TUB SUNDAY HER: OMAHA. OUTOHKU 1, 1922. Blaster he MW tha tasarled and of tha rope of lb window ruiluln. a &-p and magnificent rd, waing vt-r mi luihtly before him. I la steadied himself ta watch thin: ha moved forward a fi'W pitiva townnt moved a few aee toward It ml steadied himself bkuIii, Ho than mstit down n til front , hi eyes staring at It with utter ab sorption, and thera proceeded from Somewhere Inside hla body Strang liolto llk a ketllii Jut on tlio bull. H ilvnnc"d closer, raised a mw, and punhvd It i-vr n slightly. Then what hi u had longed fur, but eiircely dured lo eM-et, occurred. Tha t"x swung. II lilt It again. It iiwunir mora violently. With ax cited rumbling h was at It an J upon lt( catching It between hi toeth, worrying it, pulling It, letting- It go attain, tumbling. In hi eagerness, on hi head, pulling him self up aguin, rolllntc once, when he missed It altogether, over on to hi hark, anil thi' ii suddenly pausing, sitting down on hi haunches anil looking up at Todhunter with eye that wero bright with happiness, a body qulveilnx with incitement. From that moment ho muy ta said to have been firmly established In the Todhunter household. II waa christened with the mm tnonplac naiito of Dob, because Todhunter, with all hla knowledge and erudition, could think of noth ing better, lie devoted himself com pletely to hla master, following hlin about whenever he wo in the houM, refusing to have hla meal anywhere but In Todhunter' pres ence, and Bleeping on the end of Todliuntor'a Iwd. Ha very quickly acclimatized himself to the waya of the house, was no trouble to any body, and tha rook would have en snared him body and aould and turned him Into the merest kitchen dog (an ambition that every cook In the world most unfortunately po losses) hid not liln loyal soul been capable of only one attachment at a time. Then eamo the great day which wan to change Todhunter' lift. There arrived an afternoon, fine, warm and beautiful, when Tod hunter thought ho would like a stroll In the pnrk. The doir. an was hi habit, presented himself In the hall, wagging hla tail In a frenzy, his eyea rained passionately to hla master's face, bis whole body one throbbing' appeal. Torthunter yield ed, took the lead wh'ch Mordant had pure-hawed, and strode off, the dog at hla heels. Then went up Into the Inner circle, passed the botan ical gardens, through the little gate, over the railings, on to the gnat aweep of green that faces the Zoo. Today this green was covered with families,' babies and cricketers. It was early In June and everybody who could was playing a ball game of ono sort or another, from the very elegant teams in white flannel Who were playing like aristocrats, with a large crowd watching them, to four small boys who had a sth-k and an old tattered ball and spent their time delightedly screaming the one at the other. Now how should Todhunter have known that to this particular dog anything in tho shape of a ball was like drink to a drunkard, opium to a Chinaman and a hat shop to a woman? Indeed, more than thesi. A ball flying In the air was his own soul projecting Into the ether, some thing that lie could no more hopo to resist than a cat can resist a. mouse. And here was suddenly tha whole space of tho earth, the bluo of the air, tho very winds of heaven Itself, filled with flying balls, bails of every kind, color and sizo. rising, rolling, leaping, the very final para dise which he had always dreamed and never hoped to see. At once he was off, his tail up, his legs scuttling hi hind him, his nose in tho air. First, he made for two nursemaids and some babies, but here the hall was too large for him to secure it with his teeth, so he merely wagged his tail at them and scuttled across to three littlo girls who had a tennis hall that they were throwing very Inaccurately the one to the other. The moment he had it In his Mouth he was off again and all three little girls set up n howl that could surely have been heard from one end of the park to the other, nnd that brought two stout, per spiring women hastily to the res cue. Todhunter reached them Just oa they were looking angrily around for some ono to abuse. "I do beg your pardon," be began, quite breathless with his hurry (he was, of course, not in the very bent con dition), - my little dog ... 1 assure you I didn't Intend . . . nobody knew. , . . They w era mollified by hi ob vluua agitation. The dog ui res cued and brought back, tha tennis hall, punctured la several places, dragged from Its niouth, some money offered to pay for tha bull and haughtily r"Jcted. and by th time tl.i waa Just coming to an honorable but somewhat awkward conclusion, the dog tu off again, this tint plunging Into tha uiid Iks f tha elegant crkatt fttatrh, her twa snan war running fur, the tivaa batwaaa tha wkksta. Tt Muniar had )uat ttina t aoa tha iV run asyly with (has, bolt Inlu tha wickeu an I kanak aff tka fcUre delightfully nion a stout and in dlgimnt umIre, and then run after the cricket bull Which hud been flunif too far by onu fielder, rush at It as though It wr a live ihinn, push It with bis feet nnd then go for tha lent of tl.! Ili-lder who picked It up, Thera followed then an em hunt ing half hour, enchanting, that Wri, for the onlookers, but not e uctly so for the unfortunate man In a top but and a tall coat who, trying to catch the dog. Inevitably just missed htm and v.ns, aa all the delighted observer agreed, a most ludicrous and helpless tlgura. Kvery one watched, applauded, shouted, laughed, and Incited the anlmiU to further exploit. Tha dog had never known such a half hour be fore and will pretty certainly never know such a half hour nwln. When at butt he was rnii.-ht by a stout woman attended by a lurge crowd of children, nursemaids and small lioys, Tidhunter was a wreck of heat and agitation. Toor little thing." said the wo man, concernedly. "Must have a little bit of fun at times." All the crowd offered comments with that frnnknei) and humor that mi especially belongs to the cockney A great deal of advice wns offered. "Put lm on tha lead. Khovo 'is 'ead In a bag. Taka '1m 'ome and tlo 'Jm up. 'Ave a 1ath. mlsdr, yer 'ot. Btlck yer top 'at over 'lui," and so on. There followed then the agitating huNlnes of trying to fasten the lead on to his collar. The climp was a new one and very stiff. The dog wriggled Into every shape and size, and finally the really remarkable vision was offered to an admiring world of the author of "The Lake Poet and Natural Symliollsm," kneeling In the mlddlo of Itcgents park, hi hat off. his tie waving lit tha wind, his face crimson, trying to attach a very small dog and a long piece of leather whllo a con tinually Increasing crowd laughed, admired, and expostulated. Tho soena might have continued for a long time had not a soft voice been heard to say. "Perhaps I can do It for you." and Todhunter, looking up, beheld two of the love liest eyea and one of tho prettiest mouths In the world, set in a pat tern of pink and whlto against the bluest of skies. A young lady bent towards him. For a moment his hatid touched hers. In another second the lead was adjusted; for tha general public tho game was over, but for Todhunter It' had only Just begun. Mordant greeted his master's re turn that afternoon with that air of strangled surprise that was so eieclally bis own. lie suggested a bath and changing Into evening clothes a little earlier than usual. "You look warm, sir," was all he actually aald. Todhunter, lying in his bath and looking up at the, celling, won conscious of the strangest mixture of feeling, a mixture like .. some spiritual indigestion, as though his aoul had been indulging in a meal of the feelings, crab, duckling, and Ice pudding, all at ono and the same time. The dog, who followed him everywhere, was sitting on the bath mat looking up to heaven, patiently waiting for the moment when his master, who had mys teriously dropped Into a largo white hole, would onco again mys teriously rise. Ho was preparing his own little celebration of barks, gurgles, and Muller exercises for that notable occasion. Todhunter tried, his face just so happily ex tending above the water, to straighten out his thoughts and dis cover his line of action. For once they would not straighten, being perpetually crossed and confused by the recollection of those beautiful eyes, that lovely mouth, and the softness of that white hand. Ho half rose, peered over the edgo of the bath into the eyes of the dog, wondered what had hap pened to him, thought it must bo the dog, stretched out a hand to pat him, decided that it wasn't the dog after all, found himself to his amazement longing for the next aft ernoon when he could walk in the park once again, and stung to sud den madness by his perception of this weakness, Jumped out of his bath, scattering water to right and left, causing the dog to bark fer ociously. Tha next day came. It waa fine and beautiful, and ha found him self to hla horror actually plotting to launch the dog towards un suspecting strangers In order that some scene might be created that would envoka tha goddess from the surrounding bushes, ftha was not evoked. Five babies were upat, three tennis balls ruined, two elderly gentlemen made almost apoplactlo from temper, oue old lady delighted with what she called "the little darling's playful ways," one policeman Insulted so seriously that be had to be pWatad with a gift, but no goddess. It was that avealnr. la solitude la hi awn house, that showed Tod hunts what ha had raally hacom. lis. a fettled and avlldiltad bacha Vr, wha had escaped tha danavmua ac. had eVct.Wd suit finally that wtaas war nothing to aim, row i ho sat In his large, chilly library nnd sighed and even groaned and flung tho po-t laureate's eruillc work on Hilton' Prosody from on end of tho library la the other. Ma behaved, I urn sorry to say. like a liutudlln sentimentalist over the dog. Ha folidhd Jiini. caressed him, tickled hi ears, muttered absurd tlilni! Into hi mouth, and finally let him lft"i on hi lap, sitting there nturli.g In front of Mill till every Un In hi ldy ached, but ho would not wuka the animal, that littlo messenger of Jove, that little evoker of the godless, that i-nnlrie symbol of Cupid. It wus undoubtedly tho dog' best evening. There never wim, there never will be again, such a senti mentalist a that dog. It was not tho dog' fault. He had twen created a sentimentalist. The one thl - In life that ha wanted wo to be loved and caressed and It was tho one thing In life that hitherto he had not obtained. I'nllke most dog, his stomach was nothing to hi heart, and ho would desert any bona for a caress. Not that with nil this he was entirely soft. He bad the fighting quality, be had his dislikes nnd showed them, but when he loved, he loved with all hi heart. On that great evening he Just gave himself up completely to his master, and how was ha to tell that It was not of h'm that h's master wa th'nk'ng, but of something qu'ta different, somth'ng far more dan. gerousT It wa well that he made tha most of that even'ng so far a Todhunter was concerned. It was tha dog's Inst, because on the next duy, soother lovely afternoon of sun and color and scented leaves, tha goddes wa evoked, stepped forth from the hushes, gave a I'ttla startled sni'lo of rrcognlt'on when Tcrthunter ra'sed h's hat. said. "Why, there's the dear l'ttla dog," entered Into eonversat'on about dogs In general and of what part'eu lar breed th' dog In the major'ty was, passed from that to remarks about tho weather, how badly ra'n was needed, from thence to how tho weather always broke when she took her hol'doy, and It was a shame because she loved t'-nn'a so, and from that to why In general th'ngs were never qu'te as you would have them to be, and she supposed that It was because ft wouldn't be good for people's characters if they were, and from that a'la'n to character and d'sc'pl'ne, and fnallv the last, stop toward how you couldn't help l'k'ng some people at f'rst s'ght, and she really d'dn't know why It was so, nnd she supptwi'd it was fool'sh to go so often on f'rst Irnpress'ons as she d'd, but that one way and an other she had never been deceived, . although her mother kept on sav'ng to her, "Look out. Dulcle, you'll be taken In one day," but up to now eht hadn't been. By Ill's t'mo they were half across tho grass and almost directly under observat'on from a very long legged, meluncholy look'ng an'mM on to" of the Mapp'n terraces, whoso thor oughly poHS'm'st'c outlook should have been a warning to both of them, but was not Todhunter, It may frankly be sa'd, was unaware whether he were walk ing on h's head or h's heels, . whether he was In London or T'm buctoo, whether hi heart, wh'ch was beat'ng l'ke a hammer, res'ded In h's calves or somewhere just above h's left ear. H only knew that rhc was wear'ng gome wonder ful color that was l'ke cherr'os, but wasn't cherr'es exactly, nnd that when she sm'b'd the wcrM took a sudden si n 'nto snace nnd wa only haul"d back from d'sappcar'nr ul togfrthcr by the strongest exercise of judgment on his part. Here two things add to tho de velopment of my story. One was the entrance of Mallory, the bachelor friend of Todhunter. The other was tho beginning of the tragedy of the dog. It is d'lllcult, of course, to know exactly what goes on In a dog's mind, but we may suppose, without venturing into the realms of psychoanalysis or treading on Dr. Jung's German toes, that that evo nlng made glorious by the caresses of his muH'er had roused In him highest hope of a splendid and slobbery future. In truth It waa at that very moment that his de cline in his master's affections be gan. How could he II that l follow ing hia natural p ayful Instinct on that wonderful ball flying afternoon ho. had laid a pit for his own de struction? How could he tell that It waa not himself that his master needed but love and an escape from loneliness? He liked the young woman, who was now forever ap pearing at most unexpected time and In most unwarranted plam-a. but hi liking for her In no sort of way touched hia devotion to hi maater, and hla master now enid to have no longer any time for him at all. Ha was furaver be In cast down Into tha kitchen, told to play with tha cat, urged to ward beitft which wra then sud denly withdrawn fiom hliu. gvatirg aneanstad, MHit uneitwt tdly ba Iwraa tha tart fat ff Munhinl and tl ntUl larger fit of tha rk. II spent hi time sitting at tha bot tom of tha kitchen siulr looking upward, Impliij niuinnt that hi master. Ilka Jove, w...d sud denly appear, lie went out once for a walk In tho park with hi master and the young lu ly, but elicited no sullies front them, drew no attention by hi playful antic, and was In-d.4-d such a failure that during the last part of tho time ha walked at hi master' heel In something of the sunio crawling way thut ha had dona the tlmt day of nil. Ho could not understand it. Tho little Joke thut had beet) so readily accepted only tho week tefor were now not noticed at nil, and once when with true unselfish disinter esteilnes ha sprang up on tha young lady ami tried to cmhmce her, ho wo violently rebuked by hi mas ter,' who told hlin not to ha a nuisance and ordered Mordant to take him down to the basemen,. He wa very unhappy. Tho person who wns unhappy was Michael Mallory, For yr.tr and year Mallory and T'ihunlcr hud len bftchelors together. .V.allory, having, after being1 twi" rejected, flung women over tha wall as be ing unworthy of further attention, took It for granted Todhunter had dona tho stune. Thl sudden un pen ranee of a young woman In a cherry colored dress with her silly slmtierlng smile and her way of looking at hltn when ha was pres ent as though she wished ha would go away and would tell him so as soon a site was mora safely en trenched In Todhunter' affection Infuriated him. Mallory wa lonely a ha had never Iteen lonely beforo. II nut in tha library with very much the Mime look on hi round chubby face that tho dog was wearing down In the basement. If Todhunter de serted htm ho did not know what he would do. He tried to plot a little, hinted that from what he'd heard the young woman's relation woro not all that they might be, that there was a brother In Bouth Africa, ha believed, wlui had done something onco that ho shouldn't; that ho didn't know why, but he fancied that the ymng lady was not quite so loyal to Toil hunter a she ought to be; that sho laughed, he fancied, behind Todhunter' back. Finally, with a deep breath like one coming up from a deep dive far below the salty sea, he ejacu lated, "Anyway, Jim, it' good, to think that you're too old for such Billy things as matrimony." Fur prixlnf?. Indeed, then, to ee Tod hunter's anger, hi eyebrow shoot out as though, like Mr. Tate's mus tache, they were fixed tn with elas tic! "What do you mean?" he cried. "Too old? I'm not too old at all. I'll show you whether I'm too old,"' which he did by propos ing that same evening and being Instantly, even greedily, accepted. If the dog's fate before the en gagement had been a sad ona, It was nothing to what It wa after wards. He was now entirely neglected. It wa decided that the wedding should bo soon and that it should bo rather a smart wed ding. Miss Dulcie l'inkerton, the young lady, had reached Just that' cge when her women friends were beginning to say, "Poor Uulcle, she'll never bo married now," so that she was determined to Invito them all and to have tho finest ceremony possible, Todhunter was in that desperate stato whan ho agreed to everything. Ho was to wako up just a year too late to wonder why he did tho things he did. The dog sat In the basement and so desperate did things become that his meal was occasionally forgotten and he was forced to eat tho cat's. H's heart was broken. Ho would havo preferred lnt:nitely to return to the days of the t.'n can and tho jeer.'ng boyn, when lis had no il lus'on as to love, v. hen he knew ex actly where ha was. Three or four days before tho wedding he evolved a littlo plot. H hung about the stairs, outmaneu vered Mordant, who was now, of course, a very busy and self-important man, slipped into h's mas ter's bedroom, Jumped on to h!s old accustomed place and curled at the foot of h's muster's bed. Here, with bcut'ng heart, he waited. At a late hour h's master entered, and for a wh le stood In front of the look'ng glass, slowly tak'ng off hi tlo and unbutton ng hfscollar, and murmur ing. 1 ke tho hero of one of Mr. Hos settl's poems, over and over again, "Dulcle, Dulcle, Dolc e. Dat l ng, dar I ng." When at lost h delirium for a moment y'elded to the neces sity of rban'ng hi teeth, he turned round towuid the bed and saw the dog. "tlod heavens, what are you doing her?" h cried. Tho dog squinted at h'm out of the corner of both eye, thumped h tal feebly and gave a hew-h'nt wrhigla of III l'y. "fan t have jrott here," aa'd Totthuiiti r, "tur prvnwr pWa la tha kitchen." H went tn t!i door, epenvd It and railed "Mordant." Tlwt d (nlf cd rrrature waa just tUn advsiie n, poiolrroUkly to 1J. "i-. bar. ' M iiJ .m, thai d-i g-'t in l"i at. n, J list taka h.in downstair, Will you? Horry to bother yoti." Tho dog iiiiolo onn di-np tuto i f fort of appeal, gctt.ng upon his baiiiuhe snd hedging a In hla u.i 1. 1 r. happier d.iy lie hud bo n tutiiiht to do. All that occurred was that Mordant, grunt. ng, catiuhl Inin by his sk n and dragged hlin down stairs, threw li m Into the cat's Iki. kt and so left h ni. Tha dog sighed himself to sleep. The wedding wa over. Ih guests were at tho house, Todhiiuicr nnd hi Dulcle had stood in tlw mid.ilw of the room receiving ciiiIIch super Hi lnl congratulations from stiperrlli ou guests, Tho inoiui ut hsd coma whin tho happy loan must g'.i up and change his clothes for the jour ney. Outside In tha hall theie were were two figures. In the mid dle of tho hall, stout, chubby, and miserable, wsa Mallory, (Muring desolntely In, front of him. In tho middle of the talrcHc, looking nlf surd with a piece of lihtstn round hi neck, wa tha dog, aluo staring In front of hlin. hoping against hopo for a kind word, a pal of the band, something from someloly, "Hulln, Jim," said Mallory. "Hullo, old man," said Todhunter, "I must hurry up and get changed. Wo'r off In a quarter of an hour." Mallory waited for Todhunter to say something of the mora tender sort, but II la the first duty of tha Duli-i-a of this world tn salughter tha pre matrimonial frlunds. Hha had already hinted to her dear James that Mr. Mallory was really the sweetest of men but ha wa just a wee bit tlresomo with hi silly old stories over and over ago In and she wasn't sure whether he wero quit ho loyal to her dear James aa her dear James thought him. Mallory caught the ey.i of lha dog. "I say, Jim," ho suddenly said. "Hullo, what I It?" said Tedhiinler, turning at the foot of the stair. "Wasn't it through that dog," Mallory said, "that wou ni-t your Wife?" "Why, yes. It was," said Tod hunter, but showing very plainly Indeed that he wanted to escape. "Not a biul idea that," said Mal lory reflectively. "Act as a kind of Introducer, you know. After all," he put his finger In his mouth, A childish habit to which he was ad dicted, "it's never too late to mend. ... I say, Jim, would you let me have tho dog?" Todhunter, half way up tho stairs, passing the dog without looking at It, turned round. "Have the dog? Why, of course. Whatever do you want It for? I thought you didn't like dogs." "O, I don't know." Mullory shift ed from foot to foot. "Just an Idea that occurred to me. Take him out for walks In the park, you know. That sort of thing. Tou'll let m havo him?" "Why, certainly V cried Tod hunter, disappearing. Mallory went up to the dog and stroked Jt, f;lt the wholo of his heart warm to tha responsive wrlgglo that tho dog gave. "Come along, old man," Bald Mal lory. "You belong to me now. You may do me a good turn ono day. Who knows?" They left the house together. Copyright, l2t. The Guide Post To Good Books for Children. Choose one of these books to read each week. Perhaps you had better cut th a list out each timo and take it with you to your city library. It is prepared for the Happyland boys and g'rls by M'ss Ales M. Jordan, superv'sor of children's work, Boston public library. This week tdio suggests Hahlwln, James, "Thirty More Fa mous Stories " Kw'ng, J. H., "Story of a Short L'fc." Hayes, Isaac, "Cast Away In the Cold." l'yle. K., and L. S. Porter, "Theo dora." Htc'n, Kvaleen, "A Little Shep herd of Provence." W ggln, K. V.. and X. A. Smith, "Talking Heasts." Ifclng Kind. If you were busy being kind, Iieforo you knew It you would find You'd soon forget to think 'twas true That someone was unkind to you. hkhixx'a kukkpman. ltuby Sh'pley of Centralis, 111., often plays she Is a 1'ttln fairy when she gets lonesome, for there sro no other 1'ttlfl girls with whom she can play f ii.l lie Tin nd of South Portland, Me., hates to sea people whip horse and hurt dumb nn'mnl and th'nks the Happy THlm pledge la lovely. Myrtle Vorst of 8t. tleiiavleve Mo,, mad aaverul b'rd house last summer, amciur .thyri arnri.j room mrtrI1K Jusrph AJVfnu,. f rh Own, Mo. , f . . u, t ionip (lark si biM'l an.1.. .. .,, ,r t hu b like "'lll CWirKf,f V MT CI