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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1912)
.43 f V e Dec age: SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT Judge is ajeiMe Mow-am it? 7 Drawn for The. Bee by Tad 'n ..... . . J CAMT THLEJEP i THIMptV CANT JUT H0Ll AfOyr'D 1 VfGU. DEAR. " Dirr Mil buWpN& OVE- 'fiU. PUT VOy TO l r "l X" 'PA TO siLts: r - 0 ?jlQri. HA -MA -HA-HA I'm me old PON GEE i HA-J6 TO THNUM IMS tone JTORV AMP M'T VN0"A,V i-vfl" ftp TV 6 The Indifference of Most People ; - . ... : Toward Cruelty to Animals I I til ni I - ' - 1 wfi ZL - w I . 1 UiUAT V-1 ii" -. I I II UP II sne AAreg ASLEEP g N-&-5 fe far 1 .gggj lJiT IRtW ; i iti mil . I.H..I mi li immm ml MiJV f , : I1IH 1 ; Jw Mr 1 : w By KLliA WHEELftR WILCOX. ; constituted ft part bt lhe public school course In a community those Interested In its presentation should classify the dty or community Into districts, with the various schools as nuclet. 4 A placo of meeting should be selected In each district. These places might lie a room in the public library, f oung Men's Chi Mian association building, the school houBe a church, private home, hired hall, etc. , . , ' . ' ; ; . ", Ths clilidren of the school or schools which are the Centers Of the districts should ' be Invited to Come to the re spective meeting places and he officials of the schools be urged to co -opera t j m the work of their district. ' Each group of children shilild t: , un der the guide of a volunteer worker In this- great cause. And all the groups should te under the itsaersnio or one general leader in order to promote har mony and a syatetnatlsed unit Icatl n of the work, '. " ' After organising on the same genera) parliamentary plan throughout the sev eral districts, the work Should be carried Out by following a, prepared oucliiie glso uniform In the. main features tiuou6twJt the districts. , ; Meantime, here. Is an excellent thing for every mother to do who wants' her child to grow , Into , useful, constntctlvo and noble maturity, and to ecap de -st ructive, ignoble and unworthy propen sities. - ',),.,; Let her write to the Audubon or lety, 197 Broadway, Kew Tork, and ask for literature about birds suitable to inter est a child,- She must enclose a stamped and addressed ' envelope, and then the must be willing to read this literature and to give a Jittle lime daily talking with her children about it , This society is organising thirty thru sands of School children and other young people into classes for bird study, anil aids in many other '-trays iducatlonal work along th lines of bird studv. It publishes and distributes thousands of Illustrations of North Ameriotn birds, accompanied by leaflets contain ru in popular ' form a resume of th) latest known facts regarding the feiding hab its and general activities 0f th-i birds desorlbed. ' . ! It Will show the mother how to be a factor for helping to wake the World better In generations to cone. Copyright; mi, by A merican- Journal . , Examiner. i fey ELLA WHEELEH WILCOX. William G. Spragtie, of the Americai. fiumane "association, offered a prise for the best esssjr on "Humane Education.' It was won by Mrs. Hugo Krause, Of LoUIsvilie, Ky.' ' ' ' Speaking of the In difference ' of well born and well-edu cated people toward it lesori iiraiuica, ana, Kraiiae says: "HefeHire some of the forms his In difference assumes. The cruelties of com l merclal . greed and avarice, Such as kil ling the animal par ents and leaving the young to die of star- Vftton and exposure Ten thousands seals die annually of Starr Vatlon . because their mothers art Hilled W the breeding season. Tavid Starr Jor dan in Mafka and Kotik. Depriving tht parent of its young and leaving the par ' ent to be, consumed With the agony of grief over .its loss. , 'When.. s. 'mother loses her child her heart gives a cry. of a wild beast; when a wild beast, loses its young 'It gives a Cry like that of a hu 'man mother. 'i-Vlctor Hugo In "S3." 1 ' V,The Mrrors 'of the. weste"rft plain aur Ing the sndW seasonh-so forcibly brought ' to public attention, by ..the, action, of the American Humane , association,., in .pro- " curing photographs by a special agent : sent out for Invvestlgatlon. .-'Crowding ' 'cattle when " trapsporiln'g them fn such a way. they cannot lie, keeping them thus twenty-e'ght hours without, rest, food or water. . , , The cruelty of trap and spring-pole, when the death, of the dumb victim comes after hours, sometimes days, of suffering from broken limbs, lacerated flesh and the agony of fever and thirst caused by these,, not to mention all the terror and fright endured. The vanity which leads to all ; this trapping and hunting, the adorning of the body ' with the heads, claws, tails and skins of the l.lttle furry brothers, the decking forth with the beautiful plumage of the kin of wood and gln. .The cruelty of sport . when innocent and beautiful creatures like deer, moose, wild song-bird and fish are sacrificed to the , human delight in slaughter and blood shed; But -sacrificed to a still greater" de gree when ' wounded' and left to' die slowly of wounds and starvation. The cruelties practiced in connection ' with the exhibition of trick animals. ! lions beaten over the head with clubs till the blood flows from nose and ears; horses, dogs and cats whipped unmerci fully in being taught; elephants urged by 1 the Jerk of an iron hook Inserted In the ; ear.;'';'1 - -'" -';"J,; . ;4.v- . The neglect, indifference, ignorance. nd I cruelty of which domestic animals ar i the victims. . "-.'., And the crowd of cruelties perpetrated by man, the unmentionable secret crimes of the vivlsector's laboratory. These are the practices, hot of the ' apclent'idaya of bloody -sacrifices, nor of tlfe middle Ages Pt d4rk and secret oriraes,' but oif.the open, progressive, rnoral hlne teenth and' twentieth centuries.:; A ' ifor, alt ,hW.'Mrs.'. lOause thinks,,, with . eterjfj Intelligent and. kJndTbearte.d being, that f the- remedy lies with' the mothers and .teachers; ; Vy.;." :, '.' ' jBhe. suggests what has been said in this column . a hundred times, that Sunday ! srihoois 'should teach children tb jove;and understand , snfmals, apd that ministers should preach on this" subject ironv the: polpit, 'ana that clusses-shoulfl. be formed tq educate" mothers how to.eaucate ineir children.' ) '.. . .' .. r.-ili .j'-.s' fa. '. AniS added 'to all 'this that: '"'V " Hmsn?. education shou!dbe;a part of the -euriculum of the., regular school coursed .it, . - ',':''',, -"''.v tlrtt feecause of its value in racial evo lution, national progress and individual development, as set forth in trie preceding paragraphs. ; " " . . . eecond Because this, would be the best means of extending humans education to all, classes ' of children, irrespective t creed class,. naUo&alHy,etc.-f ; Third Because humane .education, when " taught pedaaogically and correctly Is so closely .related and eorelated to the other courses'" essential to the "curriculum that i Its onitsslon mars toe presentation of j the former. - ;. , . Nature study civics and ethics are so I eorelated wtih humane education that to ! omithe latter Is to", mar the presenta i tlon ,0f ,fte former. '"1 : " Fourth-rBecause educators are generally 1 advance guards la reform measures, and are, therefore, the most easily approached and convinced by argument for its estab- lUihrnent.. v. ".';..' - -' -' . ' Until humane -M'ation Is,-so res WZt rut TiPPe WAS PMXiHfr H w"i - ' ..... STAR AH ft TOLD MM TO t-OOKSft AT TMC STAR IN 'i' A wtn'ui. TID IM BASE OA It A &AMC POC? boMf cap top ters Go Fofc A SPIN Ah I POL OF THE Ct-IHKtKo (VANG WAS DOINCrA FUP PLOP AMD M AND 3F" RJNfc IN THti UOOK- PULCNG: TH STUFF fc.PA.RT CKAtlP-P A ME0AU VMTH AN in 3CR.IP7I0M fN VIDDI5K. fc.HAl2.Lie TOO IT TO AN OLD PAvaN BKOkeri WIHC T-ANSLA7CPU ' isr a LAn rnuc; ihtm yooR or rice hc'll EP INPORMATIOS ----------------- KI35 ME WINCSNr NOTHING MAK65 ME , 51 CK tuf turtle- is a lazv FisLiow vat idft rtMP rrwfcs ACCUSES HIM 6F HAVNfc A iiw wis- jsww asi a tct IK.I'M A MflVINi WCTUtf PATIN af60TA-l AVfATt Pack YanrrpY$ ; mis t tmc mar KniiDBMcgAM tAAocrr HIS NBW MOTOR BOAT - CWOfcU Dniiitn aiOMfe- THrr Fr?ltNO rxvvr . . . ut m di nc a vollsv orwomom Hrt AT KJNO OP AM fNf INF NAPhh 7."'i rrnOfA 3J3T THEN 'n'"ZZ? 1 o.AoJC 17 TAC5 JAM) PRI5WTH0HT.BP, UUCMT; AMD TMff N . 'THE HUDSON U A NIOERVWeR 0TI5NT THF HJORAMPe. TON ANPfteT COM NffWrteRJAPTtltTHATf IfceAtlTMCKTlTHr MACMlMf AN 0" START FEET oflM pf- MAKe SOME "S5TAU SICMB Til dUlBT'TUM TO COUNT THE SITNCVS tmbjii aeAT rr homg AMP M U53 l)PTN6 6ATMgRS- MOTH IN' TO OO , TILL TOMORROW Oatmeal and Haggis v Br ELDKKT HI BUARl). Beauty Secrets of Footlight favorites How to Have and Keep Pretty Eyei r Big Storehouse of Words Committing to memory the 16,000 words of; blank verse In the play "Every wom'an" by devoting two hours a day for three weeks Is the feat of Marlon Dent ler, a young actress, who has been as signed to one of Henry W. Savage's com panies - which is to prtssnt- Walter Browne's mod,rri morality piay on tour this season. " Miss Dentler, whx) Is not yet 20, was assigned the part about ajnonth ago. A familiarity with the other speeches of the play as well as those of her own role Would be of us to her, she was advised. She took the book with her to Brighton Beath,: where she spent the summer. 3 ' "When she appeared at the Savage Office Saturday afternoon to report to T. Daniel Frawley, chief of the SsuVage engagement department; Mr. Frawiey"' lnthilred Whether she Was familiar wlth'ths thr parts. She asked him to hold the book, and then,! without missing a word or , an inflection, she recited the dialogue from ciover'to cover. : .- ' iMUs Dentler told Mr, Frawley that she could repeat the text of two other (Hays in 'which she had appeared, but when She offered to prove It he threw up his hands and said he was Willing to take hsr word. -New York World.. V:--: '..i :. , ..',.,:; i .'.' : i '--:, Cv On Ott Loot. - A Philadelphia lawyer and connoisseur was describing some of the experiences in search of curios. f "1 once entered a Wardour Street shop in Lcndon," he said smiling,' "and the talesman pointed out to me a dilapidated chair. , ; ... . ..... . , "'That there chair, Sir,' he said, im pressively, 'belonged to Louis Croisrye, king of Prance.' . " .. . It 'Louis Crosseyer.sald I. 'Why, there's no such person. " 'Ob, res. there Is. sir! said the sales man, ana he showed me a 'ticket tmxkvsd 'Louis XL' "-Philadelphia Record. l 'A Baehlor Refleetlona. A Woman's tongue his only to be sharp enough to cut both ways. A. politician, is. known by tbs company he can't keep when it has any self respect : It seems as if a man could never be contented with plain rheumatism till lie got the gout. v - . What the world realty loves about lov ers Is how crazy they are to keep out of everybody's way. A man sots about -getting his hand scratched the way his wife would about getting both legs cut off. New York Frees.;..': '; i- , '. .'.;': ; ... . ; ' '-:,: . . By MARTHi WELLINGTON. If . the new "baby has nice eyes, the family predict that It will be a beauty, and a good pair of eyes is the .only claim that many famous women have to real pulchritude. With our subways, our electric light, our constant use of the eyes In reading St all times, I often, wonder whether our great-grandchildren won't be born with spectacles, and 1 rather think they will unless We leaj-n how to avoid eye strain. When you think of what a tremendous amount: of work Is required of the eyes, and how wonderfully they respond, you feel that they are really deserving , of better , treatment than that Which they get t am sure that the vast amount of elec tric light , which we use Is to some extent responsible for the gaunt and hollow yes which even, the younger sooiety women cannot escape after a couple of seasons, for electric light, is not only much harder on the eyes, but It is much more unbecoming than the soft glow of the lamps or candles of our forefathers. On the other hand, of course, if It is property focuesed. It saves the sight, for the strain of seeing an object In a poor light Is tremendous, and IS one of the reasons why so many - people have to wear glasses at a .very early age. Children begin at school to read and study by a poor light for not all of the schools have adequate lighting ss yet, but parents are even more at fault for the child does its home work as best it can, and by any light that Will serve, so thst it gets the idea very early in life that the eyes wilt stand for any kind of treatment. ; If you want to know .what a strain electric light Is on the eyes, stand be hind the footlights In the spotlight. That is the place which so many stage aspir ants hope to attain,, and most tf them would be willing to sacrifice their good Sight to get there. , t believe In taking care of my eyes, and If the time ever -come when the. spot light glows for me aloae I shall be able to face It with strong eyes at last. : I have made up a lot of rules for my self, and I try to follow them as well as I can. In tho first place, I never read in a; rockihg chair; the movement 'of , the rocker requires a constant readjustment of the sight, and it is a strain on the eyes. . ' . . . . . . ?. : ' I never read in bed, either, even If tiie light falls Straight on the book .and. not in my eyes, because this Is one of the surest ways of straining the Sight. 1 rest my eyes when traveling, and even In the car t aveid reading If pos sible. :'' ' '-' , . . .. Of course, when on Is up late at night the eyes invariably show it, and I try and relieve them by bathing with a little salt and water, I always have an eVe cup, which must be washed .out thor oughly before It is used, as -it should bs absolutely Clean. Into this cup I pour the salt water, which should be about as salty as tears, or the ocean, t hold the cup firmly to my eye so the water cannot escape, put my hd back and Open my yes. This is not. only very refreshing, but It clear the eyes out, remove every particle .of dust that may have gotten, in them and is one oft tho best wsys to keep ths eyes bright and clear. r Sometimes when I am very tired and my eyes show it as they always do at once, t get a basin of Ice water with a little of perfume added to It. Then I take a small bit of the Ice, wrap It in a Piece of soft jUkea and. rub the akia under the eye and Scotland Is a good country to be born In; It Is a good country to get out' of and at times It may ) A good country to go back to, - . I once attended a ' dinner given, to James Barrle In , iAintlon. One of the speakers sprung the usual joke about how when the Scotch leave Scot land they ftover''go back. When Barrle arose to reply he said: "Perhaps It Is trujj that the flcotch ' when ; they leave their native land", seldom re turn. If so. there Is surely precedent. In truth, :. Englishmen have been known to go to Scotland and never return. Once company of Englishmen went to Scot land, and they never returned. ; The place where they went was Hanhnck burn." ' ;.''. In 'literature Scotland has exceeded her quota. . From Adam Smith, with his deathless "Wealth, of Nations," and Tammas, the Techy Titan, With Ms "French Revolution," to Bobble Burns and ' Robert Louis, the well-beloved, , we have a people, who have been saying things and doing things since John 'Knox made pastoral calls on Mary Queen1 of Scots, and saw the devil's tall behirul hoc chair. , 1 , Thomas Henry ftuokle, In his Immortal preface to his' "History of Civilisation." says that the science of political economy was bom In Scotland, and "Adam Smith's 'fas-' there was ijitlte a book has influenced the world for good more than any book ever Written, save one." , i U , ; '" " lr. -Johnson pretended to- hate t tiie Scotch, but he lives (or lis only because he Was Well Bnswelllsed by n Scctchmah. And now nbbody knows just how, much of Bosweil is Dr. Jdhnson and how. muth is Bosweil.,; . , ' .. ' .-. ',. ; What Massachusetts has done 'for ttw fnlted States, Scotland did for Great Britain. N ' ' ': The Scotch gave us the Iron ship, the st mm eivjlhe, the lump rhlnmey, the tele- f phone. Also they supplied us Presby- terlanlsm. And this being true; they also supplied the ahtidote In lavlil Hume. The Scotch stand Ih popular estimate tor religious bigotry, yet the offense of Adam Smith, David Hum and Thomas Carlyte to a vast number of people was their liberal attitude of mind In al mat ters pertaining to religion. ;v , . ; .These men were the very antithesis ot dogmatists and sectarians. They re spected all religions, but had implicit faith In none. All Were learners; a)', worn men of peace-, all had a firm hold ton ,the niftin, old, slmpla virtues which cannot be waived When you make up.' your formula, fof a . man. They Were Indus trious, "systematic, economical, persistent and physically sound.' ' "' , - If there Is any secret ifi the success of the Scotch It lies in the fact that they are such good animals.' The Basis of life Is physical. Snow, Ice, rock, thistles, cockle burrs; dlfflcOtt);; ''hardship, all are great l-aw stock ton the making of men. The climate of Scotland makes for a stufdy manhood that lays' cash, asks for ho odds, and seldom apologises for' being on earth. . '. f V ". ," . '.. ; 1 , " ." ; : - ' Copyright, iei2, V ' . - Internatl6nsl New service." - ':- .-..'. '.?;''.. li The Manicure. Lady J f MISS MARTHA WELLtXGTOX. (One of ZiegfeldV beauties in "The Winsome Widow" Company.) Just over It with the Ice. You, have to rub very ijulckly, and don't leave the ice on too long in any one place. It is likely to be quite stinging. After you hav don this for a little while, treating both. eyes, rub on a little cream, or, bet ter still, buttermilk if you cn get It, and pinch the skin around the eyes until it becomes quite red. I think this treatment Will take Sway those dark circles under the eyes, and will also relieve puffiness, which is so unpleasant and disfiguring. Sometimes when the eyes are very tired, you can make them . feel better by pinching the muscles along the eyebrow; this seems to relieve the strain for some reason or .other, and especially it you can get someone else to do it. Is quite an excellent thing. I never wear veils w'th great big dots or figures which Interfere with the sight because I think they are responsible for much, of the eye trouble of women. When I go automobltlng or to the sea shore, I wear large colored goggles; they may be tJI.figurlng, but I'd rather ! fi!wrcd with th-m frr ' f "' 1" than suffer ftam the effects of wind and iui,U:usit. u-t'tt't.on of .sunlight on tho sand, I also carry a iiniasvl ilivd vv rl green, and try to keep my complexion In such shape that I can stand the green j color. , Thst Is a great, test( you know. If you look well under a green parasol, or under a green awning through which the tight is reflected, you don't have to worry about your skin, for few ; people come out of th s trying ordeal without appearing to be frights of the first water. :- And speaking of green, don t let anyom ever persuade you in wear anything of that shade, when you are going on an ocean trip, I think people who are sea sick ought to dress In pink, that is really the only becoming color for that woe begone condition. But, of course. If you traveled dressed In pink, people would think you . were crazy, whereas you would only be trying to spare. your, fellow, creatures the .pain ful sight of the seasick person dressed In a garment of the same color. For (hat reason, I don't Jilte green , veils at the seashore, though I know they are the best for the eyes; gray and brown are almost equally good and much more effective. , . ; , ' .' The VsbsI Start. . "Doctor, I want to become so I can r' reat weights. Can you get me that way?" .. ... , ' Uticss so; but your, physique Is rather K leht at present." "I know It Is. I thought maybe I could r.ilHp a little at first, and work up." j "Yes; we'll have to go, at it gradually, take a long course of treatment.", "All right, doctor. What shall I raise to start with?" "Better raise, J200, 1 guess." Courier Journal - ,- "George, I sure did meet an awful simp this morning," said the Manicure Lady. "The only wise thing about him. so far as I could sue Was that he had enough brains to know that, his nails was In awful bad shape and ought. to be did, so J done them tor him. 1 hated to do It at that, because lie gave me toe sam kind of a tip that I thought he Was going to give me nothing what soever." . y , -l "That doesn't make him out a simp.'" Said the Head Barber. "That puts h.im out of the simp class and into the Class of James J. Hfll and Jawn Jj. Ricke feller. Come on, now, and till why yoU called him Slmpla." ' " ";'r'r "Hs believes that the police are being persecuted," said the Manicure Lady, "lis thinks that all this scandal about Mister Becker and th rest of the fore Is a sin and a shame. He told mo that no man living could raise his voice against a policeman." .i "You don't cay so!" exclaimed the Head Barber. Was he stswed?" -y "No, he seemed sober enough," re plied the Manicure Lady. "But I guess he was Scotch, George. You know what awful arguets.them Scotch Is, 'The old gent Is Scotch, you know, if you told him that Bobble Burns ' was a hard drinker he would come b.ack with the re mark that Burns never drank anything but soft drinks. He would even go so far, as to sayjhat they used to call him 'Buttermilk Burns.' Can you beat that, George? , I 'don't know a whole lot about literature, but you don't need to know much about literature to know that Bobbie Burns looked at buttermilk kind of scornful." ' ' , "You are a champion when It comes to wandering off the subject," said th Bead Barber. "What was it that you started out to say about the simpleton that you were manicuring?" "The trusting young man thinking that there was never a cop In the world that took a cent that's all. The way he talked about the force would make you think that Becker was like that old Greek feller, Arlstides' the Just. "Sometimes 1 think that everybody In the world Is getting to be bugs, George. Maybe It Is the high pressure and the high cost of living, or maybe it is th Influence that the,. sun In. getting over this planet, the way, t read It In st Sunday's paper r but all I know It that when a man come Into A barber shop and says there isn't a crooked cop on the force I feel, Somehow, that lots and lots of folks is kind of soft inside the skull. ' . 'Brother Wilfred is getting' in tha same . class with the. gent:,. I .was just speaking about, Wilfred has Just fin ished' a poem called 'The Dying Police man.' telling how the poor fellow-.plnohed a gambling house, and how the gamblers teaned him with the frame of an oil painting because he resolutely refused to, take A bride. What, do you know about that, George? I'm only a girl, and a girl ain't got' the same chance to find things out taat b,er brother bas, but Iti didn't know more than to write a poem with sn assertion Ilk thst Irt it T would 'get on North river."- ;' ' ;s IittH Bobbie's Pa ' Jir WILLIAM F. KIRK i' What is the matter with you, my deaVt and Ma to Pa wn he calm hoam last nlte.: '.. . v:, ; ' ,-V;. Why? red Pa. , . :." Oh, I thought you looked just a'llttel tit d'ssy, sed Ms. Perhaps It was 'a vagary, Mn sed; a figment of ray fancy, a child ot my tired brain.. ; Yoii mean a plg-ment, not a figment, sed Pa. , ,(.":- ''; "" Doant sUll. sed Ma; I 'meari jest what t sed. a flg-ihehf & if you thlnR' thEl 'ou are going to throw me off the trsift that way you are sadly mistook, sed M& What is the matter with you? , ," - Dearest wife, u Pi, t newer thought for a mlnnit that I cud throw you oft the track. Anybody that knows you,- Pa sed, knows better than thst. In,-sum previous age ypu muat have' been one- tit 8mon Legree's bloodhdunds. ' V; Well, sed Ma, after you are thniwltS words perhaps you can tell me1 What malks you look so dissy. 1 ' - '-1 Do I look dtssy, Bobble? sed Pa. Then i was between two (2) fires. I hated to tell Pa, that he looked dlssy, beekaus it was only yesterday morning he gave me a quarter, besides all the other munny that he hs.a gave me.. But I knew that Pa was dizzy, ft I knew that Ma knew that Pa was dizzy, & I knew that Ma knew that I knew that Pa was dizzy; so after a while 1 sed yes, Faj I am afraid that you are a llttel bit dizzy! How sharp-er than a serpent's .toots, is a ungrateful child, sed -Pa. Think of all the rashunt, honest endeavvor thut I have spent In reering 'ou rite. Bobble.. Eve,ry time that you wanted to buy a new text book I slipped you the coin, dldent I, sed Pa. When yure : clothes was gltllng kind of shiny I always got yur new clothes for you, dldent I? sed Pn. ' '' ' i 1 '' : " Yes, I toald Po. ' You did. & when you wanted that five dollar 'to get out with the boy Scouts three weeks ago I kicked in with the- five, dldent t, Vd Pa, ' ' ; '. ' .' "-." ' Yes, Ps, I toald him; : I know all tho kind things wleh ydu hae did for me, Mit you look a llttel dtzsy' Jest the galm. ""ated to say It to' Pa I think it Burt Me worse than it hurt him. k I toald Hm 'so. That Is what he always says to Ma wen he is spanking me. , Now, then,. sd Ma, what '. made you lsty? ' .' ' ; I Was riding in one of them' dubbeU decked street cars, sed Pa. I was setting up at the top. ' . - ' Oh, you poor dear, sed Ma. I am -s j sorry I thought wrong of you. Maybe Pa thought that he had made a good alibi, but ,. I know better, bee kaus Pa had been hitting the high spots so many years that setting in the top ot a dubbel-decked streft car wuddent malk htm any dizzier than it wud malk a lsou worker. ....