{ title: 'The Cohoes Republican. (Cohoes, N.Y.) 1892-1920, September 09, 1919, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-09/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-09/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-09/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-09/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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c V a” Awenflmno nil-res. [filmy Advancing, Anon-mote. ~ so- ionic, Tabb“. T5 gents per}, \filling rictikes for all adv-raun- ' iconic» of amusements, Tofentie par \tuning enrol, requiring no chem calendar months. iP‘l‘iON, EATES' whin Cine ); Six Months, $1.50; Three: #, 756; One Month, 256. © |. gul eel-intone by mail payable HAM page ke 1 es , 5M!“ pharge for papers wont to 6tty ind;.at mm ZQM@®: .c 000. f t to cite REFUBLIMN com- 'An a 78 'W awk street, co- \Feil V. Kennedy, . gator! % 0°C TCs ut € was directed mainly to } {United States anti olenerwpowered ‘ er occupientieea railroad “stem, ayors 'to film‘lilnes into the 6 ram! noodle at least-flick. lumen\ acter out on A not K 10). the throttie- worm”; prev fine.“ As the American \prikine' . firefighter-ammonium ficmnmdtoo s and he nope! totem-hunks.“ i mum norm A YEAR: uni: Aflebie in every mount no nicer R l'i‘cllow ever occupied a chair in the * Milly Advertising, 30 gents per; former State Senator and now assistant secre- tar: of the navy. Nevertheless. he had . hot béen in hig seat | fifteen minutes: insurgent members, and while he may against Ais: natty rather than with it, L \nothing smains on the ¥ecords in All» f 'any to prove that his frito mil;- ito life brought about a peffed of wur« rest, the district having been quickly | {restored to: the Republican colunin. As: iit was Mr. Roosevelt remained in the legislature but a short period andnone ltoo tong to equip hia with tinker-enter of «experience than | was re- quired to fit trim for. federal responsi- bility. He was appointed against the. \| wikhes , of the Néw York State Danio» | \{otecy and was thereafter accepted as | ione of the paid: deiemlers or the Wilson administration; . - Since the Wilson administration has |been' under fire the former Sanctum . ”Timon on the stump to disprove all the charges of illiciilclency made | against \ ithe . President. In & recent speech he |- regermd 'to. . dollar-a-yoar-men - who | at nt to: Washington. some of whom hie | Were mot worth fifty gents a year . 2 coll alternator. worth ® qjuarter ~bf a dollar.. In makiuk this'. statement Snowmen did not the: value | some of the exporth. may 'have placed | apon memppointees of President Wil- son, including, W the . assistant: secretary oi: the anyy. and the thought may be relevant that tid the Wilson | adminlmutim been all that Win. Romveltkswid At was the dollar-(tweet- men wouldact hive been neefied in tine first instance However, -the dollar‘zcgear- that it ”has “developed liter-General of Railroads | act\ upon the merity of ir\1 concur with the DE-} \the\ Director~ onal tour 352241 it? moon?) and that. the post. who; “illicit” one isl' A lot of it ye are getting. tour cents an hour\ (two cents . {wont to Washington during the wall jand 'gave thew time to. do what\ thew could,. while Assistant Secretion of the Navy “Roosevelt and other S¥Hison ap 'pointees were on the pay roll., Thus it] might ihave neon just as well l‘or Mr. fon,of mon who sacrificed personal Hairs ds a.matter of patriotism even; it they did not come up fo. his expocta- tious. They did al they could and- yey.\ haps whon all ig cold and done they may have performed as efficient service as Mr. Roosevelt, who, when ho wis in- Albanydid not do one taing that can: be remembered that would. add any: lustre to a name made famous by n {distinguished relation. In these days | , {when psychiatry is playing itspart an | alienist might. diagnose Mr. Roomvelt 8 7: Iuntterance as “tlelonoe mention.\ ‘ Republican: sm begins at home. It- you want your county to he Republican Ivate for the Republican canfildates for: ~ {town and county offices. if you' want | your city to be Republican vote for tha znflpfibnfllfll candidates for ward and- ,q offices, If you want your stite to |, . tbe Rrepublican. vote for the Republican {candidates for 'thomber ~of | asspmbly. | y, [This is building from the bottom anid a - the people &Aré beginning' c that sad \tr.\ Republican efficency canmnot 'be ad- '\; This is the year tor Whitetail men | s , . ménletered motile Democratic {warty |: :a 4 Y imam women to git-out at the pols on | election day. If They theywill -they\ will “he the élection of: a President qnd Governor fext your Just | had certain g: our. when-git mono» § succeeds like - sum,mittxnm thi» | 6 L year will roman everyting to this: ,. |comntry which will «with» to. suitor , (from mammal elm untlt Ste | 4 imitate simctency - and inthiligentes | are Once. mom “mill-lied in. tile state attraction; yo. we When tailed Win: the more» ties «or hig chum tor the Presiden} {gy : Secretary Mol- said:. \\My candt:'} ycucfurormmwm m onyx camber of the state legislature ; \than Franklin D. Rocsevelt, teéfore-he was registered as one of the |. have accommlehctl something. working |O Roosevelt to have left unsaid his opin- |\ | moneyi-though It probably does not| diapulea proviriong of the lei Champion | sof © nations bythe thy were greatly, MeJ \other ale,\: k } remarkeble .. demonstration ~of- the oopnleoew—enlhmlamc approwal (bf) ; his attitude and - vigoroys .eandorsa- ment of his Ttemarks-he was. dis- appointed. The crowds which heard: tions were in no way notable. - To \inoke who have Jollowed presidential campaigning in. tha last decade the opening or the- countrywide campaign 1 suffered by comparison; + Yet it wimt Mr. Wils orfs to his pmokrain | by. (numerically 'clasging them as His 'allies ~hgainat, the United State Senate.. \The only people I owe any report; to are you and the other citizens of the United | his hearers kite that he did owe a; report tp the Senate of the United itates, . their representatives in \ |-peses treaty ware. stimuli by a- lie-oi” paing. 4p Neas & fate. ~ quaiysla .' of - Abd appainted, .. When ' the President -was | _ \HF not dealing with generalities he was © warmly domains provialoria ofthe: a zoot understand it. His gon ts getting treaty to which no, ohjedtion:. Jins. \been. raised. . ? {- 14f the Pro-ideal bad. loot-cl tof . a} his wore large. but the demonstrg- | \s (dull ‘ He plainly, s01 gilt to win his audit-a . | States,\ he decie ed with fervor, But the | T~b gimme”. out Father Nina. oi Norm Kaa rom‘et‘ the\ Rolemn in connection: with the olfing of the ) forty hours 4; | In. ct. limes | church, Wat.“ war the attraction - at the Option 0pm How? > Prizes fr. the but not We awarded by' {the deline- pusineas Men's asavciation, were ointrtbntell as “It”? Mye: “Welter C. Harringtod, | . Reary, chutes R. Ford, & \tw barman. Q. K. McNeil, ~B. Bamugis and Mrs_R. R. Chadwick. ° mil known in who”. was . elected . senior grand warden at the annual concleyo of Knight Template held at; Famine. . , TWENTY Vilma A@0.. m % w $ 4: '. The world known Dreyfus chee jn Rennes, hence. came to a close to- | day when Captain Alffed Dreyfus o? the French army was loom minty ot» thureb. _ we 2a mersey come bed ithe we?“ wes conflicts. i Sry? . i the insistence that was his up to the upper branch of Congress, the body which underatho 'constitution | is giv-; -on <the final dediston in Sreaty making | aud the President know tile fact even better than they did. |.. Under these, circumstances it; is: hot surprising that his challenge to the Senate did not meet with An “D“! roar. & tu sf greener“ Wilson ml.\ blmne no- | body But himself it the general im- préesgion of: his tour is. that of. po-] stumpndpenklng Me- has made iA bad beginning' in his public inch—Syracuse Journal. it ~ | More War lmnpagity. e As each néw development of inca-| light, the {mind mnlmonselously. sats; AtaBE, to resist the shock of still other: revelations. To. the disclosures ot the excessive expense and the <al- | most nothing of the outcome of tha conduct of the board responsible for: the production «or, rather, the mon- added the revelations of © 'the fatlurée ot} the ordnance departmont lurc- duce man \arms machine \gans 'or | artiliety for actiiar use: in France in 1 anything like the quantity needed or possible, an. gpite -of expenditures | that were astonishing 4 their mag- | nitinde. - (Now comes the information,} dragged to light by the House com- ¢ the conduct ofl the wir, that the\ “munitions plaat: |vonstmicted in Ohio, which was es- tlmategl to jedst not < more, thon actually | cost $14,000,000] 'in an uncomplefed stale so. Excessive expenditures to secure soeell where speed was a vital neces- .but when excess of cost was accom- panied \by extreme dilatoriness and ] inexcusable delay and Inefficiency, as was the chase especially with all the | I unitertakings df the ordnance de- partment, it comic; be condoned. \The War was a big thing, to be. sure. {df was unfortunate that we did not: have in execn’tlim positions .more} men who mellowed hp to its bust+ ; liege »-St, Loulg. «Globe~l}emocrat i . & i Government Operation. makes the contentions femark thit: ,,he bad 'found met governments could] spend money but had never known a government to {novicew anything in, ~the-nature of in enterprise;, Probably this is trie of ell governifi/ efits, It is, certsinly - true: of our owns \What ' Américgn would ~Wigh to buy stock In any owness~ehioplnm trcnsoorta \Etion réclamation-or in any factor? mant or industry organized and oratew by\ our government? Whoa 'wodld want stock therein accessible tor dgficlts? Who would 'biy stock: with fle expectation. of - racéiving' criminals? The oho thing \Our gov» ian do at a profit is to print: produce the .Blils as cheaply. as | u- mm concern gould, but pity: mori 1 designing, engraving and printing [ novernments kya apendets, not ers; and the ngtJion. that they can Yun railroads. pivot or make: or. Or airplanes or any other Commodity at exprofit hak« Heen ~40) thoroughly. disproved\by * recent ax- pbrience . that governmen operation l” public ytilities is unlikely to be perilously considered by : Intelligent Aitizens, who hare no axes to.grind, tor many yéard to 00mmwlloo‘lleilor ii’ont‘lifxprcm‘ oleae The ; ~At#ill be recollect hy: w? foregoing that £9:- « long> time the President y / with . Germany. the docilion willfie mammoth the conflicts or other pecity and reckless extravagance in | the eqndnct_ the war: comes to. production. of aircraft have been |. sity may be excused, even approved, . , goiter ~~ Isthdt are to supply the next genera-f non.-~Temoe Tribune. - A man whosils trying to piodernige.] ; the froight transit system\of London| | was\ as Cinsintent ' thay \wo muat\ po- [t] main ont of' the war, neutral, even 4 early part of 1917, or dig he \look at the thing with the jaundiced eyes of! f ofte who has some private purpose or lite own ' However that may lie, he reversed his attitude . completely in 1917. He| thus confessed that he had been in |. the wrong tor more than lwn yeals and & halt , -. He is in tile wrong now. country cannot afford. to be mide & . to admit that he was in: the wrong, \ by. disastrous experience affecting |. the. whole nation .~Albany Jollrnol , Wm . ; The MON! Side of it. primary: a moral one so far ag this. sacrificing our honor, discrediting, 'That. country did not win if from -China in war. ~datter forced China to moire certain. these concessms from the still help- less Ching has a . po ~more rightful claimpuptn ghantnng than the Ger- | mans had. °- _ States subscribe to-a' treaty which. violates 'all our-traditions and which, moreover;.robg a friendly: nation?. Our integrity forbids any such step. af Japan must have Shantung -this: property yemaing stolen property despite all the finely worded peage treaties that can be drawn.-Brook- lyn Standard-Union, , W” \ 16 to 1. The mills of the gods grind slowlY. but they grind, nevertholess. About twenty-five years ago the cry of the: country was \If to 1.\ - We have actually lived to seg it come to tor 'it takes sixteen dollars to buy anything, and if the present genera- 2 -tion - should start hollering for a yatlo we geol for the poor: kid® PRodediation |- . \The Pawsr Behina thd new A. lcolonel, Arthur ucA’tfllul' or my. I_ make us. & party to all internatiomk-fi ~ Avas hd. ignorant when he held 'ta | - ”mils victim. of the President's . mopenltlon - : in order that ho. may again, be forced |/ The Shantung issue is of course, | nation is concerned. | We would \be ' our past and: making our . pretensions i. to justice ridiculous © by: approving | .> nafaing ovey this province to Japan.! * Nor did Germany. The | concewloos and Japan, -in - seiwing |-- '*Pheraefore, wily should the United ‘ country 'should not approve. Stolen k clear\? * “Q ”m 'a {3 September tom at the owe > | Cow: say. “xiii at fie cxrd perty given Mound Lmke by - up Jame- B.: (31th ot some. a I Lo TWENTY-HIV. VIA” A00, . Albert annexe and Joint 'Gusick. were elected men: bers . ot Hose com» pany, , No. 1. i L002 0%. Krank. lit Buisman . was < elected | preaident 'ot' the E‘hilorlxoe illiterat- society of Weteriit ya. 'The\ newcomer Volve company“out announced the reopertog ofits plant on a day and night* schedule. | -'Rev. Dr. Fletcher of, Which spoke 'at > services An the A ‘ljgt‘ Baptisy e » a + - ve wake meric soma m Buin cnn _as A Bit. a} Poetry LEAGUEQMANM. liengfies for workers, - «Leagues , for shirkers. < iLeugues to repress, ~~~ . deagies than‘tlititrees. Leagues to reform, ' that disiorm, -Leagne® to egohew, -|- ° neaghuel that undo, | mangoesfio digdirss,. 9,1 han as .. + iuoitheMek‘DunieisOvomootllit‘ | © Fage securbd the) -- {: from dying in my tracks !. At's quite l \ said,. \| took her tin ys |. «Good Byet I do hope you'll have the most sblendidtrip.\ She gave his hand , | Good bye? | ment later \glanced back over. his Ulst‘ood watching him, that same. casoat ~~-*\t% can't stun? ihlilf’ George raid. \ta a dow volce. \I'm\just_ about ready te . go in 'this drug store here, and eok: ''the clerk for sometcing to keep me _shotk, you see, Lucy §\ 3 e> . < *What ig.\ . ~ - ._ \To find out certainly. at int. how Geéply you've cared for me! To set ~how much différence this makes ts .you! By Jove, I have mattered to you i Her cordial smite was tempered now with good \George!\ She | Anughed Andulgently. \Shrely you don't me to do pathos . on &, down town corper t\ \Fou - wouldn't where!\ . *Wellt-don't - Fou think pathos I generally rather foogling?* ° ~ \t. can't sitind this any longer,\ he. “l“ gan't! Good bye, Lucy!\ Hel id. \It's good bye-I think: for good, LucyI\ -~ 'do pathos' W it's good » 'corvdigl little grip, then - nelegsec Hghtly. \Give my Jo¥e to your mother. -He turned heavily away, and e me ghoulder, 'She hnd not gone on,\ \but - . Leagues just to fuss, Longnee *to agsist,- “Leegnek to desigt, . _- Leagues to revise, '- L. : Leagues to dlevise, ° - Leagites to Leagues to affiliate, - Leagiieg to Geterminate, | Leagues to exterminate, C - Leagues ta preserve, , ~ Leagues to conserve,. | ° Leagues for your eatables, ~ _ Leagues:, for your drinkables . Leagues for the kiddie, Leagues for the Biddy, All dolled up with leagnes ~ - you're plump giddy ~- Give me a league - With & real league pull, . . Where tl0y make home tuns | won the Hasta Hath *~ ~ 0 John B Foster. wan” he Wit and Humor w HUMAN: seuriennEss. ~ \Or gourse,\. said Mr. Crosslots, many=individuals & say in running} \the railroads.\ “Why not?” “Livery one would want to. delay business mestings while he put up an arbument to have express trains stop as; his particular «treet crossing., --\Vashington Star. > e- (Figurine The chances. \Tom said. his young wife, \I bought a ticket today. for a piano: that's going to be raffled off. ® 00; ~* “Hint How many - chances there?' | \A thousand, That's what decided} me. Where there are so many! chances 'as tha; one ought ty stand | real good, shark oughtn't one, Boston TranScrlpt A are Billingsgale-N Tt comes I8 A> distinctellock to the. American people to discover that what . was announced as an excursion for the. 'expounding\ of the 'treaty of, peace. has resolved itgelt nto a sort of fish- wives' junket for outpouring of the . 'commodity commonly known as bil- serious mutate in following the exam- one of the Vigil! and the Times in 13« sorting to' vituperation directed at in- when the occasion is qne cal- like for srkpment »pon principles, Al- ready his course has been construed as | evidence an irritation which, natur» ally enough, is attributed to alum!“ ment over the digcovery that he cam {neither balloon nor dragon Senators bent upon woman; the duty impos- ad apon them-~bytheir oaths of ofllce and! their love of country; | -/ ., *What the country his expected 36: thie President is a frank discusion of those features of the treaty -and 'the \Covenant which have eroused the [tear of the people that the vital inter- eats of this are not | ptopcrl? 'gafognarded 'in the document as it was submitted. to the Senute. Instead the! surt: at, men: who, charged with. tile ~igravent Wfibfllfiu, have ft to difter with htm the meas- Ing and effect of certwhs. provizions of | it\ those Wont Angegate; Thcel’resident is making a', have had, so far, only glittering gener-: . titration. . theme | intersperped . - with ot Argument - my minds\—~o sneer that bespealas the |professoriat assumption. of a superior montality,. By inference, at \toast thoy. are charged with promoting Bolghe~ vism-a charge that is am. insult to the intelligence uf the Presidents hearers and to oll Americans. Lee \*\We mast got aglow little. groups of | selfish men to plot the futura of Amer- |- tea,\ the Presifent Aeclared at Kansas: pity Anericans whoinsist that the vi- ta, interests of their country must no}: be surteddered will agree ' with the: Président in that, thought mailing # natur» |différept application. The Senate - hay under.consideration a document which. duet of \little groupe of selfish men\ not interim and in that document so constructed, the fate of this nation fs Involved K great measure; Ver? | many Americans, in. addition to vent bers -of the Henate, see that under. it: provimons the Rmpire of amt Brita Ilain .and the umpire of Japan are, the \in: wintiers,\ and they féar that . the United melee is a loser of rights that 'why\ of this situation, / ./. ; Tt is. to be hoped that the mug. Frankly Hecuasthg th6- imitation: Gt: 'the troaty over which. controversy lint arisen. The American people: went in. -' formation, not vituo‘muon' 'and - as a'they: are baring the noon» of this ok» |Progidentint ewing around the circio'1i MMthVai-afitw toitl (-¥. ¥. Hapa @ \s - esse f \you ccaid't undertake to give tool O | waving her small Hand to him chedr« | slowly into the digg store which had | {able clerk. 'who had been looid.g at \| her through the display window as. she | from the shelves of glass jars againqi bears many earmarks of beingthe pro- | fugue \have been deat to the. Amer{- Ke 'cen heart. They want to know tile uh Site Had Not Gone .on, out: Stood j Watching Him. cordial smile oh her- face to the very emphasized her'frliendly unconcern 'by | By,though pértripe- wit? the slightest \hint oe’pyoocenpnfion; as if she had begun to 'think of the errand that brought her down town, Lucy, remained where she was until he wis out of sight. Then she went | struck George as a possible source of L atimulant Zor himself. \Please let me have a few dropy of:! aromatic spirits of ammonia in a glass 'of water,\ she said, with the uticost composimwe. **Yes, marami\ said the impression: stood on theo corser. But a. moment later, as he turned 'the wall, syith the potion she had asi gd for. in his hand, he uttered an or gtamation : \Por goshes' sale, MissI 'feliow bonrders, that evertag, \Sugge!) firefly noir to the - countep, she was,\ (he \wald \\I been a. bright, - 'quick, ready-tornnything young fella the'd 'a' fAummixzed. plum! 1 was, watchin' hep out the window -taikin' to some young sety fella, ang sh was all right \Then. She was All right when she Chme in the store, too. Yes, sit? the protflest girt that ever walk- 'ed'in our place -and: look one good look at me. T reckon it must be the wat what some you town wage soy. about | taco!\ (woe At thit liom‘ the heroine of the susceptible clork's . romance -was. en- | gaged: In brightening tlle rosy little: coal fire under the white. mantelplece lit her pretty white and blug boudoir.\ ographs all frnmed in decor, coo in- sliver went to the anthra-> {with a profound fervor, * -| well-balanced to let myth | you deeply about 'that-thnt;mon Led Rlorentine box v A fHon within the sxine. hour. that nu & Fanny spoke“ and.a little Inter Fealled her father in, as. honeyed her -+0 door, ani pointed to the blackened a % pathy, telltog fim th {=-OB, 5 last; and now, i% 'he looked back, { 'And, describing t¥is adventure to his f a tribute to awl-co. 1s, be thinks he's beep such: a dero, . and Isabel does, too. and that makes , eroMot'l'ri +, CS gol! him more than twice is awful. IPs |. . © - been the same all hislife: everything ; {he did was noble antiwar. He bod 'a camper-int nature' to 'bexin' with. 'and let it go on, and foetered: It ° | till it absolntely riled ther,. -B nover ' ;; saw a plainer case of a 'perpon'@ fault - making them pay for having It! She goes: abowt, (overseeing the melting 'and praising George and prolonging to 'be perfectly cheerful about what he's . «done. She pretends he did much a fine. . thing-s0 manly | and> protective=-go: - ing. to Mrs. Johnson. And so berole- \| doing what his 'principles' made, him ~-sven though be knew what It would > - cost him -with yor!-\And «lf the While - it's almost killing her-what he said to, your father} Bhe's always been: lofty «enough, so to speak, and had the [grentest iden -of the: Apibgriens boing superior to the rest of #hg world, and wl1 thilt, but rudeness, or 'n “log like. a 'sgéne,' omiany\ 'bad' hi pore elm}; just made her salék! could. never sge when corp ners. were-oh, . it's ' been'ch - tempt po adulation! .. .. .~ It's going.t6: beat for : me,, living in that bij House,, a alone; you must comp iind gee mc- [I monn: after: they've gone, of i PH go crazy AT don'tioegz of people, I'm sure you'll - foften as you can. I know: you, *do' o think you'll he sengltive about ing there, . or 'being. \reminded sot George. Thank heaven you're-too will« _ balanced,\. Miss Fanny conclnlleg. autre. tao: The Four photographs and.thi it to thetf Lucy: aren on the underside of the' muntelpi¢ce, fand to the burnt henp upon the coal, | where some: metallic shapes sHll about his neck : in pasglopdte | am gt she linen: . i “D y. _- Thad happeded to him': . 6 \fhe began to comfort: her an! 1; rmesedflnugh un em \ well-\ he<«siid. ' * \Well lold for such foollshres® ¥o : be (into my head, mnyhow,?} < - * © \No nol\ aho qobhéfl. \And ii; yo ‘imew how I despise myself for over having;thought one lostant about: , \There~E think I agree, with, your»; Eugene said grimly, and in his éven; there was a steady Hght-of anger thit | wasto last, \Yes I think-I agree with you about that!\ ° \(rituals oply one thing to do with such f person.\ she said vehemently. at \That's to puthim out of our thoughts fogeve orever p And yetfthe next day, at six o’clock. which was the hour, Fanny had told © her, when George and. his mother-were - to leave. upon, their long Journey; Lucy touched that scorched place on: hep - mantel with her band Just as the little: clock above 'It struck. Then, after this odd, unlonscions gesture, she went to window and stood. between the cur - thing, iookioe out- into the cold No-: vember dusk, and in spite of every ° | reasoning and reagonfible power within horya paimof lonelinesfi struckthrough: her heart, street halal?! hor 'wingow, the datk fouses.acros® the way, the vagne alr ltsclfwallflookcd 2 empty, cola and {most-of @) un- . interesting.. Something more sombre than. November dask took thes color from thein nnd ghve them that air oil desertion. a k 'The light of her fire, file ering up 'bchind her, showed suddenly a Ayling: ~I |tammea outline. She flung «her arnia -~. ® group of tiny: snowflakes nearing the |© | window-pone. and Yor an- instant sho | folt the sensation of belng: crowed ! through a spow-trift ugidor a broken ieutter. with n boy's arms about her- ° 'an arrogant, bundsome, towonqnerlng 'boy, who did his best to get hurt himself, keeping her from any - pussible harm. . She shook the picture out PT lief eyes indignantly, then came and sat | ; her fire, And looked tours-M4?” long at the biackened man 1mm {She Aid not have the q . 'painted-and, since. graphs.. Oné forgets what made the scar upon his band but 'not what mule the scar upon 'his wall. - >.> ~. .- . . New facesnpoearedet tn: clte's erce destruct! 1-fraimes and: euu—iollwthree pukets of lotters and notes in: a ~vharming Florentine treas- 'ure box df printed wood; nor was the : box any more thin tho silver frames, spared this rousing. finish. < Thrown rtily upon live coal, the fine wood ; led forth in stars, they burst -in- ,. \to: an. alarming blaze which scorched 'the white manteiploce. bit Tiucy stood ,* will putin end to bilingsgula methods | ' turn his at tion. to the task 0 ten took * filial bad. happened -at. lsnbcls €loop, ! 22 22 crs ind looked on without moving - it whs not Fogefie who \ told, hor When she got home, she found Fanny | ater wetting tor her-a secrot ex- of Fanny's. for the purpose, pre-; ge that was what, she did, .She, told. Luey overflow: Cexeopt' her own la- e part in the 38. “incline of the ; béen appearing everywhere. for 'that lMl’lnl‘, : “letting out\ again ;~ be- : € - ‘on P I in. iss Fanuy called \him. the riglit x) * ‘ name: that rmonkeyt He ls f*** * far # a ' h P9 n 131 O C2 Vm whe 'did not = 000) might 'as well have' kept: his photo- , T t 'dances of the winter; now facem hac® - ~~ - { matter, and fumiliar ones 'were disan-* mefged: In the increasing.. ~crowd, or gone forever and misacd a_ \lttle and not. long; for the towh was ' growing and changing as it never had. grown awed before. {2g - de ''To. a primary school examination. & question about the senses was no- : ewered liy & bright pupit in. this # \The five senses nre snee sobbing.: erying, yowntug -and com 711W ~aixth sense fs nigant \am which some row he\. ~The 8ix Senset | - :