Hector Moe!’ muttered Mr. Feather- knowing what he was about, he walked) hone, recognizing the austere features up the stairway, passed the swinging, | of his former fellow townsman, leather-bound doors behind which lay| “For the eake of our old acquaintance his two hundred dollars, and seeing! back in Cassopolls," begged the culprit, another etair, he ascended it to the top.| “let me wut of this! You know what ‘Then, being @ young man and full of it would mean down home if I wei unutterable woe, he sat himself down) caught. As an officer of the law and a upon the rich carpet and wept copiously. | friend, I plead with you for freedom. With his desolated countenance in his| Take this. hands, the tears trickled down and/ He thrust another roll of, bills toward formed lttle poole on the expensive! Mr. Moe, but Hector scorned {t with » & policeman, or elee maybe like | at dnce languld, irritable, elated, dissat- Coney Island straight across the | ised and sportive, Me was no diagnos The Real “Hot Weather Malady” It Is Peevishness. Steer Clear of It. By Clarence L. Cullen. other afternoon, when the good peanon to give that hind of talk @ Fst i, gs a heat was greatest, about | vacation, toothy, wave of his hand, men and women, most of| The men who meet the pubile in great ud } “ ¥ 5B Hector wished he was back in Cas- he answered sternly, “I will them cross, were) mobs during long hours every day, are} Cricket hunting with an automobile— . REPO as 0°43 ( sopolis with some one to comfort him|take no money from you. IJ will per- at tha eoaniey_ ti est #5 onmte' Ah fo been ton eons | eee ca ee ll ac she Mee ucel Gamieieee Gee western Flin abe tal neti ae ee ra ewan nes dls ipetslant enh canetng sone many bs Hesay Sos Soaeriane ae ee the ‘gheortul panorama afforded, by| Hector skipped up the tron route, @ef- ticket office, Most) of them—whom they have to meet, Ye Jo BY e orater of the Hew Hicks’s red barns, and the country| lowed by Cassopolis’s leading flour-amé- of them, it ap-| They come in for @ good deal more eee easy te danas om bis buckboards driving in to churoh on| feeder. Together they clambered ever Deared, Wanted| maltreatment of the en pg itt | ooonian ck os “hos usa cones ¢ Sunday. roofs until they reached a fire-eacape, Hunting Crickets With---an Automobile Curator Raymond L, Dit- Be Sores Bic ee NAO aie ee u mar s Ingenious Scheme ; ; : : ‘ wor Tracking the Wily chairs of ‘ Then he dried his futile tears and| Following his leader, Mr, Featherbone care te anaes Most eon tee nt ‘They | Men buat, This year he plans to devote ge i % ; summoned his numbed faculties, At; reached the safety of the street, and ca] City. would not lest a day on thelr jobe if| °Peclal attention to the capture of q 6 his back was am fron ladder, the top of|then for the frst time he breathed 9 r ‘The five decided-| they were not decidedly patient. erickets, katydids, locusts and the other which rested against the celling scuttle, civil young] If one of them now and again,| squirming, crawly, bussy fauna of Sul- | and es Hector gazed upon it with ead clerks behind the/ wrought to a moment of heat Irritation, | ivan County, And he has devised a oven 8. quides and terrific commotion counter were work- lets an impolite word or so out of his| plan for their circumlocution worth: | star! a i ing hard, Their| system, the individual who hes caused fence oy Fara pale pease J From the depths, far below, came a| “It is nothing, he sald, with gratitude to "I can never repay you for " Hector said haughtily, \ r 4 roaring sound, followed by the crash | ‘Come with me and we will have am Manner was re that might very easily reflect that mid-| “you sec," he explained, “there's lots of falling glass, the overturning of tables! !ce cream soda. ‘Then go back to Oae- spettu! and obliging. But |t appeared summer peevishness is an article of| of insects that look exactly like leaves and the banging of iron doors. sopoliz.” the supply of chairs on parlor cars, Which he himself cannot expect to| and twigs, Gce this one,” and he picked & i “ # : L an ial aula Atlantic City had run out. There. | Possess a monopoly. Up @ epecimen from his desk which in- : : Pet ; ie ie Pi j ane toe Genoa Nut es hens | nade Mp, Seatherbone anook hatte take the fftyrand-odd cross men and! The clerks, the ticket oMce men, the] deed strongly resembled a light green bh F. p rs fearless spirits about the gaming tables | MY With his savior, wrought wpon by the heat,/CMductors, the gateman and many teas, even the legs seeming like shredded any violent noise is but one thing—the Pend g \ Hector advised. | Tae at the clerks. They snarlea °tB¢r# who meet the crowds have pretty | leat Ares. \& sound of the door smashing police, the | When ‘tne aige for you rubs spiteful things to the clerke| 702" Summer Jobs, nor are they bighly| ‘These insects live on trees tna oncoming of the raiders im unlform, | pole tad utente ytE Hl My paid for thelr work, hrubs,"" continued Mr. Ditmars, "and th t of | tion Mr. Mow h ae railroad and Pullman com-|" pny great majority of them 4 s siren.’ He did so; the katydids im-|the ald of my searchlight, secure a A close investigation on the part | Hon. low hunted a ai panies. \best they can, which, spesking = ] wane Th ren Gea phate ra |Mediately responded and X made severai| number of valuable epecimens. The| “I don't understand why; we seem she sid ene eS Lre Maine ri are io. i when he had eke fhe clerks, of course, had nothing!fectively, ix mighty well. There ts| their hiding place. Yet many of thom, captures, nyusical vibration wil prevent the in-|to be growing Uired of each other,” es 5 pete ela a he paused in his pleasant. taait Whatever to do with the fact that th very reason why they should be given | like the cricket, alng only at ni and| “Now, I have made @ fine collection | sects from being frightened at the light. | said a husband of but & few months. A puntatranean bine had filled a cot. | }one enough to remar' ‘Were Bo more parlor car chairs to ® chance for their taw marble ‘one can't go scrambling after them in|f & dosen different horns and whistles |It won't be nevessary for me to give| "I haven't an idea! said the wi lar with gas, which hed gone off Pay chem dok-Bone 1 armera certainly ‘They had sold all they had to sell, and) And there ts no sense or Gecency| pitch darkness. On the other hand, a|"d rattles, which can gil be attached|an exact imitation to each separate Feplied the young man, “wer-| 1, 0S” Mising upon an inactive fur- stig town when they seach dhe feet let them out But they were| whatever in gratultounly abusing them,| Strong light, trom en automobile or a|*° & motor car, of, which I oan carry, | song so long as my motor siren or other| haps that is the reason.” —Lippincott’s,| © OOMe TMM Utes tough w base: ‘Then ive resumed counting, ‘o @neered at and spoken harshly to. And, — Pocket flash, frightens them and stops! ¥erking them by means of @ @mall|instrument is tuned to set up the same eee erene Sera = Decamss they, no doubt, need their jobs, MOTHER'S TONGU thelr singing, #0 that the ‘unter of {Private battery in my pooket. There is|number ef vibrations ae those sent out THE DIFFERENCE, HATS FOR EVERY WOMAN, | was won by @ Filipino, while the Japans they were compelled to take al! of this} “Do you realise the power of the specimens is helpless. & different instrument for each ineect|by the insect in question,” The Mananer~h4 ‘© ien't a single A London firm has sixty display win- we won the marathon and had a base fatale eduse of eupposed-to-be rational) mother tongue?” asked the young man! “1 ast summer I was out with e friend|Which I am curious to capture. I have] “save you found any musical in- ed in your @ve-act play that will] dows in its store and recently all the| ball team that defeated jhe Filipinos ta 4A and women; all of whom, by the) Who professed inter in @ motor car and heard @ regular | #everal little rattles and drum arrange-|etrument which will attract files or! The Playwright—But I'm not writing windows were Giled with a display of | every gam ‘Wey, also demanded thut they be watted | he! exipreon Ne’ | uatydid chorus. I gaid: ‘I'll got some ot|Ments which I picked up in a children's| mosquitoes?” Mr, Ditmare was asked. | for posterity—t'm writing for plunks, | Women's hats. Nearly seven thousand Rperaiey om at once. as in eshte Nin Baiauabs those fellows.’ And I started to climb|toy store. I also have an automabtle m gure I Rope not,” he laughed. —Cleveland Plain D. hats were shown, mee ae Be ne rn Prey a BOF CLOCK, ‘There A CONTINUOUS & neighboring tree, asking my friend to| siren from which & have removed the} 1¢ y have accidentally hit on such a — oe eee ne ie yes Gah eae WHER sands in an GRE printed, avout the anapptenness of direct his motor searchlight into he] ™mesaphone in order to diminish the) thing !t won't remain long Ia my cel- ; ty clectrictty pills : ni Bengt operated who have to meet the public In| find it," remarked the plutocretic pro-| branches, nolse, lection, I assure you.” “I admire everything that is beauti- CHINESE: Rentoae BEsT. A win he jeok , bince 1670. it office men, box office! moter of great trusts. ‘Presto! The katydids were silent and| ‘I shail drive my car into @ suitable| Mr. Ditmars also hes @ plan to make a) os, a things to| In the recent. far Eastern Olympic| in the clock, and so ‘constant has she as seek Oe On aio agen grant replied the snare rele Jenks, RN; ‘neleaverioes and on my. sousieal_-| woving pioliwoe Of. oe Janeele FesRt0t~ saa. eho replied. Wwe have only ames at Manila the best all-round ath-| supply of electricity been thet the elses A le man, ‘out please don't take it ell af ene at work in turn, Them I ing to the Motor each other a little while.”—Ci iete wap 0, Chinean Fon Wico-sings whe | has cus wall nigh contlavoudy tt om “SSO j ) your mater foot gestentiq, confident thet 3 cam, With bene. : Pain Dealen wen the geesghien; fhe feeb | was invent final re